
Sunday, October 21, 2007
Me Too Iguana...

Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Bile Is Back In!

A while back, Matt was reading Athletics Nation, the blog he obsessively checked for new posts from obsessive A's fans salivating or fuming over every new thread of a rumor related to the team. I believe this was even before the last season started so it was just speculation about the arrival of the first pitch of the season. Anyway, one of these rumors was that a despised Anaheim Angel player might be signed to play for the A's and some clever and outraged A's fan posted "I think I just threw up a little in my mouth."
As much as I may not need to hear every little detail about the A's the way that avid readers of Athletics Nation might, I was THRILLED to have this information relayed to me. I just threw up a little in my mouth. It's f-ing brilliant! I love it. And I've used it - judiciously, of course -- no point in quickly burning out on the best phrase i've heard in some time - since then.
Fast forward to one of the many more rambunctious nights at Sky from this harvest. It was just a small group of us staying up past when we should have long since been sawing logs to build up stamina for the day of picking ahead of us. I vaguely recall Alyks, Ttam, Amolap and Lav talking incessantly over each other, jockeying for the floor, snorting and chortling (what the hell is chortling, anyway??). Drinking all the Trumer in sight and imbibing who knows what else. All of a sudden, there is an overwhelming stench assaulting our intoxicated senses -- and it is not coming from the prime suspect among the four of us. Amalap jumps up on a chair and yells something about a skunk walking into the kitchen with us. General chaos insues. Oh my god, did it smell. One of us MUST have gotten sprayed!! It became absolutely critical to evacuate the kitchen. We wandered around looking for a sanctuary from the stench and covertly trying to smell each other to find out who was the targeted culprit. Eventually we find ourselves on the front porch and someone starts retching. A dry heave-fest ensues. Think of that scene in Stand By Me with the pie eating contest that turns into a lumpy laugh fest but without the projectile vomiting. Mica eventually shows up to investigate the horrendous sounds and inform us that it was acutally the dog that got skunked. Things simmer down and as the dust settles, we take stock of our situation. It turns out that Lav might have blown a chunk and change, but the rest of us were able to keep our cookies down.


That's the thing about bile. It's just so FUN to talk about. Few things are as visually and verbally stimulating (even if in a repulsively can't-stay-away sort of way) and as humorous. Anything for a laugh...
Saturday, October 6, 2007
I'm Wacko, I'm Yacko, and I'm....CUTE!

I started this post a week or so ago and forgot where I was going with it. Lets just assume it was witty and insightful and call it a day.
The crew above (working hard, or hardly working?) is pretty darn cute, I must admit. Although, it does seem like they are a little too cool for school. And if you don't get the title, please do us all a favor and watch yourself a little Animaniacs. Its really that good.


Perhaps I am spouting much ado about nothing this evening. Perhaps its the effect of the perfect Mandarin Hangar One and Tonic that Matt has so skillfully created tonight. Perhaps its just my favorite M.O. When you go this much, eventually something must hit the mark, even if its entirely on accident.
Friday, September 28, 2007
Sky Article in the Chron from September 7, 2007

Beyond the corporate players and cult hits is a side of the valley few people know
Jon Bonné, Chronicle Wine Editor
Friday, September 7, 2007
(excerpts)
On the face of it, Sky Vineyards shouldn't even be in Napa Valley. Its mailing address is in Sonoma County. So is the turnoff to its long dirt driveway. Only as you climb near the summit of Mount Veeder and cross the precipitous ranch trail that divides the two counties, do you finally reach Sky's 14 acres of gnarled vines.
This is Napa.
No manicured estates up here. Just a couple of weather-worn buildings filled with nubby rugs, a wood stove, bare-bones kitchen and reams of paintings and sketches, one of which graces Sky's labels each year. The owner, Lore Olds, sits on the porch of his unpainted cabin, describing life above the fog line.
"This is probably Napa's s- chateau," he remarks, "and I say that proudly."
There is the Public Napa. Its established names sit imperiously on Highway 29 and Silverado Trail, courting visitors who come for a picture-perfect glimpse of where American wine came of age. Many began as modest family establishments in the late 1960s and early '70s, often growing to huge proportions as their fame spread.
Increasingly, they are now corporate affairs. When Warren Winiarski sold Stag's Leap Wine Cellars to Antinori and Ste. Michelle Wine Estates in July, he joined a long list of preeminent names who have turned over the keys to big concerns: such wineries as Beringer, Beaulieu Vineyard and of course, the template-setting Robert Mondavi Winery.
Then, there is the Private Napa. These are cult names like Colgin Cellars, Bryant Family and Dalla Valle, an elite tier with just the opposite goal: Keep the public away from the gates, and welcome a select few to worship at the altar of $200 Cabernets. This second wave began in the 1970s but hit high gear in the booming '90s, when the model for a Napa winery went from public to private (in part, after walk-in tasting permits were frozen by a 1990 ordinance). Most newcomers now aspire to follow in the model of Screaming Eagle, whose very location is a closely kept secret to ward off supplicants begging for a place on its waiting list.
These two Napas share some common goals: preserve the valley's image as idyllic wine-fueled paradise, where the legend of the small family winery lives on, where all wine is wonderful and all vintages, like the children of Lake Wobegon, are above average. Without this buffed-up version of reality, Napa's rarefied image and high prices would be at risk.
Then there is a third Napa: wineries that stayed small without grasping for cult status. Call it the Alternative Napa. No single thread binds them, but their wines are well regarded enough to attract distributors and regular customers.
While not cheap, the bottles are usually reasonable, at least by Napa standards. Most vintners arrived early enough to buy wineries before land prices went stratospheric. Typically, they have been out working in the fields as Napa matured around them into a playground for the rich.
These scattered holdouts occupy an increasingly rare place. Here's a side of Napa Valley that's largely been obscured from view.
Mount Veeder
Spring Mountain's contradictions seem mild compared to those on Mount Veeder. There you'll find large, prestigious wineries like the Hess Collection, owned by Swiss businessman Donald Hess, and Mount Veeder Winery, now owned by Constellation Brands, the world's largest wine company.
There may be fewer than 20 wineries in the sprawling Mount Veeder appellation, which covers 15,000 acres, but it's more than Bob Travers recalls being in all of Napa County when he arrived in 1968. Travers, owner of Mayacamas Vineyards, continues to make one of the long-lived Cabernets that helped establish Napa's reputation; in 1976, it was one of those chosen for the Judgment of Paris tasting.
Now Travers remains away from the tourist fray, still making the same 4,000 or so cases per year he did 30 years ago. At 2,400 feet, his dry-farmed vines yield just a ton or two an acre. But the wines are amazingly durable; Travers just re-released the 1991 Cabernet. "It's still a young wine," he insists.
Just down the road lies Sky Vineyards, where Lore Olds and his daughter, Mayacamas (call her Maya), grow mountaintop Zin and Syrah at 2,100 feet in the heart of Cabernet country.
In the early 1900s, this patch of the Mayacamas was a resort. By late 1972, when Lore Olds showed up, the site was long deserted. He had been working throughout Napa and Sonoma, including on a commune at Sonoma's Old Hill Ranch. He'd also been hunting for a vineyard, one high in the hills with an eastern slope so grapes could ripen in the morning sun's softer rays. This was perfect. Olds bonded the winery in 1979, the same year he went to work for Bob Travers as assistant winemaker.
Maya grew up atop Mount Veeder, then attended Davis and worked in Australia before settling in downtown Sonoma two years ago and taking a job with Phil Coturri's Enterprise Vineyards management company. Now she farms many of the same plots from her dad's hippie days, with one big difference: "I can't even comprehend the amount of money that a lot of my clients have," she says.
Sky may be off the map, but it's hardly cut off from the world. Lore Olds, 61, grew up in Berkeley, where his mother, Betty, is still a city councilwoman. His girlfriend, Amy Dencler, works at Chez Panisse, which gets the fruit from his century-old quince tree.
Obscurity has its challenges. Sales are slow; if they improve, Olds will buy new barrels, enough for 15 percent of his wine. (It used to be 50 percent.) The family harvests virtually all the grapes themselves, hauling some 15 tons to a low barn filled with barrels, cases and a prosciutto Maya is curing.
The grapes go into an old hand press bought from Conrad Viano, whose family planted its Martinez vineyard in 1888. "The wine gets pressed however hard the local teenager can press it," says Lore.
"There's not many of us teenagers around here anymore," Maya replies. She's 32.
2004 Sky Vineyards Mt. Veeder Syrah ($40) The Syrah up atop Mt. Veeder is a newcomer, arriving in just 2000. But it's a curious beast - intensely floral, with the same vibrant, florid fruit that dominates Sky's Zinfandel (pictured above). That Zin can be light, almost Beaujolais-like, at times, but the Syrah has a pleasing weight. Built around a core of gray mineral flavors, it's got a juiciness that offsets its slightly tannic, if refined, texture. A bit rustic, but the texture, and bright purple fruit flavors, give it a nuance lacking in many Napa Valley Syrahs.
Friday, September 21, 2007
I am a Slacker of Sky

Harvest is here. Well, way past here, actually. We're two weekends in, have 11 tons in the winery, a weekend off and then full on again. Its been a good harvest so far. Weather's been cool, picking crews have been big, and everyone has something to say. For a change.

The crews has been fantastic. Big. I know size isn't everything, but, you know, sometimes it is. Tons of people make the tons go quicker. You can even get away with looking cute on a bike instead of laboring away beneath the vines (but only briefly). And the crews have been so fab that they barely complain after 18 yellow jacket stings or blistering burns from picking molten glass out of the fireplace (what a sec, that last part was me). Which brings us to part ii of the joy of this harvest.

Lots of raging.
What the hell is he doing anyway? Besides rightfully flipping me off as he slurps up the last of the Trumer that matt and I brought up. What the hell is with these Trumer sluts? It's like sky is infested with them, along with the R.O.U.S.es that live in the closet I grew up in. Anyway, what I was on about? Lots of awesome Gee-tar playing around the fire and blah blah blah-ing loudly into the wee hours, only to get up for another long day. Nothin' better than sweating the last of the alcohol (or *whatever*) somewhere shortly before the mid-morning break. I still have the haunting refrain from my favorite of Cameron's from the weekend knocking about in the basement of my brain. (If only I could hear the actual words so someone would tell me what the hell the song is & I could find it somewhere).


ps. All the victims of the vicious yellow jacket attack have been vindicated. Against the advise of his lawyer, Matt joined a number of hooligans in pouring diesel fuel into their home and burning the shit out of those fuckers. Lets just say: mistakes were made. drinks were had. boys were scolded. and people died (ok, no people, just the sociopathic yellow jackets).
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Grandpa's Obituary

Walter Olds 89, died of cancer on August 17, 2007, at his home in Berkeley, where he had lived for the past 54 years. Walter was born on a farm in Iowa in 1918 and learned carpentry from his grandfather, with whom he lived while attending high school. Walter was a quiet and private person, who designed and built the leaded glass and most of the furniture in the family home. He graduated from Iowa State University in 1942 with degrees in architecture and civil engineering. While waiting in the university library for his girlfriend and future wife of 65 years, Betty Milne, Walter discovered a magazine about the work of the architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. Inspired to devote his career to the study and practice of architecture, in 1947 he was accepted by Mr. Wright as an apprentice at the Taliesin Fellowship. Later Walter would serve as the senior apprentice and supervisor for the Wright-designed V.C. Morris building on Maiden Lane in San Francisco, the Walker residence in Carmel and the Buehler residence in Orinda. After leaving Taliesin, he was hired as the first employee of the architectural firm of Anshen and Allen. He later joined the firm Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, where he spent the next 40 years of his career. His first few years at SOM were spent in Okinawa working on the reconstruction after World War II. Retiring from SOM in 1990, Walter continued to practice architecture. In 1994, he supervised the restoration of the Wright-designed Buehler home, which had been partially destroyed by fire, and had recently designed a home for a longtime client in Kenwood. Walter Olds was an avid hiker and with his wife, traveled extensively around the world, often with the Sierra Club. He is survived by his wife, Betty Olds, a Berkeley Council Member; sons, Lore and Colby (Deborah); daughter, Marcia, and four grandchildren, Mayacamas, Skyla, Olivia and Samuel. There will be a private family service. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to The Nature Conservancy, 4245 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 100, Arlington, VA 22203.
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
More ironic than Alanis Morrisette...

8.20.2007
I just finished reading The World According to Garp by John Irving. I initially resisted the book due to some early Wellesley bashing, but by the end, I really enjoyed it. For me, the book was about death and the irony and absurdity that often accompany it. Garp loved an ironic, unexpected, and ultimately karmic death.
As I sat in the corner of the café near my house frantically to finish some work on a death penalty appeal that I’m behind on, I had a vision of my own death. The tables and chairs are bulky and placed close together here. Between me and the door is a larger table. A woman with a huge stroller was trying to maneuver her way to the table and eventually had to park the stroller outside and bring only the bulky car seat with baby in to set next to me on the bench. The difficulty of logistics inherent in this small activity caught my attention and distracted me. Moments later, her friend arrived with another oversized stroller and they shuffled the large chairs to make room at the table to park the baby. Just settled in to drink lattes and discuss the latest triumphs of their precious little things, I had a vision of a fire in the café. I am stuck in the corner, trapped by the large machinery of birth, with all fire exits and paths to the door blocked by the oversized stroller. At the end, the babies take their collective revenge for my obstinate immunity to their charm. It would be a death that Garp would appreciate.
Of course, real death is neither ironic nor absurd. It is not romantic nor literary. It is sad. So so sad. Heartbreakingly so. It is painful and it hurts. Even if there is relief in some death, there is nothing redeeming or sensible about it. It just hurts.
Monday, June 25, 2007
chooks

we've got chooks.
they are very exciting. Chris built a chickencoop where the bottom rows of monkey island used to be and after nurturing the chicks through their early months, Linn brought them up to their new home.
There are four chooks and about ten names. Originally, Linn's seventh grade girls named them Grimia, Einstein, Dina maybe? and I forget. (no, i really do, that's not the name). Pomme thinks she should get to name them since Chris built the coop. So she has her own names for them all. Dad can't call anyone by their right name, and certainly not the chickens, so he's got Benjamin, Jessamia, and the little guy. Amy calls the aggressive piggy one Jezebel. I named the runt Pigeon (same word as Dove in Puerto Rico, and Paloma's most despised creatures) and then dad and I changed it to Pigelina (mixing in Pomme's middle name). We think we're funny. Paloma, oddly, hates it . The naming wars continue but I imagine it will settle out eventually. Or not. I guess Jesse's dog has at least5 different names: Sasha, Salsa, ratdog, X-dog, wiggles.

Anyway, Dad makes oatmeal each morning and takes it out to the coop. Like everyone up there, the chooks are very snobby about what they'll consume. Is that parslane organic? they wonder. I went out to observe the morning meal. Dad sat down on the ground in the breakfast nook, put Pigelina on one shoulder, Jezebel on the other, and fed them all breakfast. Benjamin is apparently the gross one. She seemed more interested in picking at dad's burn scabs on his arm than the oats. It was a funny scene. Dad looked like St. Francis of Assisi preaching to the birds. Probably more worthwhile than preaching to anyone else up there.
No pictures yet of the chooks, so i put up dad with the wall of roosters behind him.
in spite of my rage
Particularly now. Roberts, Alito and the rest eviscerating the delicate balance that made compliance in system possibly worthwhile. They don’t even apply to fundamental principles of our legal system – already stacked against the powerless and unwanted – evenhandedly. The arrogance of their easy execution of injustice inflames me. I understand what people mean when they say they see red and are consumed by rage. You feel it within your body.
Makes me want to stop. Alternately makes me want to withdraw into the easy distraction of daily life and pursue my own happiness; or give it all up and truly crusade for change through drastic measures. But the war rages in my head and never trickles down to my actions. In spite of my rage I am still just a rat in a cage.
What does it all mean? I feel eternally plagued by this question. I’ll be drawn into work or life and forget to obsess on the central existential questions, and then they come rushing back into focus, eclipsing the minutia of the mundane. But no answers, ever. Only the question and the possibilities of ignoring it for just a little while longer.
6.25.07 (happy birthday amy) upon reading of Supreme Court opinion in Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon.