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“We’re poets and we drink coffee!”

(attributed to Roberto Bolaño in The Savage Detectives)

 

The word “coffee” appears 71 times in the The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño. It’s reasonable to think that Bolaño actually wrote the line “We’re poets and we drink coffee.” But, he didn’t.  It was suggested as something he might write by Benjamin Obler. I didn’t have to tell you that. You might have been more amused if I left you in the dark.  But, I couldn’t do that.  I wouldn’t do that.  Still, 71 times is a lot.  It’s certainly reasonable to assume coffee was important to Bolaño.  Coffee was the inspiration for many writers as well as artists, tradesmen, teachers, and loafers.  That I will try to show below.

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

 

Coffee has played an important role in literature, the arts, and politics from the beginning.  According to Sean Paajanen, “the first record of a public place serving coffee dates back to 1475. Kiva Han was apparently the name of the first coffee shop, located in the Turkish city of Constantinople (now Istanbul) … Coffee was such an important item during that time period that it was legal in Turkey for a woman to divorce her husband if he could not supply her with enough coffee.”

“It was in an English coffee house that the word “tips” was first used for gratuities.  A jar with a sign reading, “To Insure Prompt Service” sat on the counter.  You put a coin in the jar to be served quickly.” (Paajanen)

For five centuries coffee was mostly just coffee. Then came espresso. In 1946, (the year I was born) Gaggia invented the commercial piston espresso machine, easier to use and safer than earlier models.  Soon we were off to the races.

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Mike Evans artist

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Mike Evans artist

 

With the emergence of laptops, iPhones and iPADS coffee went boutique.  Gourmet coffees and espresso drinks arrived—iced coffees, lattes, cappuccinos, macchiato, caramel frappuccinos, the flat white, an endless variety of flavored hot drinks.  The coffee world of today is a far cry from those early days yet the goings on in coffee houses are essentially the same as they’ve always been.

The Sea Gull Coffee Shop was once a thriving and popular hangout in Mendocino.  As the owner, I was witness to multiple idiosyncrasies of coffee drinkers.  I am a coffee addict.  That’s what owning the coffee shop did to me.

 

Sea Gull Coffee Shop, Nicholas Wilson photographer

Sea Gull Coffee Shop, Nicholas Wilson photographer

 

On any given morning Don, Skip, Ken and sometimes Jack would be the first to arrive. Locals. Contractor, electrician, school bus driver, fisherman. They settled at a round table in the middle of the room between the two counters and ten stools and the smaller tables by the windows. They were the unofficial traffic cops, the keepers of order in a room where an eclectic mix of locals and tourists gathered to discuss business and politics or simply listen, to enjoy coffee and sometimes breakfast. An animated banter took place between the patrons in the coffee shop.  Sometimes the cooks joined in through a window in the wall open to the kitchen.

 

David Gottsche, chef, photograph Nicholas Wilson

David Gottsche, chef, photograph Nicholas Wilson

 

David, Angie, David, Gary

David, Angie, David, Gary

 

My young son grew up with these discussions. He would learn the lingo and carry on conversations with himself when he played with his toy trucks and cars.  Alone at home, he sometimes took on the personality of one or another of the regulars.

He’d mimic the husky, deep voice of Big Al.  Al was an imposing sight—tall, black, hair in Rastafarian style—but gentle as a lamb.  He could annoy the waitresses at times.  He sat at the counter.  He was not forthcoming with his order.

 

Painting of Big Al by his daughter Lisa

Painting of Big Al by his daughter Lisa

 

“What do you want today, Al?”

“Bread.”

The waitress brought the bread in a basket with butter and set him up with a paper napkin and silverware.

“Soup.”

She went to get the soup.

“Salad.”

At this point the waitress, who ruled the coffee shop by sheer force of personality, would put her hand on her hip and gave Big Al a cross-eyed look.

“Al, I’ve told you, order everything at once. Just say ‘bread, soup, salad’ in one sentence. Is that so hard?”

Long pause.

“Roquefort.”

 

Jeannie, Doug, Sheldon

Jeannie, Doug, Sheldon

 

Should I kill myself or have a cup of coffee? Camus, A Happy Death

 

Linda and Marlene

Linda and Marlene

 

Bessie Strauss was another (sort of) regular.  Short, of ancient vintage, living alone, she wore the same faded grandma print every time I saw her.  She arrived each month to “pay her water bill.”  She got no further than the register, never pierced the inner sanctum.  There was no time for coffee or pie or anything else.  Bessie owned the building adjacent to the Sea Gull Inn.  (Now the Headlands Inn)  There was a water line underground from the well on the Sea Gull property to her house. How and when that line was installed, no one knew.  She lived in just two rooms.  The other rooms were packed full with the detritus of years past.   By some long undefined tradition she bought her water from the Sea Gull for $3 – $4 a month, a price she set on her own based on her usage.  I still have one receipt that cashier/hostess Lorna Young made for June 1974.

 

Bessie-Strauss

 

One of Bessie’s many quirks was to emerge early in the morning from her front door to walk across the alleyway between the two properties. She looked carefully to see that she was in the clear. Then, quickly to avoid detection, she threw a bag onto the Sea Gull property.  That was how she disposed of her garbage.  We retrieved the bag and deposited it into our trash when she was gone.  No one ever mentioned this.  It was just the way it was.

 

I have measured out my life with coffee spoons. T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

 

Artists and musicians, authors and poets along with the local tradesmen were among the regulars. Some were celebrities, some were not. A few names—Kent Chapman, Leonard Cohen, Arlo Guthrie, Richard Brautigan, Truman Capote, Chester Anderson, Bill Zacha, Bob Avery, James Maxwell, Charles Stevenson, and Martin Schmidt, Larry Fuente—I know for specific reasons. Others I’ve forgotten. Bobby Markels, ruth weiss, Bill Bradd and Gordon Black and Mitchell Zucker and Ilja Tinfo (the last four were also employees), Sharon Doubiago, Jay Frankston, Colonel Wingnuts, Luke Breit, and more. For a larger list of characters, skip to the bottom where I’ve chronicled  a number of regulars with the help of the local newspaper.

 

Coffee shop regulars Byrd Baker and Jacques Helfer, Nicholas Wilson photographer

Coffee shop regulars Byrd Baker and Jacques Helfer, Nicholas Wilson photographer

 

In several previous blogs I have related some of my memories of the Sea Gull Coffee Shop.  Here are some of the links.

Clifford

Coffee

B-Not

How Richard Brautigan Saved My Life

 

Vicki

Vicki

 

John Bush

John Bush

 

Coffee is about camaraderie. Some say its good for the soul like soup.  All I know is that I can’t live without it and from years of experience in the restaurant my sense is that I am not alone.

 

Left to Right: Lynn, Debbie, Daphne, Sharon

Left to Right: Lynn, Debbie, Daphne, Sharon

 

Gerald “Fud” Ford: “The beatnik days were happening then. Jim used to like— instead of listening to rock & roll records— he’d read Kenneth Rexroth and stuff like that. We’d go over to the coffeehouses and hang out in front and, you know, wearing sweatshirts and Levi’s. 

We’d go over and hang out. Put on sweatshirts and Levi’s and wear sandals and go over and hang about in front of the coffeehouses and go in and listen to the poetry sometimes; try and steal wine, spend time out at Playland-at-the-Beach. That was a great place to have fun for a kid; gone now. [Playland was a ten-acre seaside amusement park next to Ocean Beach on the west side of San Francisco that closed in 1972.]

Frank Lisciandro: Jim Morrison: Friends Gathered Together

 

Local woodworker, Philip O’Leno, who built the bar for the new Sea Gull after the fire close friends with Jim Morrison back in their college days as documented in Lisciandro’s book. I had some amazing discussions with Phillip while he was installing the bar and other wooden creations he crafted for Cellar Bar. (We didn’t change the name even though we moved the bar upstairs. I used the excuse that the Catholic priest had printed it on his business cards before the fire.)  Phillip knew about Ginsberg and Blake.  A woodworker that knew his poets defines the Mendocino at that time.

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Jack Haye artist

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Jack Haye artist

 

Bearded robots drink from Uranium coffee cups on Saturn’s ring.

Allen Ginsberg: Collected Poems 1947-1997

 

Some say coffee acts like a truth serum, that it can remove the veil of self-delusion.  I’ve found that to be true.  Never have I been so thoroughly in touch with my failings as after I’ve had a few cups of coffee and gazed into the mirror.  Coffee can make you perky and coffee has its perks. You might think I’m over-hyping the benefits.  If that’s what you think, you’ve obviously never drank a cup of real coffee.  Gordon Black, janitor/poet/radio-personality, exemplifies the power of a good cup of coffee in the picture below.  He is wearing a T-shirt designed by himself that subsequently led to a series of Sea Gull T-shirts.  James Maxwell used the photograph in depicting Gordon in one of the Sea Gull Paintings (Row, row, row).  [Thanks to Gordon for setting me straight on this in his comment below]

 

Gordon, Eliza Hicks photographer

Gordon, Eliza Hicks photographer

 

I just want a hot cup of coffee, black, and I don’t want to hear about your troubles. Charles Bukowski

 

Marlene Hall in the original Sea Gull Coffee Shop

Marlene Hall in the original Sea Gull Coffee Shop

 

Coffee can change the scene, set the mood, even control the mind.  Listen to David Byrne of Talking Heads explain the coffee chains in Venezuela.

In Venezuela there are chains of coffee shops where the clientele, almost exclusively male, is waited on by attractive women in tight outfits. The twist—what separates this chain from ordinary coffee shops—is that the interior architecture allows the female waitstaff to tower over the men. The women are positioned behind the counter on a slightly elevated platform. This means the typical Latin macho man is either being put in his place, and enjoying it, or that he is being transported back to his childhood, where his primary view is of his mother’s breasts looming conveniently above him. David Byrne: Bicycle Diaries

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Marjorie Whittig artist

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, Marjorie Whittig artist

 

The coffee shop is where people exchange ideas, watch, listen and conduct business. There are those who feel more productive in a coffee shop, who actually work there. Others go just to hang out and relax, to read, or to meet friends.  Gene Clark, founding member of The Byrds, is one of many famous people who sometimes hung out at the Sea Gull.

 

Gene expounded to Domenic Priore in 1985,”People sometimes think, and I know they’ve asked this of Dylan,’Do you write songs out of personal experiences or do you write songs like a novelist writes a novel?’ Actually, in many cases you write them out of examples you get from watching other people or situations you see, or just dream up a situation. It is sort of like a novel writer. It’s not always written because you went through a particular situation. A lot of times they are, but for the most part, most of the songs I’ve written are from observations. Something you see. Like you could be sitting at a coffee shop and see some guy arguing with his old lady or something and write a song about it.” John Einarson: Gene Clark. Mr. Tambourine Man: The Life and Legacy of The Byrds’

 

Coffee can help you set your goals, take the initiative, move forward.  You want to convince some guy to ask you on a date?  Even ask you to marry him?  Offer him a cup of coffee.  Some claim coffee is an antidote for madness, a way to reconnect with your own synapses, to reset the senses, to firm up your sense of reality.  The “coffee eyes” below confirm this.

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, R.T.S. artist

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, R.T.S. artist

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, R.T.S. artist

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, R.T.S. artist

 

Notably, women weren’t permitted in coffee shops, unless they owned or worked in them. Even a respectable lady might stop at a tavern if she needed to, for they were required by law to serve food and provide lodging. Coffee houses, which didn’t have these legal requirements, weren’t a place for even an unrespectable woman, though. Some women took exception to this custom and published a petition, “The Womens Petition Against Coffee,” which was mostly tongue-in-cheek but does provide this lively description: “….the Excessive use of that Newfangled, Abominable, Heathenish Liquor called COFFEE.”

To clear the record, I want to say that not only did we allow women in the Sea Gull Coffee Shop, we encouraged them and they were equal in all ways if not superior to the men.  Ina from Mendosas brought her own tuna fish in a can to sprinkle on her “plain green salad.” Peggy with her unruly son Dillon sat by the front door,  It was a major vacuum job under the table after Dillon and his mother left.  Char spent hours drawing pictures of horses.  There were many, many famous women going in and out of the coffee shop in those days.

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

 

The history of coffee is like history in general.  It is filled with both the positive and the negative.  Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano points this out in a single paragraph from his book Mirrors.

 

Death to Tea, Long Live Coffee 

The British Crown decreed that its colonies had to pay an unpayable tax. In 1773, furious colonists in North America sent forty tons of London tea to the bottom of the harbor. The operation was dubbed the Boston Tea Party. And the American Revolution began. Coffee became a symbol of patriotism, though there was nothing patriotic about it. It had been discovered who knows when in the hinterland of Ethiopia, when goats ate the red fruit of a bush and danced all night, and after a voyage of centuries it reached the Caribbean. In 1776, Boston’s cafés were dens of conspiracy against the British Crown. And years later, President George Washington held court in a café that sold slaves and coffee cultivated by slaves in the Caribbean. A century later, the men who won the West drank coffee by the light of their campfires, not tea. Eduardo Galleano: Mirrors: Stories of Almost Everyone

 

Marlene cooking in the old kitchen

Marlene cooking in the old kitchen

 

Historically theologians and scholars would gather at one coffee house, stock brokers at another and sea-faring merchants at another. Not only poets but physicists also have found inspiration in coffee.  We had them all in one room at the Sea Gull.

 

Menu design for new Sea Gull, Judy Brown artist

Menu design for new Sea Gull, Judy Brown artist

 

The scene is a coffeehouse. The Café Josephinum is a smell first, a stinging smell of roasted Turkish beans too heavy to waft on air and so waiting instead for the more powerful current of steam blown off the surface of boiling saucers fomenting to coffee. By merely snorting the vapors out of the air, patrons become overstimulated. The café appears in the brain as this delicious, muddy scent first, awaking a memory of the shifting room of mirrors second— the memory nearly as energetic as the actual sight of the room, which appears in the mind only third. The coffee is a fuel to power ideas. Janna Levin: A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines

 

Sometimes its only a cup of coffee that gets you through the day. Shirley Jackson, famous for her story The Lottery, wrote about the therapeutic benefits of coffee in her amusing book about motherhood, Life Among the Savages.

 

“And how do you feel? Well?” “I surely do,” I said. I took my c offee into the dining room and settled down with the morning paper. A woman in New York had had twins in a taxi. A woman in Ohio had just had her seventeenth child. A twelve-year-old girl in Mexico had given birth to a thirteen-pound boy. The lead article on the woman’s page was about how to adjust the older child to the new baby. I finally found an account of an axe murder on page seventeen, and held my coffee cup up to my face to see if the steam might revive me. Shirley Jackson: Life among the Savages

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

 

Coffee keeps you going when you’re struggling to keep awake. Sometimes it’s the only thing that can. This is especially true for students. Kafka knew this and used it in his book on Amerika.  I’ve always found interesting that Kafka wrote a book about America even though it was a place he’d only visited in his imagination.  Coffee?

 

“Oh, as for sleeping!” said the student, “I shall sleep once I’m finished with my studies. As for now, I just drink black coffee.” And he turned around, pulled a large flask from under his desk, poured black coffee into a little cup, and downed it, the way one swallows medicines quickly so as to avoid noticing the taste. “It’s such a great thing, black coffee,” said the student, “it’s a pity you’re so far away and I can’t hand you some.” “I don’t like black coffee,” said Karl. “Nor do I,” said the student, laughing. “But where would I be without it. If it weren’t for black coffee, Montly wouldn’t keep me a moment longer. I always say Montly, but of course he doesn’t even have the slightest notion I exist. I really have no idea how I would keep going at work if I didn’t always keep a flask this big in my desk, for I’ve never yet dared to give up drinking coffee, but believe me, it wouldn’t be long before I’d be lying behind the desk fast asleep. Unfortunately, people can sense this, at work they call me Black Coffee; it’s a stupid joke that has certainly harmed my chances of getting ahead.” Franz Kafka, Amerika or The Missing Person

 

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

Sea Gull Cellar Bar Napkin Art, artist unknown

 

Coffee has been written into so many poems, stories, and novels that its impossible to keep track.  Richard Brautigan, who visited the Sea Gull, included a story titled simply “Coffee” in Revenge of the Lawn, a book of his short fiction.

 

They say in the spring a young man’s fancy turns to thoughts of love. Perhaps if he has enough time left over, his fancy can even make room for a cup of coffee. Richard Brautigan, Revenge of the Lawn, The Abortion, So the Wind Won’t Blow It All Away

 

Coffee is so essential to writers that an entire publishing company has been named after coffee.

Coffee House Press THE MISSION of Coffee House Press is to publish exciting, vital, and enduring authors of our time; to delight and inspire readers; to contribute to the cultural life of our community; and to enrich our literary heritage. By building on the best traditions of publishing and the book arts, we produce books that celebrate imagination, innovation in the craft of writing, and the many authentic voices of the American experience. Visit us at coffeehousepress.org.

 

Coffee House Press publishes one of my favorite new authors, Valeria Luiselli. She herself is a lover of fine coffee.  She wrote a paragraph on coffee’s ability to help pass the time.

 

I’d been in the Lebanese café for a few hours waiting for the rain to pass, half reading a scholarly edition of Rousseau’s Meditations, half studying a group of old men drinking coffee and silently playing dominos at the next table. I’d got stuck on a Rousseauian phrase, possibly more ingenious than rational, about how adversity is a schoolmistress whose teaching comes too late to be truly useful. Salvatore remembered that meditation, he said. I had a Pentax with me that I’d just picked up from one of the camera repair shops on the street and, more from boredom than real interest, I’d been taking photos of the old men. Slow-witted pupils of adversity, Salvatore concluded, thinking himself very clever. When it finally stopped raining, I took a last gulp of coffee, put a twenty-peso bill under the sugar bowl, and made my way to the door. (Passing the old men’s table, I overheard them speculating about the firmness of my ass.) I stopped in the doorway for a moment to look along the street: rain-soaked, Mexico City returns to being that valley that obsessed Cortés, Juan Zorrilla, and Velasco. I raised the camera, focused on a Rousseauian pedestrian who, at that moment, was jumping over a puddle, and shot. Valeria Luiselli: Faces in the Crowd

 

Is it possible to measure the quality of your life with cups of coffee?  Will coffee help you get in touch with your emotions?  Can coffee assist you in deciphering the mystery of life?  Yes, yes and yes again.  In conclusion, I will return to Roberto Bolaño’s The Savage Detectives.

 

“And I asked the boys, I said, boys, what do you make of this poem? I said, boys, I’ve been looking at it for more than forty years and I’ve never understood a goddamn thing…I remember that while I was drinking the coffee the boys sat down across from me again and talked about the other pieces in Caborca. Well, then, I said, what’s the mystery? Then the boys looked at me and said: there is no mystery Amadeo.”

 

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THE NAMES:  SEA GULL BUILDERS, CHARACTERS, EMPLOYEES, FRIENDS, AND PASSERS THROUGH – THANKS TO ALL FOR WHAT YOU DID FOR US

 

Some of the Crew, Nicholas Wilson photographer

Some of the Crew, Nicholas Wilson photographer

 

The Crew That Rebuild the Sea Gull (Mendocino Beacon, June 16, 1977)

 

Mike Nielson

Gus Acosta

Phil Brock

Chris Brown

Steve Scudder

Neil Erikson

Dick Barham

Dan Wilson

Rick Lane

Cheryl McConnell

Sally Howell

Tom Quinn

Kathy O’Grady

Judy Brown

Nehemiah Bear

Bruce Dahl

Lloyd Taylor

John Fredericks

Ilja Tinfo

Steve Weingarten

Len Peterson

Paul Townsend

Pat LaDue

Stuart Marks

Elmer Whaley

Ralph Umbertis

Suzy Wilson

Bill Spencer

Patti Larrick

John Knobber

Brian Lee

Phillip Oleno

Leone McNiel

Jim Schell

James Rolfe

James Maxwell

Stan Kelly

Ken Stevens

Lucy Loren

Bob Zvolensky

Beverly Francis-Gunsul

Gail Lucas

John Birchard

John Chamberlain

Byrd Baker

Bruce Sloan

Eleanor Hill Edwards

Lew Harris

Tom Griffiths

Bill Provost

Sam McNeil

Harriet and Dr. Tepfer

Jack Moyer

Dick Mabbatt

Clifford Doolittle

Cherie Christiansen

Lorna Young

David Clayton

 

Another Crew Picture, Nicholas Wilson photographer

Another Crew Picture, Nicholas Wilson photographer

 

Sea Gull Customers, Friends, Employees and Passers Through (Mendocino Beacon, August 29, 1985)

 

Marlene McIntyre

Julia Calouro

Angie Panfilio

David Russell

Steve Budnick

Randy, Paula, Shannon and Aaron Panfilio

Janet Morris

Kathy Kiefer

Carl Stevens

Linda Stroh

Sula Combs

Beck Dodds

Richard Albright

Dr. David & Cathy Baines (Cathy Panfilio)

Kelly Sanger

Allison Browne

Roseanne Sink

Berverlee, Don & John Younger

Monty & Barbara Reed

Joan & Jack Carlson

Don Pollard

Biage Quattrocchi

Dick & Laura Brandon

Jeff, Bobby and Sis Burdick

Rod Holden

Geo Masterson

Jeanne Sullivan

Barbara Grable

Walter Mapes

Ed Glazer

Bill & Gwen Jacobson

Bob Heron

Linda Friedman

Michael Nankervis

Richard Cooper

Ruth & Peter Veres

Carolyn & Mike Kostick

Brenda & Larry Costa

Patsy Brown

Ray Furey

Francis Rutherford

Peter Cecchi

Jason Keseric

Skip Jones

Kenneth Shrode

Hank Dahl

Bob Rosenfeld

James Maxwell

Fred Greer

Bob & Jean Droz

Charlie Remer

Ellen Callas

Greg Hillman

Shawnis Michaels

Doug Nunn

Tracy Burns

Hit & Run Theatre

Richard Reeves

Sheila Burns Sosnovec

Antonia Lamb

Jim Lamb

Baby Fae and the Heart Throbs

Carlotta

Georgia Lane

Vicki Ward

Carl Hayward

Marina Balassi

Kathie Golightly

Kita Alford

Al Fiefer

Gary Aumack

Craig Tingle

Pacini Wines

Butch Deas

Michael Beck

Sheila Kirbow

John Rogers

The Story Book Playes

John Fredricks

Neva Beach

Jo McClure

Lee Welty

Harry Rothman

Gordon Black

David & Marie Matlin

Dee & Rich Lemos

Rick Lemos

Bruce Dahl

Bonnie Tillotson

Laura Grube

Ilja Tinfo

John Bush

Mark Perkins

Chris Lloyd

Marie Ripley

Karin Givon

Grace Sandefur

Kristy Hotchkiss

Bob & Carol Goodwin Blick

Blayne Link

Oscar

The Scudders

Tom Quinn

Jackie Dornan

Bev & Jake Van Horn

Charley Swehla

Bill Vargas

Steve LaChapelle

Emery Burkey

Thom Thompson

John Wetzler

Deb Kelly

Martha Wagner

Bill Wagner

Mike L. Evans

Wolfgang Hasselkuss

Linda Stuart

Pam Rose

Mr. & Mrs. August Brings

Mamie Mendosa

Alvin & Jeanette Mendosa

Mary Kuvaja

Susie Zipp

Mary Dougherty

Lee & Lorena Edmundson

Jack Kronfeld

Eric Schmid

Patti Long

Joan & Jeff Stanford

Betty Chastain

Bob & Dorothy Ayres

Mark Hughes

Marc Diamond

Karl Schoen

Daney Dawson

The Bob Ayres Big Band

Carla Jupiter

Nancy New

Toni Dance

Lorna Young

Bob & Verna Defer

Chris Hayter

Eva Anderson

Judy Sperling

Ruth Dobberpuhl

Richard Yaski

Leila Bryant

Josh Maloney

Daphne Jacobson

Roy Hoggard

Gary Sheppard

Frank Meyers

Fred Lemin

Eric Jordan

Bill McNeil

Carolyn Lundquist

Fancy That

Tickle Your Fancy

David Gross

Mitch Ortiz

Mendocino Bakery

Laoma Bryant

Estelle Grunewald

Michael Grean

Napkin Artists

Sandra Lindstrom

Deb Fedornak

Charlene Stevens

Larry & Lorraine Halter

Joanie James

Myrna Sharp

Kevin & JoAnn Athey

Mark Engleman

Bessy Moore

Monique Timberlake

Mendocino Coast Jazz Society

Sharon Schlesenger

John Chamberlain

  1. Rudin

Peter & Diane Wells

Gary Olander

Frederick Geers

Nita & Ed Pillsbury

Matt & Ute Roland

Denali & Tom Files

Jack Fremont

Rhoda Teplow

Arlene Crandall

Rosana Rathbun

Harold Robinson

Sunny, Danny & Leif Barca

Mendocino Music

Gloriana Opera Co.

Sally Stevens

Mike Westerlund

George Spiker Manchester

Tom Brist

Rosie O’Grady

Grail Dawson

Betty Barber

Elinor Hayes

Dwain Ray

Bill Zacha

Jennie Zacha

Maydene Burtt

Dottie Hill

Sheldon Cox

Barbara Lane

Betty & Warren Williams

Michael Jolliffe

Jean Sidjakov

Bobby Markels

Gale & Marva Brandon

Lee Larson

Eve Rice

Gail Lauinger

Jenny Otter

Kathi Griffen

Mrs. T

Randy King

Fran & Larry Heit

Rainsong

Melting Pot

Old Gold

Alice Wittig

Marilee Acklin

Katherine & Harold Henderson

Déjà vu

Mike Velasquez

Mark Safron

Jim & Judy Tarbell

Sue Siskin

Don & Shirley Kirkpatrick

North Coast Cookie Co.

Peter Lit

Joanna C. H. Lamb

Mendocino Beacon

Colonel Wingnuts

Great Put On

Elan

Metro

Penny & John d’Arcy

Jim & Rochelle Marquardt

Betty J. Allen & Cory Wisnia

 

Entrance to the Sea Gull Coffee Shop, Nicholas Wilson photographer

Entrance to the Sea Gull Coffee Shop, Nicholas Wilson photographer