2018 September COLONY Magazine
COLONY Magazine — Your Hometown Magazine. A collection of events, activities, news, business, and culture for the Atascadero area.
COLONY Magazine — Your Hometown Magazine. A collection of events, activities, news, business, and culture for the Atascadero area.
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<strong>COLONY</strong>MAGAZINE.COM
2 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
FEATURES<br />
contents<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, Issue 3<br />
18 20<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> DAYS<br />
IT’S NOT JUST A PARADE! <strong>COLONY</strong> DAYS BRINGS FUN ACTIVITES TO SUNKEN GARDENS,<br />
FROM A HISTORIC RE-CREATION TO WEINER DOG RACES AND MORE<br />
WAYNE COOPER: IN SERVICE<br />
FRIENDS, FAMILY AND COMMUNITY MEMBERS<br />
HONOR ONE OF ATASCADERO’S LEADERS<br />
DEPARTMENTS<br />
31 24 11<br />
SOMETHING WORTH READING<br />
06 Publisher’s Letter<br />
ROUND TOWN<br />
08 Colony Buzz<br />
10 Santa Margarita: Small Town, Big Heart<br />
11 Third Annual Cornhole Tournament<br />
12 On the Road with Pope X3<br />
13 Wine Country Theatre: Moonlight & Magnolias<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> PEOPLE<br />
14 Karen McNamara:Community Advocate<br />
16 Nate Conrad: Student Becomes the Teacher<br />
17 Doug Filipponi:Savoring the Good Life<br />
BUSINESS<br />
22 John’s Video Palace: Family-Friendly<br />
Entertainment for 30 Years<br />
TENT CITY<br />
24 Colony Days Brings Tent City Re-Creation<br />
25 Tent City After Dark Moves to Friday<br />
26 Veterans Memorial Needs Volunteers<br />
27 Battling the Back to School Blues<br />
by County Superintendent Jim Brescia<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> TASTE<br />
28 Taste of Americana: The Colony Cookbook<br />
29 Ancient Peaks: Historic Roots, Rich History<br />
EVENTS<br />
30 North SLO County Activity & Event Guide<br />
31 Whale Rock Music & Art Fest Promises a Hit<br />
LAST WORD<br />
34 Boys & Girls Club: Champions of Youth<br />
ON THE COVER<br />
Ancient Peaks Winery in Santa Margarita<br />
By Cameron Ingalls<br />
4 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 5
Something Worth Reading<br />
ATASCADERO — SANTA MARGARITA — CRESTON<br />
BUSINESS | DINING | SHOPPING | ARTS | EVENTS | PEOPLE | NEWS<br />
805-391-4566<br />
publisher@colonymagazine.com<br />
MAIL: P.O. Box 163<br />
Atascadero, CA 93423<br />
PUBLISHER, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF<br />
Nicholas Mattson<br />
publisher@colonymagazine.com<br />
OPERATIONS DIRECTOR<br />
Hayley Mattson<br />
EDITOR<br />
Luke Phillips<br />
LEAD AD DESIGN<br />
Denise McLean, Mode<br />
Communications<br />
LEAD LAYOUT DESIGN<br />
Travis Ruppe<br />
GRAPHIC DESIGN<br />
Aaron Seedorf<br />
ART PRODUCTION<br />
Sue Dill<br />
WINE EDITOR<br />
Mira Honeycutt<br />
WRITER<br />
Melissa Chavez<br />
WRITER<br />
Heather Young<br />
COLUMNIST<br />
Sarah Pope<br />
COLUMNIST<br />
Simone Smith<br />
COLUMNIST<br />
Barbie Butz<br />
VOLUME 1 | NUMBER 3<br />
19,000 Printed | 15,775 Mailed<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> is published monthly and distributed FREE to every<br />
residence and business in Atascadero 93422, Santa Margarita 93453, and<br />
Creston 93432 zip codes. Postage paid at Paso Robles, CA 93446.<br />
3,200 Dropped at High Traffic Locations<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> is also available for our visitors at wineries, Chamber of Commerce,<br />
North County Transportation Center, local motels, hotels, vacation homes, B&Bs, the<br />
airport, doctor’s offices, restaurants, and other high-traffic hotspots.<br />
Subscriptions<br />
AD CONSULTANT & WRITER<br />
Millie Drum<br />
AD CONSULTANT<br />
Pam Osborn<br />
AD CONSULTANT<br />
Jamie Self<br />
AD CONSULTANT<br />
Karli Twisselman<br />
AD CONSULTANT<br />
Carmen Burton Kessler<br />
<strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> ©<strong>2018</strong><br />
is owned and published by<br />
Nicholas & Hayley Mattson<br />
*No part of this periodical may be reproduced in<br />
any form by any means without written consent<br />
from <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />
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Let us keep our faces to the sunshine<br />
and we will not see the shadows.<br />
— E.G. Lewis<br />
Happy birthday to us! Yep, we are<br />
officially 12 months into our<br />
ownership of PASO <strong>Magazine</strong><br />
and we are thrilled about where we are<br />
going. With the launch of <strong>COLONY</strong><br />
<strong>Magazine</strong> for Atascadero and Santa<br />
Margarita, we are proving that print is<br />
alive and well, and we love being a part of<br />
making a community like ours stronger.<br />
For many years — after picking it up<br />
as a quote misattributed to Benjamin<br />
Franklin — I have kept the motto “Do<br />
something worth writing, or write something<br />
worth reading.”<br />
As a member of our local media, it is a pleasure to live in a community<br />
that continues to produce things worth writing about, so we can fulfill<br />
our part in writing something worth reading.<br />
Thank you all for being a part of this early journey. Now three months<br />
into a new life as <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, we could not be more proud of<br />
the team and the community that has come together to make it all work!<br />
We took over PASO for the October 2017 issue, went glossy in<br />
December, made a splash in January with a polar bear dip cover and our<br />
inaugural Taste of PASO restaurant issue (watch out for our second annual!<br />
It will be even bigger). We added a couple of columnists to give our<br />
young parents some ideas about activities and outings with the kids, with<br />
Tonya Strickland of Two In Tow and Sarah Pope with Pope X 3.<br />
As a member of the community, we’ve partnered with the Chamber<br />
of Commerce, Paso Robles Event Center and California Mid-State Fair,<br />
and continued to support our Downtown Paso Robles Main Street Association.<br />
We also continued our focus on our local nonprofit organizations,<br />
including Boys & Girls Club, Committee for Atascadero Public Schools,<br />
Colony Days, Printery Foundation, and other events throughout the<br />
year. We have a great community to partner with and we look forward to<br />
doing that for all our community organizations.<br />
My wife and I serve on multiple boards as directors and volunteers and<br />
we know how much work goes into providing services to those in need,<br />
or producing community-centered events that make our community<br />
great. Some might want to Make America Great Again, and that sound<br />
wonderful, but around here, we have a long history of working together<br />
for a great community, and we just want to do what we can to Keep<br />
North SLO County Great … and make it even better.<br />
We are moving into our second year with a full head of steam and a<br />
few more great things we are excited to release as a service to our community.<br />
We are destined to become a community favorite, and appreciate<br />
everyone’s encouragement as we introduced <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> with<br />
the hope to improve the community and present our community to<br />
visitors, and the support that our local businesses and advertisers deserve<br />
for supporting such a great community asset.<br />
Please enjoy this issue of <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />
Nicholas Mattson<br />
805-391-4566<br />
nic@colonymagazine.com<br />
If thou wouldest win Immortality<br />
of Name, either do things worth<br />
the writing, or write things<br />
worth the reading.<br />
For advertising inquiries and rates, story ideas and submission of photos,<br />
letters, press releases, etc., email publisher@<strong>COLONY</strong>magazine.com.<br />
— Thomas Fuller, 1727<br />
6 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
The Hope Chest Emporium<br />
Old Ranch and Antique to Just-Made Local Goods<br />
We Carry a Unique Blend<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 7
Plop a Spot for<br />
Cow Pie Bingo<br />
The Atascadero Printery Foundation is selling<br />
tickets to a unique FUNdraiser that waits<br />
for nature to call. The second annual Cow<br />
Pie Bingo will<br />
be set to music<br />
by Shelly and<br />
the Classics on<br />
Sunday, Sept. 16.<br />
The event will<br />
include food,<br />
drinks, fun and<br />
games, and plain old good times on the grounds<br />
of the Atascadero Printery building while the<br />
crowd waits for Betsy to get down to business.<br />
How it works, is there is a bingo grid with<br />
squares sold to participants and the cow meanders<br />
around the grid, looking to pick a lucky<br />
winner with a plop on their spot.<br />
Folks have at least a one in 500 chance of<br />
winning, although some have already purchase<br />
plots of fertile property in three-bythree<br />
squares, increasing their chances that<br />
ol’ Betsy will deposit her brown gold in space<br />
under their dominion.<br />
It all goes to a good cause in helping the<br />
Atascadero Printery Foundation to raise funds<br />
for its mission to reclaim, rehabilitate, and repurpose<br />
the “Press Building” into a multipurpose,<br />
community-use facility.<br />
Funds from the event will count toward the<br />
foundation’s effort to win the 2019 Dancing<br />
With Our Stars as an added bonus.<br />
To purchase tickets for the event, go to<br />
atascaderoprintery.org/cow-pie-bingo-squares<br />
Enjoy An Evening<br />
in Santa Margarita<br />
Celebrate Santa Margarita and indulge<br />
in all it has to offer during An Evening<br />
in Santa Margarita on Friday, Sept. 14<br />
from 5 to 9 p.m.<br />
Enjoy music, food, drinks, and crafts while<br />
strolling through town, and to sweeten the<br />
flavor of the evening, proceeds go to support<br />
Friends of the Santa Margarita Library.<br />
Cruise down El Camino and stop at your<br />
favorite shops and restaurants or if you’ve never<br />
been, visit them for the first time — either way,<br />
take some time to explore.<br />
The evening will feature vintage cars, wine<br />
tasting, and ice cream sundaes at The Barn Antiques<br />
& Unique, as well as a cornhole contest<br />
outside Margarita Bikes.<br />
Get a lecture at Educated Gardner, find children’s<br />
activities outside Something Blue, or take<br />
the kids over to see the Santa Margarita Fire<br />
Department fire truck.<br />
Local restaurants will donate a portion<br />
of their sales to Friends of the Santa<br />
Margarita Library.<br />
Participating businesses include, Studio58,<br />
The Barn Antiques & Unique, HOME •santa<br />
margarita•, Casa Loma Rustic Furnishings,<br />
The Educated<br />
Gardener, Something<br />
Blue-Fine<br />
Sewing and<br />
Wedding Alterations,<br />
Margarita<br />
Bikes, Ragtime<br />
Clothing,<br />
Ancient Peaks<br />
Winery, Soaring Hawk Vineyards, Sculpterra<br />
Winery, JUSTIN Vineyards & Winery, Vintage<br />
Cowboy Winery, The Porch Cafe, The<br />
Range, Rosalina’s, Pacific Beverage, Southern<br />
Station, and Paradise Shaved Ice. And our<br />
sponsors ~ Diamond M Investments, Foundation<br />
Solutions, Oak Country Lumber, Pintor’s<br />
Tire & Wheel, Santa Margarita Feed and Joel<br />
Switzer Diesel Repair.<br />
Movies in the Gardens<br />
Playing Two More Weeks<br />
Two more dates are left for Movies in the<br />
Gardens, with “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” and<br />
“Wonder”<br />
rounding out<br />
this year’s<br />
outdoor<br />
movie schedule<br />
at Sunken<br />
Gardens<br />
on Saturday,<br />
Sept. 1 and<br />
Saturday,<br />
Sept. 8.<br />
If you don’t know what Star Wars is by now,<br />
you probably really don’t care, so we’ll save the<br />
unnecessary description — but go see it in the<br />
park anyways. It will be worth it. The latest Star<br />
Wars installment was critically acclaimed by<br />
the movie review site Rotten Tomatoes, with<br />
a 91 percent on the Tomatometer. Audiences<br />
gave it 46 percent, but probably none of them<br />
saw it outside under the Atascadero stars with<br />
hundreds of friends and neighbors.<br />
“Wonder,” on the other hand, is worth<br />
talking about as the name gives you pretty<br />
much nothing. Wonder was well-received by<br />
audiences and critics alike, and is kind of like<br />
the story of every home-school kid’s first day of<br />
public school — except … August Pullman has<br />
some unusual facial differences. But he makes<br />
up for it with charm and a rapier wit.<br />
Owen Wilson and Julia Roberts play the<br />
supportive and caring parents as August enters<br />
fifth grade to battle the typical middle school<br />
torture with the gloves off. If you can see where<br />
this is going, you might think he turns lemons<br />
into sweet lemonade and takes you on a journey<br />
to the heart of a child forced to find the humor<br />
in tough situations, and inspires compassion<br />
unmatched but for the Dalai Lama. You might<br />
be right, but you should get your lowrise lawn<br />
chair and see for yourself on Sept. 8.<br />
Movies begin at 8 p.m. and snacks, desserts<br />
and drinks are available on site.<br />
8 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
Cruise Night<br />
Rides Again<br />
Vehicles of all shapes and sizes cruised the streets<br />
of downtown Atascadero for nearly three hours<br />
during the <strong>2018</strong> Hot El Camino Cruise Nite<br />
Aug.17, kicking off a weekend of motorhead fun<br />
in the city, concluding Saturday with the Mid-State<br />
Cruizers car show at Atascadero Lake Park and the<br />
city’s new Dancing in the Streets event downtown.<br />
Photos by Luke Phillips<br />
Seafood<br />
Proudly serving<br />
Salmon Picatta<br />
Chilean Sea Bass<br />
Mahi Mahi<br />
Specials<br />
Monday Tuesday<br />
1/2 Off Wine Tri-Tip<br />
Wednesday Sunday<br />
$1 Oysters Prime Rib<br />
Meats<br />
Now serving<br />
Waygu Beef Ribs<br />
Waygu New<br />
York Strip<br />
Private Parties: Three dining rooms for large and small groups. Birthdays, wedding and rehearsal dinners, or holiday parties<br />
6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero, CA 93422<br />
Web: www.the-carlton.com | Email: info@the-carlton.com<br />
Call: (805) 461-5100 | Take Out: Call to Order<br />
Hours: Sun-Thu: 4p-9p / Fri-Sat: 4p-11p<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 9
ROUND TOWN<br />
Santa Margarita SMALL TOWN, BIG HEART<br />
Photos by Luke Phillips<br />
Welcome to Santa Margarita! As a<br />
business owner celebrating 25 years<br />
in and a resident for 30, I’ve come<br />
to know and love our tiny town and I’d like<br />
to take a moment to welcome you and explain<br />
what makes this small town a very special place.<br />
Every area is unique in its own way. Geographical<br />
location, natural environment, history<br />
and community all come into play to shape and<br />
mold each into what it currently is and what it<br />
will be in the future.<br />
NOT to be confused with the very young<br />
planned city of Rancho Santa Margarita (pop.<br />
47,853) incorporated in Orange County in<br />
2000, you can find the town of Santa Margarita<br />
(pop. 1,259) located within the County of<br />
San Luis Obispo, at the southern end of “the<br />
North County” and a mere 10-minute hop away<br />
over the Cuesta Grade from the city of San<br />
Luis Obispo just off Highway 101. The current<br />
“downtown” is centered on a portion of road<br />
which has multiple names, mainly three (but<br />
if you ask certain locals there are a few more).<br />
When traveling to Santa Margarita, the main<br />
street happens to be a portion of the historic El<br />
Camino Real (The King’s Highway) running<br />
north/south; the western end of State Route 58,<br />
which stretches east to Barstow; in addition to<br />
being named “G” street (as established by the<br />
original town map of 1889).<br />
Having one stretch of road with three names<br />
is always fun trying to explain to visitors and<br />
there are many stories of confusion with Rancho<br />
Santa Margarita (a roughly 5-hour, 279-<br />
mile drive away) including “that time when a<br />
bus full of a high school football players arrived<br />
looking for the football field to play the local<br />
team” or “that time when a semi-truckload of<br />
new cars was looking for the dealership”… oops!<br />
The original inhabitants were likely drawn<br />
to the idyllic Santa Margarita Valley by the<br />
bounty provided through its year-round running<br />
streams, abundant wildlife and acorn-producing<br />
oaks and was used by the northern<br />
Chumash and southern Salinans as a gathering<br />
place. Years later, in 1769, the area saw the<br />
arrival of the Spanish exploratory expedition<br />
of Gaspar de Portola accompanied by Father<br />
Junipero Serra who established nine of the<br />
eventual 21 Spanish missions, including Mis-<br />
By Simone Smith<br />
sion San Luis Obispo de Tolosa, founded in<br />
1772 and soon after it’s associated asistencia<br />
(assistance or sub-mission rancho). It is believed<br />
that this mission rancho was named in honor<br />
of Father Serra’s mother Margaret and favorite<br />
patron saint Margarita de Cortona of his<br />
birthplace in Spain.<br />
Due to its geographical location and hospitable<br />
environment, Santa Margarita has long<br />
been and continues to be a special place that<br />
welcomes and brings people together, from early<br />
Native Americans to the missionaries and<br />
beyond to present day gatherings.<br />
ShapeBe on the lookout! Next month, I plan<br />
on filling the historical gap between the Mission<br />
days and present day Santa Margarita.<br />
Upcoming gatherings in Santa Margarita<br />
for <strong>September</strong><br />
Sept. 3 - Final Summertime Margarita Monday<br />
Community Potluck in the Park - 6-9 p.m.<br />
Sept. 14 - An Evening in Santa Margarita<br />
– 5-9 p.m. - Enjoy music, food, drinks and<br />
crafts while strolling through town. Hosted<br />
at local business locations, this event benefits<br />
and supports the Friends of the Santa<br />
Margarita Library.<br />
For more information about the history of<br />
Santa Margarita, visit santamargaritahistorical<br />
society.org.<br />
You can also follow Santa Margarita on Facebook<br />
by searching for @SantaMargaritaCA.<br />
10 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
ROUND TOWN<br />
ATASCADERO KIWANIS & KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS<br />
Showdown<br />
Third annual event returns to<br />
Sunken Gardens Sept. 22<br />
The third annual Atascadero<br />
Kiwanis and Knights of Columbus<br />
Showdown Cornhole<br />
tournament will take place on<br />
Saturday, Sept. 22 in Sunken Gardens.<br />
Last year’s tournament was the<br />
largest of its kind on the Central<br />
Coast with 64 teams participating.<br />
Organizer Mike LoPicolo said that<br />
more than 100 teams are expected<br />
to attend this year.<br />
“The Atascadero High School<br />
Greybots robotics team has been<br />
chosen to receive the proceeds from<br />
this year’s tournament,” LoPicolo<br />
said. “The Kiwanis and Knights<br />
By Heather Young<br />
chose the Greybots because a major<br />
focus of both clubs is to help<br />
the youth and youth programs in<br />
our community.”<br />
No more than 128 teams will be<br />
accepted into the tournament. Each<br />
team is made up for two people. The<br />
cost for each team to enter is an $80<br />
donation. There will an eight-round<br />
round robin play for A and B bracket<br />
double elimination placements.<br />
The teams that place first through<br />
fourth will play in the A bracket<br />
for up to $2,000 in cash prizes and<br />
teams that finish in fifth through<br />
eighth will place in the B bracket<br />
for up to $1,000 in cash prizes.<br />
Check-in for the event begins at<br />
8:30 a.m. and tossing begins at 10<br />
a.m. and goes until 5 p.m.<br />
“If you like to play cornhole, the<br />
tournament is a nine-game minimum,<br />
with over $3,000 in prize<br />
money with a sold-out event,” LoPicolo<br />
said. “There will be a Long Shot<br />
contest with $100 in prize money<br />
and an Air Mail Shoot Out for<br />
$100. Two Giant Jengas will be set<br />
up for anyone wishing to test their<br />
Jenga skills in a big way. A water<br />
balloon toss will also be part of the<br />
fun.”<br />
For those not playing in the<br />
tournament, there will be additional<br />
cornhole board set up for some<br />
cornhole fun.<br />
“You might even be able to get a<br />
chance to challenge the Greybots’<br />
cornhole-playing robot,” LoPicolo<br />
said. “If you enjoy a good raffle<br />
with lots of great items, our North<br />
County Adaptive Sports and Recreation<br />
Program will also be there<br />
with items that we know that<br />
you’ll want.”<br />
Sponsors are also still being<br />
sought for this year’s tournament<br />
and there are two level of sponsorship:<br />
$100 or $200. For $100<br />
you can get an 18-inch by 24-inch<br />
business sign posted at the court and<br />
for $200 you’ll also get a team and<br />
lunch.<br />
Last year’s tournament sold out,<br />
so if you’d like to get in this year’s<br />
event, have some fun, and help out<br />
some great programs, you can register<br />
at Atascadero Chamber of Commerce<br />
or online at Eventbrite.com,<br />
search “Showdown Cornhole.”<br />
If you have questions about the<br />
event, email LoPicolo at mklopic@<br />
msn.com.<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 11
ROUND TOWN<br />
Taking the backroads WITH POPEX3<br />
By Sarah Pope<br />
It’s near impossible to run out<br />
of things to do here on the<br />
Central Coast. It’s Saturday<br />
morning and the boys were<br />
bouncing off the walls! With<br />
triple digits outside, we decided<br />
to take a drive to the coast… the<br />
long way. My husband was born<br />
and raised here and he loves to entertain<br />
our boys and share his stories<br />
of his adventurous childhood<br />
days. He has experienced every<br />
back road, creek and creepy cave<br />
along the way.<br />
Driving west from Templeton,<br />
our long road trip began at Vineyard<br />
Drive. Soon after crossing<br />
over Highway 46, we enjoyed<br />
the endless winding country road<br />
surrounded with the most beautiful<br />
old barns, some of the best<br />
North County wineries nestled<br />
in between some of the oldest<br />
and majestic oak trees. On this<br />
beautiful drive the country road<br />
is hugged with a wall constructed<br />
of limestone rocks pulled<br />
from the surrounding area. As<br />
we continue our journey, we pass<br />
Adelaida Road, how the historic<br />
Adelaide Cemetery got her name.<br />
Legend states never to leave your<br />
keys in your car or the residents<br />
of the cemetery will steal them,<br />
leaving you stranded. The ghost<br />
of the late, Charlotte Sitton (aka<br />
The Pink Lady), has been know<br />
to wander the cemetery every<br />
Friday night leaving flowers<br />
at her child’s grave. Lots more<br />
fascinating stories for around<br />
the campfire.<br />
Aware that there is a creek running<br />
to the right of the road, we<br />
are all on the lookout for a spot<br />
to get our toes wet. As we drive<br />
over a loud wooden bridge we<br />
find the most perfect spot right<br />
underneath it. The water was cold<br />
and so refreshing! The boys found<br />
fish, small running creeks and a<br />
cluster of bright blue dragonflies.<br />
It felt as though we were in another<br />
land, but in reality we were<br />
so close to home.<br />
As we neared the ocean we<br />
could see the temperature gauge<br />
rapidly dropping (97 … 80 …<br />
73). We rolled down the window<br />
and could only hear the wind<br />
and the trees as we enjoyed the<br />
cool breeze hitting our faces.<br />
Then there it was, the ocean and<br />
a view that a picture could do no<br />
justice. Sweet Cambria, with its<br />
quaint local shops, antique stores<br />
and home of the fun and COOL<br />
Shamel Park.<br />
As memories are being made,<br />
we are discovering new places,<br />
;earning something new everyday<br />
about the history in our very own<br />
backyard and visiting places “daddy”<br />
used to visit as a child. There<br />
is no better tour guide than he.<br />
12 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
ROUND TOWN<br />
Moonlight & Magnolias<br />
Three men, five days, one iconic screenplay<br />
Screwball comedy<br />
opening at<br />
Wine Country<br />
Theatre Sept. 21<br />
Moonlight and Magnolias,<br />
Ron Hutchinson’s<br />
Off-Broadway comic celebration<br />
of one of the greatest<br />
movies of all time, opens<br />
Friday, Sept. 21 and runs<br />
through Sept. 30 at the Park<br />
Ballroom, 1232 Park Street in<br />
downtown Paso Robles.<br />
Wine Country Theatre continues<br />
its fourth season with the<br />
zany comedy directed by Lisa<br />
Woske. This wildly funny and<br />
engaging tale illuminates the behind-the-scenes<br />
business of movie-making<br />
during the Golden Age<br />
of Hollywood.<br />
The premise is based on a true<br />
story: Unhappy with the incomplete<br />
shooting script for Gone<br />
with the Wind, legendary producer<br />
David O. Selznick has shut<br />
down production on his new epic.<br />
He sends a car for famed script<br />
doctor Ben Hecht, pulls director<br />
Victor Fleming off the set of The<br />
Wizard of Oz, and proceeds to<br />
lock them all in his office in order<br />
to finish the script. Subsisting on<br />
a diet of bananas and peanuts, the<br />
three men spend five days rewriting<br />
a screenplay that will become<br />
the blueprint for one of the most<br />
successful films of all time.<br />
“If only Hecht had read the<br />
book!” elaborates director Lisa<br />
Woske. “With no time to read<br />
1037 pages, Selznick and Fleming<br />
attempt to act out the story<br />
for him – which may or may not<br />
be helpful…but it sure is comical.<br />
Hecht also provides a bit of social<br />
commentary as he types, so there<br />
are layers beneath the laughs.”<br />
Wine Country Theatre’s Executive<br />
Director Cynthia Anthony<br />
adds, “Moonlight and Magnolias<br />
is a great production to present<br />
this season. Our audiences will<br />
love the fast-paced humor and<br />
enjoy the behind-the-scenes antics<br />
that surround such a wellknown<br />
movie classic.”<br />
Featuring four outstanding<br />
local actors – Chad Stevens, Ed<br />
Cardoza, Tony Costa and Jo Jackson<br />
– the comedy embodies the<br />
mission of Wine Country Theatre,<br />
which is to offer a professional-caliber<br />
theatre experience for<br />
Central Coast audiences.<br />
The show runs Sept. 21–30;<br />
Friday and Saturday nights at<br />
7:30 p.m. with Saturday and<br />
Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. at the<br />
Park Ballroom in downtown Paso<br />
Robles. Wine, snacks and desserts<br />
are available for purchase;<br />
generous table seating allows refreshments<br />
to be enjoyed during<br />
the show. Tickets are $25 general<br />
public; $20 for groups of 8+;<br />
$15 student.<br />
For ticket information go the<br />
website: winecountrytheatre.com<br />
or contact Brown Paper Tickets at<br />
1-800-838-3006.<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 13
<strong>COLONY</strong> PEOPLE<br />
KAREN MCNAMARA Realtor, business owner, community advocate<br />
By Heather Young<br />
Karen McNamara has not<br />
lived in Atascadero all her<br />
life but she loves Atascadero<br />
as though she had. She moved<br />
here with her late husband,<br />
Mike McNamara, who died<br />
in June 2015.<br />
Since moving to Atascadero, she<br />
started the Printery Foundation<br />
with Nic Mattson, who had started<br />
discussing the fate of the historic<br />
building with Mike, but Mike died<br />
before anything could be done.<br />
“He didn’t like to complain,”<br />
Karen said. “If he didn’t like<br />
something, he did something<br />
about it. He was just a really good<br />
man… Mike and Nic both grew<br />
up here, it’s a building they both<br />
care about.”<br />
The foundation was officially<br />
formed in October 2015. Since<br />
that time, it has gained control of<br />
the building and raised enough<br />
money to buy it from the county<br />
when it went to auction.<br />
The Atascadero Printery Building<br />
has been red-tagged and<br />
boarded up since the San Simeon<br />
Earthquake hit the county in 2003.<br />
It had remained relatively untouched<br />
since, leaving most of the<br />
windows broken and the building<br />
quickly deteriorating, according to<br />
McNamara, president of the Printery<br />
Foundation.<br />
The foundation’s mission is to<br />
reclaim, rehabilitate and repurpose<br />
the Printery building. It's estimated<br />
that the foundation will need<br />
$8.5 million to make the building<br />
fit for the public. The foundation<br />
has currently raised $140,000 of<br />
“Community<br />
rabble-rouser<br />
should be my<br />
title. I don’t<br />
believe in just<br />
griping about<br />
stuff but<br />
getting involved."<br />
that amount. McNamara speculates<br />
that the majority of the<br />
funds will come from grants and<br />
possibly very large donors. Of the<br />
total, $2.5 million will be used to<br />
retrofit the building. That amount,<br />
she said, is the committee’s first<br />
goal now that the foundation has<br />
ownership of the building.<br />
Anyone who wants to get involved<br />
in any way can contact Karen<br />
at 805-459-5113 or mcrealtor@<br />
rocketmail.com.<br />
Even before she undertook<br />
saving the Printery, Karen joined<br />
the Optimist Club about six years<br />
ago, which led her to join the Colony<br />
Days Committee on which<br />
she is serving her second of two<br />
terms as chair.<br />
“Community rabble-rouser<br />
should be my title,” McNamara<br />
said, adding that when her family<br />
attended the parade their<br />
first year back in Atascadero she<br />
felt that she should get involved<br />
in the event. “I don’t believe<br />
in just griping about stuff but<br />
getting involved.”<br />
Karen McNamara mans her store, Hope Chest Emporium.<br />
Photo by Heather Young<br />
She started out working with<br />
vendors and figuring out logistics<br />
and then served as secretary before<br />
moving up to chairperson.<br />
“I’ll stay on the committee,<br />
but probably won’t have a lot of<br />
responsibilities because I have a<br />
lot going on with the Printery,”<br />
she said.<br />
With progress heating up with<br />
the Printery, McNamara said<br />
she’s often in meetings related to<br />
the building.<br />
In addition to her community<br />
involvement, she is also a real estate<br />
agent and owns Hope Chest<br />
Emporium, which is located next<br />
to Bru Coffeehouse at 5800 El<br />
Camino Real. The home goods<br />
store has a unique blend of locally-made,<br />
restored or repurposed<br />
furniture, decor, candles, garden<br />
items and more. The store features<br />
goods from a variety of sellers.<br />
“I call it my lemonade stand,”<br />
McNamara said. “Life handed<br />
me lemons and I made a lemonade<br />
stand. I miss Mike terribly<br />
but I’m not going to dwell on it.<br />
I’m going to be a help in the community.<br />
That’s the way I’m going<br />
to honor him.”<br />
McNamara has four children:<br />
Jaime, 37; April, 36; Ryan, 23, and<br />
Kody, 20. All of her children except<br />
Jaime are local residents.<br />
14 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 15
<strong>COLONY</strong> PEOPLE<br />
Welcome back, Conrad<br />
Photos by Pat Pemberton<br />
AHS grad Nate Conrad Enters 13th Year Leading His Old Band<br />
Nate Conrad was preparing to fly to Europe<br />
where he would perform for the<br />
third time since entering college when<br />
the call came to go back home.<br />
“Four or five people from Atascadero called<br />
me and said, ‘When are you going to get<br />
your teaching credential?’” said Conrad, who<br />
was studying at California State University,<br />
East Bay at the time. “Because the job just<br />
opened up.”<br />
The Job: director of the high school band.<br />
Seven years earlier, Conrad had performed<br />
with that band as a student. Suddenly, he<br />
had an opportunity to return to Atascadero<br />
as an educator.<br />
Remember that 70s sitcom “Welcome<br />
Back, Kotter?”<br />
Like that, but without a laugh track.<br />
Now, 12 years after his return, Conrad is still<br />
leading that band, which will experience a significant<br />
change this year when it skips marching<br />
competitions to focus on musicianship and<br />
local events.<br />
“This is pretty awesome,” he said, sitting in<br />
a temporary instrument storage space while<br />
the band room undergoes renovation. “And<br />
I’m really happy doing what I’m doing where<br />
I’m doing it.”<br />
Conrad moved to Atascadero at the age of<br />
four with a family of musicians.<br />
“We were always singing and making music<br />
in the house growing up,” he said.<br />
His father, an Episcopal priest, enjoyed classical<br />
music and hymns, so that dominated —<br />
but didn’t necessarily dictate Conrad’s earliest<br />
music selections.<br />
“I got the first Weezer album and the first<br />
Green Day album,” he said.<br />
But during his sophomore year, his parents<br />
bought him some music for Christmas —<br />
Count Basie and J.J. Johnson — and he was<br />
hooked on jazz.<br />
“It probably took me twice as long to do<br />
my homework as any other student,” he said.<br />
“Because I had those CDs on all the time, and<br />
I would space out and listen to music.”<br />
Conrad began playing trombone one day<br />
simply because the other available instruments<br />
— a trumpet and a clarinet — were in worse<br />
condition.<br />
“In a typical musician way, I love that it’s<br />
impossibly hard to play,” he said of the trombone.<br />
“My youngest brother is a professional<br />
saxophone player, and every time I see him<br />
play, I’m like, man — that’s such a smarter<br />
way to go.”<br />
After high school, Conrad started his studies<br />
at Cuesta College, had a brief stop at Cal Poly,<br />
then headed to Hayward, where he found more<br />
opportunities to perform and compose. He<br />
would have continued to perform in the Bay<br />
Area had he not returned to that familiar place.<br />
By Pat Pemberton<br />
“It was familiar in a really good sense,”<br />
he said. “The weird part was talking to<br />
the teachers.”<br />
A few of the teachers he’d distanced himself<br />
from as a student suddenly appeared<br />
much differently once he got to know them<br />
as colleagues.<br />
“It turns out they were phenomenal people,”<br />
he said with a laugh.<br />
While competing has long been an element<br />
of the marching band, this year, Conrad and<br />
the administration decided to back off from<br />
competition.<br />
For one thing, Conrad said, the school always<br />
had to travel long distances to compete<br />
against much bigger schools. And competing<br />
on the road, he added, just isn’t as rewarding<br />
as performing at community events or home<br />
football games.<br />
“When the stands are full, it’s close to<br />
2,000 people,” he said. “So over the course of<br />
five home games, we’re playing for close to<br />
10,000 people.”<br />
By skipping competitions, he said, he can focus<br />
on making students better musicians, which<br />
will ultimately help those who want to pursue<br />
music further.<br />
And serious musicians will want to play serious<br />
music, which is why this year’s catalog<br />
includes several Steely Dan numbers.<br />
“A lot of them don’t know Steely Dan,” Conrad<br />
said. “But by the end of the year, they’re<br />
going to be checking out Steely Dan and other<br />
bands from that era and similar styles, so<br />
that’s a win.”<br />
16 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
<strong>COLONY</strong> PEOPLE<br />
Doug Filipponi<br />
By Melissa Chavez<br />
It’s Monday in the tasting room at Ancient<br />
Peaks Winery in downtown Santa<br />
Margarita. What was pin-drop quiet minutes<br />
after unlocking the front door is bustling<br />
moments later.<br />
In an adjacent room, co-owner Doug Filipponi<br />
remains attentive while juggling a smartphone<br />
and mental calendars. He’s tying loose<br />
ends and stealing time for a meeting before<br />
leaving town the next day. It’s a busy life for<br />
this grape grower, well driller and cattle rancher.<br />
Doug’s many ventures all serve to underscore his<br />
affinity for the North SLO County terrain, in<br />
which he is well-rooted.<br />
For Doug, forging good relationships with<br />
people is a foundational trait. Among those<br />
people is Ned Thompson, with whom he formed<br />
Filipponi & Thompson Drilling, Inc. in 1974.<br />
The company provides water well drilling services<br />
throughout the Central Coast, from Monterey<br />
to Ventura.<br />
Nearly 20 years ago, Doug recalled that the<br />
idea of a winery first evolved when he and his<br />
friends bought vineyards from winemaking great<br />
Robert Mondavi. He joked, “You know, I told my<br />
wife to whack me with a frying pan if I ever got<br />
into making wine, and yet, here I am!” Indeed, he<br />
remains intact, as is his formidable influence in<br />
the SLO County community through involvement<br />
with the California Mid-State Fair’s Heritage<br />
Foundation, Rotary and Kiwanis clubs, and<br />
Atascadero Greyhound Foundation's Lighthouse<br />
Committee, to name a few.<br />
Together with business partners Rob Rossi<br />
and Karl Wittstrom, four generations of winemaking<br />
infuse every vintage of Ancient Peaks<br />
award-winning wine.<br />
“All of the grapes are grown right here,” Doug<br />
said. He heavily credits Jaime Muniz (Vineyard<br />
Manager), Mike Sinor (Director of Winemaking)<br />
and Stewart Cameron (Winemaker) for<br />
Ancient Peaks Winery’s continued success.<br />
Savors the Good Life in Santa Margarita<br />
“I’ve been involved somehow or other<br />
with this ranch since I was a kid<br />
and now to be a part of it<br />
and share it is pretty special"<br />
Doug Filipponi<br />
Photo by Melissa Chavez<br />
“Food and wine should be shared together,<br />
which is why we serve food in the tasting room,”<br />
Doug said. Charcuterie, cheeseboards, soups,<br />
sandwiches and hamburgers made with locally-grown<br />
produce pair deliciously with Ancient<br />
Peaks wine for a true sense of terroir (“a sense of<br />
place”) in every bite.<br />
The wine label draws inspiration from the<br />
neighboring Santa Lucia Range, which encompasses<br />
Doug’s Santa Margarita Ranch property,<br />
a 14,000-acre, picturesque landscape nestled between<br />
Atascadero and San Luis Obispo.<br />
The historic parcel, part of Father Junipero<br />
Serra’s Mission Trail in the 1700s, contains<br />
remnants of the 1878 stone walls of the Santa<br />
Margarita de Cortona Asistencia, (a former<br />
partner structure to Mission San Luis Obispo de<br />
Tolosa). Those remnants are now protected by a<br />
barn, a generations-old ranch house and mission<br />
vineyard land — all dating to the days of the<br />
Franciscans.<br />
“I’ve been involved somehow or other with<br />
this ranch since I was a kid and now to be a part<br />
of it and share it is pretty special," said Doug<br />
of the beloved Santa Margarita Ranch he owns<br />
with Rossi and Wittstrom. “I want people to see<br />
how beautiful and special this place is. I want<br />
them to taste the wine, take it home, and let it<br />
bring back to them what they saw.”<br />
Today, the preserved ranch sustains a natural<br />
beef program, a sustainably-grown Margarita<br />
Vineyard and a steam-powered Pacific Coast<br />
Railroad with 5/8-scale passenger coaches that<br />
date back to the 1950s for the public to enjoy.<br />
The ranch hosts gatherings large and small, from<br />
hometown weddings to Savor the Central Coast<br />
events by Sunset <strong>Magazine</strong>. Santa Margarita Adventures<br />
offers six zipline tours that glide more<br />
than 7,500 feet across the property and provide<br />
an eagle’s view and draws locals and visitors alike.<br />
Born in Paso Robles and raised in Atascadero,<br />
Doug credits good mentors who helped develop<br />
his approach to business.<br />
“It’s not about money,” said Doug. “Do what<br />
you love doing. If you don’t, you won’t be happy.”<br />
Doug momentarily ignores a text message<br />
on his phone and the people waiting outside to<br />
share a final thought about the work ethic that<br />
fuels him and his crew:<br />
“I’m personally proud of these folks. We have<br />
40-year team members in our drilling business<br />
alone. It’s all about commitment and we’re committed<br />
to people who work for us. Anyone who<br />
has shown us that they’re willing to work hard?<br />
They’re just like family to us.”<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 17
<strong>COLONY</strong> DAYS<br />
Brings the Mudhole Follies back to life<br />
By Heather Young<br />
A BIT OF<br />
HISTORY<br />
Atascadero was founded<br />
in 1913 by E.G. Lewis,<br />
who purchased the land that<br />
makes up<br />
Atascadero<br />
for $1<br />
million from<br />
the United<br />
States<br />
Army. The<br />
Army used<br />
Atascadero,<br />
especially<br />
the<br />
area around the lake, for<br />
maneuvers. Lewis, who had<br />
also started University City<br />
in Missouri, was looking for<br />
another venture and found<br />
Atascadero to be the perfect<br />
place to start a planned<br />
community. He intentionally<br />
started the city inland from<br />
the ocean, but had Highway<br />
41 built so residents could<br />
easily travel to the beach in<br />
Morro Bay.<br />
Lewis was a publisher<br />
and businessman who<br />
developed the city with<br />
streets, sidewalks, gutters,<br />
water and power before<br />
the house were built. The<br />
first buildings constructed<br />
in Atascadero were the<br />
Printery building, where<br />
he produced his magazine<br />
Women’s Illustrated and the<br />
Atascadero News,<br />
and City Administration<br />
Building.<br />
The history city hall is a<br />
prominent feature of Colony<br />
Days, being right behind<br />
Sunken Gardens were the<br />
majority of the festivities<br />
take place.<br />
Annual celebration moves to the<br />
first Saturday in October<br />
Every October the residents<br />
of Atascadero past and<br />
present come together to<br />
celebrate the city’s roots with the<br />
annual Colony Days event. This<br />
year’s event — the 45th annual —<br />
will take place two weeks earlier<br />
than it has in the past, happening<br />
on the first Saturday in October<br />
rather than the third. This year’s<br />
theme is “Mudhole Follies.”<br />
“We want to have fun,” Colony<br />
Days Committee Vice President<br />
Nic Mattson said. “Follies is about<br />
being silly, being foolish and we<br />
want to do that on as large-scale<br />
as possible, but also being responsible.<br />
The purpose of Colony Days<br />
• 7 to 9 a.m.: Lions Club<br />
Pancake breakfast.<br />
• 10 a.m.: Parade begins at<br />
A-Town Diner on El Camino<br />
Real and ends at West Mall<br />
and Palma Avenue<br />
• 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Tent<br />
City re-enactment in Sunken<br />
Gardens, events will include<br />
pie eating contest and other<br />
games during the day—see<br />
schedule in Tent City the dayof.<br />
There will also be a variety<br />
of vendors, entertainment<br />
and food in and around the<br />
Sunken Gardens.<br />
Schedule of events:<br />
is to bring the community together<br />
and celebrate each other and<br />
Atascadero. This year we want to<br />
do this with the spirit of silliness<br />
and fun.”<br />
Entry into the parade is free and<br />
the deadline for entry applications<br />
is Monday, Sept. 17. The parade<br />
starts at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct.<br />
6. Parade numbers and participant<br />
ribbons will be available for<br />
pickup on Friday, Oct. 5 during<br />
Tent City After Dark in Sunken<br />
Gardens or Saturday, Oct. 6 from<br />
7:30 to 9 a.m. at the start of the<br />
parade route.<br />
The Colony Days event on<br />
Saturday, Oct. 6 has something<br />
for everyone in the family starting<br />
with the Lions Club<br />
pancake breakfast at 7<br />
a.m. at the corner of El<br />
Camino Real and West<br />
Mall, the parade, vendors<br />
and activities in Sunken<br />
Gardens, Dogtoberfest,<br />
food and beverages and<br />
a historic re-enactment<br />
of Atascadero in the year<br />
1916. The Atascadero<br />
Historical Society will<br />
also have its museum<br />
open during the day and<br />
docents will be giving<br />
tours of City Hall.<br />
• 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.:<br />
Weiner Dog & Small Dog<br />
Race Registration<br />
• 1 to 2:30 p.m.:<br />
Dogtoberfest Wiener Dog<br />
and Small Dog Races<br />
• 2:30 p.m.: Pet Costume<br />
Contest (any size dog can<br />
particIpate)<br />
• 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Free<br />
tours of City Hall led by<br />
Atascadero Historical<br />
Society docents<br />
Colony Days event is organized<br />
by community volunteers who<br />
work year-round to put the event<br />
together. While new committee<br />
members are always needed, there<br />
are a variety of one-off volunteer<br />
opportunities available, from keeping<br />
the grounds of the event clean,<br />
to setting up and taking down<br />
chairs and more. Check out ColonyDays.org<br />
for more information<br />
on how to help.<br />
T-shirts for the 45th annual<br />
Colony Days celebration are now<br />
available for pre-order on the website<br />
and will also be available the<br />
day of the event.<br />
Go to colonydays.org for registration<br />
and more information.<br />
Some ideas for parade<br />
entries include:<br />
• Dressing up in silly<br />
costumes<br />
• Playing unusual<br />
instruments, such as pots<br />
and pans, kazoos, recorder<br />
or keytars<br />
• Lots of balloons<br />
• Silly dancing and<br />
entertainment<br />
• Dressing up as a<br />
prominent community<br />
leader, past or present<br />
• Juggling and carnivalrelated<br />
fun<br />
18 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
FOR ATASCADERO CITY COUNCIL<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 19
Greyhound For Life<br />
Photo by Rick Evans<br />
Service For a Lifetime<br />
Wayne Cooper Leaves Behind Big Shoes to Fill<br />
By Nic Mattson<br />
He was a mountain of a man with a deep<br />
and gentle soul. Hundreds of friends<br />
and family gathered together on Aug. 7<br />
to celebrate the life of Wayne Everett Cooper<br />
(1944-<strong>2018</strong>) at Colony Park Community<br />
Center in Atascadero.<br />
The gymnasium was filled with orange and<br />
grey shirts on folks walking around sharing memories,<br />
laughter, tears, and hugs. Outside, many of<br />
those closest to Wayne cooked the meal to be<br />
served. Wayne spent many years cooking as a part<br />
of the Bones BBQ crew, and was given the day off<br />
in honor and respect.<br />
Wayne was born a Greyhound, and his final<br />
breath was taken on the all-weather track<br />
he helped build at Atascadero High School’s<br />
Memorial Stadium. On Wednesday, Aug. 1,<br />
after pulling a regular volunteer shift at the final<br />
All Comers Track and Field meet of the<br />
season, Wayne helped his friend Donn Clickard<br />
carry supplies in their little red wagon back<br />
to the truck.<br />
When they reached the edge of the track, he<br />
and Donn went to pick the wagon up over the<br />
curb, as they had done so many times before, but<br />
something moved to make certain Wayne never<br />
stepped foot off that track again.<br />
“He was there, and then he wasn’t,” Donn said<br />
about witnessing his best friend pass away just a<br />
couple feet away.<br />
The noise of hundreds of attendees<br />
was gone from the meet,<br />
and now the belly laugh of one<br />
of Atascadero’s most notable<br />
characters was to be just an echo<br />
in the minds and hearts of those<br />
fortunate enough to have heard it.<br />
Luckily, Wayne spent a lot of<br />
time helping others, so he shared<br />
his laughter quite often.<br />
Undoubtedly incomplete, the<br />
list of Wayne’s service positions<br />
include AHS sophomore class<br />
president, student body vice<br />
president, student body president,<br />
school district board trustee,<br />
SLO County Planning Commissioner,<br />
an active member of the<br />
Atascadero Elks Club, supporter of FFA and<br />
4-H programs, Atascadero Chamber of Commerce<br />
board, president of Atascadero Greyhound<br />
Foundation and co-founder of LIGHTHOUSE<br />
Atascadero.<br />
Wayne was also the patriarch of a large local<br />
family of Coopers that includes three sons, a<br />
daughter, and 16 grandchildren.<br />
During Wayne’s service in August, three of his<br />
grandsons spoke to the friends and family gathered.<br />
Everett spoke about his grandfather going to<br />
any length to help, with a story about Wayne and<br />
his wife Diana driving 12 hours to help Everett<br />
move out of his dorm at Arizona State University<br />
— a 20-minute endeavor — and then driving<br />
12 hours home. Alex spoke to his grandfather’s<br />
unconditional support, win or lose. Creston related<br />
the tale of the boy throwing starfish into<br />
the ocean … because making a difference to even<br />
one life is significant.<br />
Donn took the podium and spoke to the<br />
friendship and support Wayne gave him.<br />
“Wayne was one of the finest people [we] had<br />
the opportunity to have known and loved,” Donn<br />
said. “His commitment to his family cannot be<br />
overstated. Wayne’s work has been to the benefit<br />
of the youth of Atascadero.”<br />
Wayne Cooper<br />
Contributed Photo<br />
Donn followed<br />
with quotes by others,<br />
including Wayne’s<br />
granddaughter Charlotte,<br />
who said “Papa<br />
swings me just the right<br />
height on the spiderweb<br />
swing.”<br />
At 73 years old,<br />
Wayne gave more than<br />
his share and the community<br />
response to his<br />
passing proved it was a<br />
life well-lived.<br />
He was called a<br />
“One-of-a-kind treasure<br />
of a human being”<br />
and “a rock and very essence<br />
of integrity” who left behind “hard shoes to<br />
fill” and was an “example for all.”<br />
Donn summed up his oration with the encouragement<br />
to all present to “try to swing each other<br />
just the right height on the spiderweb swing.”<br />
“For me, Wayne was the model of dependability,<br />
a steady influence in my life,” Donn said. “He<br />
epitomized the meaning of friendship, loyalty,<br />
intelligence and common sense.”<br />
Donn served the community alongside Wayne<br />
for more than 25 years and out of all Donn’s confidants,<br />
Wayne was most influential.<br />
“Wayne was my go-to guy,” Donn said. “He<br />
was always so clear in his answers. He responded<br />
specifically to my question succinctly, and it was<br />
not necessarily what I wanted to hear. It is trite<br />
to say, but he was always thinking about what was<br />
best for the kids. I don’t really remember a time<br />
when I didn’t do exactly what he said.”<br />
Like his laugh, the quiet and thoughtful depths<br />
of Wayne Cooper will always echo in the hearts<br />
and minds of those familiar with him.<br />
The family of Wayne Cooper has asked those<br />
who wish to give in Wayne’s honor, to give to<br />
the Atascadero Greyhound Foundation at<br />
atascaderogreyhoundfoundation.org, or P.O. Box<br />
3120, Atascadero, CA 93423.<br />
20 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
Saturday, Oct. 13 at Chalk Mtn. Golf Course<br />
LIGHTHOUSE<br />
Golf Tournament Raises Money, Awareness<br />
LIGHTHOUSE Atascadero<br />
began in 2012 in hopes of<br />
making a difference to high<br />
school students in need regarding<br />
substance abuse and addiction.<br />
The mission was to provide awareness,<br />
prevention, and intervention<br />
to students at the continuation<br />
high school and financial assistance<br />
for a licensed therapist for<br />
student access.<br />
In order to fulfill that financing,<br />
the Atascadero Greyhound Foundation<br />
produced the LIGHT-<br />
HOUSE Atascadero Golf Tournament<br />
to raise money. Each year, the<br />
event provides monetary assistance<br />
for the provision of professional<br />
therapy to high school students at<br />
Paloma Creek Continuation High<br />
School and the fifth annual tournament<br />
is scheduled for Saturday, Oct.<br />
Special to Colony <strong>Magazine</strong><br />
13 at Chalk Mountain Golf Course.<br />
Registration for the tournament<br />
is open to the public,<br />
and is a shotgun-start fourplayer<br />
scramble.<br />
Entry to the tournament is $40<br />
per player and includes the green<br />
fee, cart and lunch. Entry is limited<br />
to the first 30 teams.<br />
Funds are raised through hole<br />
sponsorships, which are available<br />
from $100-500 per hole. The funds<br />
help support the prevention and<br />
intervention part of the LIGHT-<br />
HOUSE mission, but the entire<br />
golf tournament is a means of<br />
providing for the awareness part<br />
of the mission.<br />
Like the story of the kid walking<br />
down the beach throwing sea<br />
stars back into the ocean, and the<br />
naysayer explaining that there<br />
are so many sea stars that the kid<br />
will never make a difference to all<br />
of them. The kid picks up a sea<br />
star, throws it back into the ocean<br />
and says “I made a difference<br />
for that one.”<br />
The Greyhound Foundation<br />
is working to provide real help<br />
for high school students struggling<br />
with addiction and mental<br />
health issues during important<br />
years of life. The golf tournament<br />
is an opportunity to learn more<br />
about the program.<br />
Since 2012, LIGHTHOUSE<br />
has come a long way and is the<br />
main focus for the Greyhound<br />
Foundation. In just the past year,<br />
multiple programs have been established<br />
to fill needs for high<br />
school students, including peer<br />
mentoring, resources and an<br />
after-school program.<br />
LIGHTHOUSE After School<br />
provides classes for kids who want<br />
to fill their afternoons with productive<br />
and educational experiences.<br />
“Everything is about good decision-making<br />
and problem solving,”<br />
AGF executive director Donn<br />
Clickard said. “The program will<br />
teach ceramics, how to build a<br />
computer or bicycle and gardening<br />
— filling leisure time with<br />
productive activity.”<br />
With respect to the LIGHT-<br />
HOUSE mission, measuring the<br />
impact these classes will have on<br />
the lives of students is difficult,<br />
even for an experienced educator<br />
like Donn Clickard.<br />
“How do you measure the funeral<br />
you didn’t go to?” Donn said. “How<br />
do you measure a kid who does not<br />
do drugs, or the impact Reality Tour<br />
has on them?”<br />
The bottom line is whether or<br />
not the programs are making a difference<br />
in the lives they reach.<br />
For more information on the<br />
Atascadero Greyhound Foundation<br />
or LIGHTHOUSE, go to<br />
atascaderogreyhoundfoundation.<br />
org, or lighthouseatascadero.org.<br />
5th Annual<br />
Saturday, Oct. 13<br />
LIGHTHOUSE Atascadero Benefit Golf Tournament<br />
At Chalk Mountain Golf Course • 805-466-8848<br />
10000 Bordo Avenue, Atascadero<br />
$100<br />
Hole Sponsorships<br />
• 4-player Scramble<br />
• Shotgun Start<br />
• $40 entry includes<br />
green fee, cart<br />
and lunch<br />
• Sponsor a hole<br />
to support<br />
LIGHTHOUSE<br />
Atascadero<br />
in the battle<br />
against addiction<br />
For More Information, Visit AtascaderoGreyhoundFoundation.org, or call Donn Clickard, 805-712-6356<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 21
LOCAL BUSINESS<br />
JOHN’S VIDEO PALACE<br />
Local business marks 30 years of family-friendly fun<br />
For the past 30 years, John’s Video Palace<br />
has been renting out “pure entertainment”<br />
to the people of Atascadero, offering<br />
them a couple of hours of escape from<br />
the real world.<br />
“People come in here to take a break from<br />
reality, to watch something that couldn’t really<br />
happen, and then they have to go back out<br />
there,” said owner John Taft.<br />
Taft’s enthusiasm for movies and for his<br />
customers are evident as soon as one walks<br />
through the front door.<br />
“What movie can I help you find?” Taft asks<br />
with a smile. “Name any old move, I’ve got it.”<br />
According to Taft, it’s that enthusiasm and<br />
commitment to making the video store experience<br />
fun and friendly that kept the business<br />
going throughout the years, especially during<br />
the heyday of Blockbuster Video (don’t say “the<br />
B word” around John!) when the giant corporation<br />
was driving mom and pop video stores out<br />
of business left and right. When John’s Video<br />
Palace first opened in 1988, it had 10 other<br />
John’s Video Palace owner John Taft.<br />
Photo by Luke Phillips<br />
By Luke Phillips<br />
competitors in town, but the numbers slowly<br />
dwindled and many of the small operations<br />
that couldn’t compete with the big guys turned<br />
to renting pornographic videos, Taft said.<br />
“We’re not carrying that and we’re not supporting<br />
that,” Taft said. “People would come in<br />
here and say ‘You’re not carrying them? Then<br />
we’re supporting you.’”<br />
Most of the store’s customers these days<br />
consist of families with young children who<br />
can’t afford the cost of movie theater tickets,<br />
those who don’t have a good enough internet<br />
to stream movies and those who can’t find the<br />
movie they’re looking for online. And perhaps,<br />
from time to time, a younger couple on a date<br />
night looking for a bit of nostalgia.<br />
“Online you only get your choice of a handful<br />
of movies,” he said. “We’re almost like a library<br />
now, like an old-fashioned thing. We’ve<br />
got all the old movies that nobody has anymore.<br />
Certain movies may only rent once a year, twice<br />
a year so that’s why Neflix and those guys don’t<br />
want them. They don’t want to carry them because<br />
they don’t make any money. They don’t<br />
care — we carry them.”<br />
The store carries more than 6,000 older titles<br />
and they rent for $3 for two nights, a price<br />
that hasn’t changed in more than 20 years. Taft<br />
finally budged and raised the price of new releases<br />
from $3.50 to $3.95 recently, but refused<br />
to raise the price for library titles because he<br />
“likes to keep it old school.”<br />
John’s Video Palace, located at 8120 El<br />
Camino Real, is open seven days per week,<br />
from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. For more information,<br />
call 805-466-5525.<br />
“tell ‘em Sol sent you"<br />
22 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
LET OUR HELPFUL STAFF FIND THE PERFECT CART<br />
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<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 23
TENT CITY<br />
TENT CITY<br />
Recreates Atascadero’s Early Days<br />
By Heather Young<br />
Tent City is a the re-enactment<br />
of 1916 Atascadero when<br />
residents lived in tents while<br />
waiting for their homes to be built.<br />
The tent owned by Atascadero’s<br />
founder E.G. Lewis had electricity<br />
and all the comforts of home.<br />
Actors will “perform” during the<br />
Colony Days celebration on Saturday,<br />
Oct. 6 and at a few other<br />
events related to Colony Days.<br />
Tent City grew from nine small<br />
tents and two large ones, which<br />
showed residential camp life, a<br />
school and a land office.<br />
It also is a little community<br />
that includes the Land Office,<br />
Ice Cream Parlor, a working<br />
Blacksmith, architect John<br />
J. Roth, Atascadero’s first business<br />
Atascadero Mutual Water<br />
Company, agriculture/apples,<br />
Mercantile, Atascadero<br />
News outlet, diner, Red Cross,<br />
a barbershop and the Federated<br />
Church Atascadero.<br />
For the second year in a row,<br />
the Tent City re-enactment will<br />
take place in the Sunken Gardens<br />
along El Camino Real. Tent City<br />
was moved from it’s original location<br />
along Atascadero Creek off<br />
of East Mall because of the construction<br />
of the pedestrian bridge<br />
connecting downtown Atascadero<br />
with Colony Square.<br />
“[This year’s] event in the Sunken<br />
Gardens was an experiment<br />
that yielded a lot of great pluses,”<br />
Tent City organizer Dianne<br />
Greenaway said. “[Tent City] became<br />
the visual core of the Sunken<br />
Gardens celebration, making us<br />
easy to find. The ‘city square’ lent<br />
itself to a lovely feeling of community<br />
for our little Tent City,<br />
lending it to just hanging out. We<br />
had the vibrant energy of our local<br />
dance school added in as ‘newsies’<br />
as well as performing from the<br />
‘Newsies’ musical.”<br />
Actors of all ages are sought<br />
to portray different citizens of<br />
Tent City barber Milo at work.<br />
Photo by George Westlund<br />
Atascadero from the city’s beginning<br />
in 1913. Rehearsals for<br />
Atascadero’s Colony Days re-enactment<br />
will take place Tuesday,<br />
Aug. 21 with an informational<br />
meeting and potluck in the Community<br />
Church of Atascadero’s<br />
Fellowship Hall at 5:30 p.m. This<br />
is for all actors and parents and<br />
guardians.<br />
The rehearsals will take place<br />
every Tuesday following the informational<br />
meeting through Oct.<br />
2 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the<br />
Community Church of Atascadero<br />
United Church of Christ at<br />
5850 Rosario Ave.<br />
During the class, actors will<br />
learn Atascadero history, period<br />
dances and songs and acting<br />
techniques while perfecting<br />
their characters.<br />
Blacksmith demonstration.<br />
Photo by George Westlund<br />
Greenaway, who started Tent<br />
City in 2003, said she is seeking<br />
families who would like to be a<br />
part of Tent City together.<br />
“We will engage in the culture<br />
of the period, singing songs<br />
and learning some dances,” Greenaway<br />
said. “We also welcome<br />
entire families to join in. Becoming<br />
‘history’ together is a<br />
great experience.”<br />
While anyone can attend the<br />
classes on Tuesday, those who<br />
do must be committed to taking<br />
on the responsibility of developing<br />
a character role, which will<br />
be more merged with exhibitors<br />
this year. However, if someone<br />
is interested in being a part of<br />
Tent City, but can’t join the first<br />
week, arrangements may be made<br />
with Greenaway.<br />
A “newsie” in action.<br />
Photo by Rick Evans<br />
Tent City cast performs on stage.<br />
Photo by Heather Young<br />
“We always welcome newsies<br />
who will go out in pairs to<br />
sell newspapers during Colony<br />
Days,” Greenaway said. “I’m<br />
looking for someone high school<br />
age or older to work at the Caladero<br />
exhibit, which was created<br />
by the Atascadero Land<br />
Preservation Society/Atascadero<br />
Native Tree Association, to<br />
work under their supervision<br />
with an apple press and apple<br />
slice experience.”<br />
While actors are a big part of<br />
Tent City, people helping out behind<br />
the scenes are also needed.<br />
To find out how you can be<br />
a part of Tent City, go to ColonyDays.org<br />
or contact Greenaway<br />
at 805-712-3947 or<br />
diannegreenaway@gmail.com.<br />
24 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
TENT CITY<br />
TENT CITY<br />
AFTER DARK<br />
TAKES OVER FRIDAY NIGHT<br />
By Heather Young<br />
The annual fundraiser for Colony Days,<br />
Tent City After Dark, will be bigger<br />
and better than ever. The concert will<br />
happen in Tent City, which will be set up in<br />
Sunken Gardens, on Friday, Oct. 5 starting<br />
at 4:30 p.m.<br />
The event has historically been held the<br />
Saturday evening of the Colony Days celebration<br />
for event goers to get another view<br />
of the historic Tent City once the sun went<br />
down. The event will begin at 4:30 p.m. with<br />
food trucks and beer and wine and continue<br />
well into the night. The main music<br />
event will begin at 6 p.m., although there<br />
will be amateur musicians and other events<br />
happening beforehand.<br />
“Tent City After Dark is an amazing combination<br />
of good music and an incredible setting,”<br />
Colony Days chairwoman Karen McNamara<br />
said. “Once the sun sets, the tents and hanging<br />
lanterns glow as they did in the original<br />
Tent City. It is truly something that can only<br />
be experienced at our event. There will be lots<br />
of food and drink vendors, plenty of room to<br />
dance to a high-quality concert and a moderate<br />
late summer evening. We believe the move to<br />
Friday night will bring a stellar kick-off of the<br />
celebration of our community.”<br />
This year, Tent City After Dark will kick off<br />
the Colony Days celebration, giving a preview<br />
of the tents along with live folk and country<br />
music. Advanced tickets are $35 each and include<br />
one beverage. Tickets purchased at the<br />
event are $40 each. VIP sponsorship tables of<br />
eight are $500 and include one drink per person,<br />
a platter of tacos for the table and personal<br />
table service for the entire evening.<br />
“I can’t wait to see this event<br />
grow into one of our community’s<br />
premiere evenings of entertainment,”<br />
Tent City After Dark committee<br />
member Candice Hubbard<br />
said. “Tent City After Dark will<br />
bring our community together to<br />
celebrate the history of Atascadero<br />
in a relaxed and fun atmosphere.”<br />
For those attending the home<br />
football game that Friday night,<br />
admission after 8 p.m. will be $10<br />
Featuring:<br />
per person with a hand stamp from<br />
the football game.<br />
As of press time, Carolina Story<br />
and Hilary & Kate were booked<br />
to play, with two more bands still<br />
to come.<br />
Firestone Walker Beer will be<br />
available, as well as other local<br />
brewers and wineries.<br />
To purchase tickets or more information,<br />
visit ColonyDays.org.<br />
Proudly Serving<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 25 | 25
TENT CITY<br />
Veterans Memorial Foundation<br />
Needs Your Help<br />
The Atascadero Faces of<br />
Freedom Veterans Memorial,<br />
located at the<br />
intersection of Highway 41 and<br />
Portola Road in Atascadero, needs<br />
your help.<br />
The memorial honors veterans<br />
throughout the county and was recognized<br />
some years ago as the official<br />
San Luis Obispo County Veterans<br />
Memorial. It was designed,<br />
built and paid for by community<br />
volunteers to honor the memory<br />
of those who gave their lives in service<br />
to the nation and describes the<br />
conflicts in which they served.<br />
The Atascadero Veterans Memorial<br />
Foundation (AVMF) is<br />
responsible for maintaining the<br />
memorial and coordinates ceremonies<br />
on Memorial Day and Veterans<br />
Day to honor veterans and<br />
their families.<br />
At the outset of the endeavor to<br />
build the memorial, multiple volunteer<br />
groups comprising more than<br />
50 volunteers came together to<br />
contribute. Since its dedication in<br />
November 2008, the organization’s<br />
numbers have dwindled to less than<br />
15 members. Now they are asking<br />
for people to join the organization<br />
in order that they might continue<br />
to host annual ceremonies on<br />
Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day<br />
which may not be possible without<br />
additional volunteers. Volunteers<br />
By Al Fonzi<br />
don’t have to be a veteran or even<br />
know a veteran, they just need to be<br />
willing to participate.<br />
The group meets at 6 p.m. on<br />
the last Monday of each month at<br />
the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post<br />
2814 located at the corner of Highway<br />
41 West and Santa Rosa Street<br />
in Atascadero. You may contact the<br />
AVMF President Al Fonzi at 805-<br />
423-5482 for further information.<br />
26 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
TENT CITY<br />
Coping with new school year stress<br />
“The two most powerful warriors are<br />
patience and time.” — Leo Tolstoy<br />
A<br />
new school year, new job,<br />
new living arrangement,<br />
and even a new relationship<br />
can cause stress. For many,<br />
the fall means back to school, a<br />
return to routine, or time to begin<br />
a new term. Some view the<br />
fall as a chance to make a fresh<br />
start and an opportunity to make<br />
new friends. However, individuals<br />
with challenges such as Attention<br />
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder<br />
(ADHD), learning disabilities<br />
and depression may find transitions<br />
difficult.<br />
These transitions can be particularly<br />
challenging for individuals<br />
with mental health concerns<br />
because they can struggle with<br />
friendships, may have difficulty<br />
relating to teachers, or may experience<br />
feelings of discontent.<br />
If you have a loved one, friend,<br />
colleague, or acquaintance that is<br />
dealing with a mental health issue,<br />
there are ways you can assist with<br />
transitions. Local school officials<br />
and North County centers such<br />
as the LINK can identify available<br />
services and support youth<br />
and families to connect with<br />
needed services.<br />
For many preschool, elementary,<br />
middle, and high school<br />
students transitions to a different<br />
school can signify social<br />
and educational development.<br />
Regular events such as puberty,<br />
changing schools, making friends<br />
and accepting more autonomy<br />
are considered a rite of passage.<br />
Often the physical environment<br />
in which the transition occurs is<br />
larger in size and expectations.<br />
When compared to the smaller,<br />
single-teacher environment of<br />
an elementary school, students at<br />
the middle or high school meet<br />
multiple teachers and differing<br />
expectations. Transitioning to<br />
the workplace or college can also<br />
cause stress, further challenging<br />
those with disabilities.<br />
Young adults with mental<br />
health issues can face difficulties,<br />
from getting educational accommodations<br />
to accessing affordable,<br />
high-quality mental health<br />
care. The transition to college or<br />
Jim Brescia<br />
By Jim Brescia, SLO County Superintendent<br />
the workplace may also require<br />
some planning. If an individual<br />
is overwhelmed by the process of<br />
getting ready for post-secondary<br />
education, there are organizations<br />
such as Transition Year that can<br />
help. People may assume that<br />
the major obstacle in adjusting<br />
to campus life or the workplace<br />
will be academic. However, research<br />
shows that emotional issues<br />
are most likely to interfere<br />
with success during transitions,<br />
even young adult transitions.<br />
There is no “right” routine for<br />
back to school time. Stress reducing<br />
methods include:<br />
• Time Buffer-If something takes<br />
longer than planned, extra time<br />
reduces anxiety.<br />
• Individual Path-Personal preference<br />
in completing tasks can<br />
reduce stress.<br />
• Group Support-Agreement<br />
and support reduces anxiety.<br />
• Task Lists-Breaking tasks into<br />
parts may reduce the stress and<br />
simplify the process.<br />
Fall transitions can be difficult<br />
for individuals with stress-related<br />
issues, but anticipating and<br />
working to counteract problems<br />
in advance can assist with transitional<br />
anxiety.<br />
San Luis Obispo County residents<br />
have access to 2-1-1 SLO<br />
County, a free program, that is a<br />
one-stop way to obtain timely access<br />
to health and human services<br />
and referrals. Together we make<br />
our community stronger.<br />
5935 Entrada Ave.,<br />
Atascadero, Ca 93422<br />
Children’s<br />
Consignment<br />
(805)296-3600<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 27
<strong>COLONY</strong> TASTE<br />
Americana<br />
TASTE OF<br />
THE <strong>COLONY</strong> COOKBOOK<br />
During summer months<br />
throughout the country,<br />
families and friends are<br />
involved in country fairs. Whether<br />
they’re at the community, county or<br />
state level, one thing they have in<br />
common is food.<br />
However, food items on the<br />
midway are entirely different<br />
than food items being judged for<br />
a blue ribbon!<br />
I judged in that area a few<br />
times years ago, at our own Mid-<br />
State Fair in Paso Robles (usually<br />
I judged in the arts and crafts section).<br />
But, I sure remember my first<br />
time as a food judge. I was assigned<br />
to the baking category and I started<br />
off with a bang. I took normal<br />
bites of cookies, brownies, cakes and<br />
pies and very soon I was on a “sugar<br />
high.” We were being interviewed<br />
by a reporter from KSBY, who happened<br />
to be a friend of mine, and<br />
when she got to me I could hardly<br />
talk about all those sugar-filled<br />
entries. In fact, it was several days<br />
before I could face anything that<br />
had sugar in it.<br />
Other foods that are judged, of<br />
course, are the results of a bountiful<br />
summer harvest. Pickles are forever<br />
popular, and jams, jellies, and preserves<br />
are favorites to “put-up” for<br />
competition at the fair.<br />
Since it is too late now for<br />
local competition, consider “putting<br />
up” a few jars for winter<br />
holiday gift-giving.<br />
Bread-and-butter pickles are<br />
some of those old-fashioned pickles<br />
that never go out of style. I remember<br />
that my Grandma O’Haver’s<br />
pantry was never without several<br />
jars and she served them with<br />
almost everything.<br />
My resource this month is a<br />
wonderful little cookbook titled<br />
“The Country Fair Cookbook”<br />
compiled by Alison Boteler in<br />
1995. It has become one of my<br />
“go-to” cookbooks for summer, even<br />
though here in California most of<br />
the recipes are good all year ‘round!<br />
By Barbie Butz<br />
I have to admit that when they<br />
say “don’t judge a book by its cover,<br />
I did. It has a red border (I love red)<br />
and features a strawberry/blueberry<br />
dessert with a true “Americana”<br />
background. It just looked like<br />
summer, country fairs, and all that<br />
is good about America.<br />
I’ve picked out a few recipes to<br />
share. There’s really no theme except<br />
that they are good for using<br />
summer produce. Enjoy!<br />
Iced<br />
Bread-and-Butter<br />
Pickles<br />
Ingredients:<br />
• 4 quarts thinly sliced cucumbers<br />
• 8 onions, sliced<br />
• 2 green bell peppers, split in half,<br />
seeded and sliced<br />
• ½ cup kosher salt<br />
• 2 trays of ice cubes<br />
• 4 cups sugar<br />
• 1 ½ teaspoons turmeric<br />
• ½ teaspoon ground cloves<br />
• 4 teaspoons whole mustard seed<br />
• 1 teaspoon celery seed<br />
• 4 ½ cups distilled white vinegar<br />
Bread-and-Butter-Pickles<br />
Photo by Andrea Nguyen<br />
Directions:<br />
Combine cucumbers, onions, and<br />
peppers in large bowl. Sprinkle salt<br />
over vegetables and toss to coat.<br />
Empty trays of ice over vegetables.<br />
Let stand 3 hours. Drain vegetables<br />
completely. Combine sugar, spices,<br />
and vinegar in large kettle and bring<br />
to boil. Reduce heat to very low and<br />
add vegetables. Heat through but<br />
do not allow liquid to boil. Meanwhile,<br />
sterilize five 1-pint jars (and<br />
loose lids) in another kettle filled<br />
with boiling water. Turn jars and<br />
lids upside down on clean dish towel<br />
to drain. Ladle pickles into hot<br />
jars; liquid should come within 1/4<br />
–inch of top. Seal lids and process<br />
jars in kettle of boiling water for 5<br />
minutes. Remove jars with tongs<br />
and cool. Once opened, pickles<br />
must be stored in the refrigerator.<br />
With pulled pork sandwiches<br />
so popular these days, here’s a<br />
delicious slaw to serve with them<br />
that will win on two scores. Number<br />
one, it uses some of that fresh<br />
corn you grew this summer, and<br />
number two, it absolutely needs to<br />
be made hours, or a day in advance<br />
of serving. The flavor improves<br />
as it marinates!<br />
Cabbage and Corn Slaw<br />
Photo by Alex Bayley<br />
Cabbage and<br />
Corn Slaw<br />
Ingredients:<br />
• 6 cups shredded cabbage<br />
• 2 cups cooked corn, removed<br />
from cob<br />
• ½ cup diced red bell pepper<br />
• ½ cup diced green bell pepper<br />
• ½ cup sugar<br />
• ½ cup distilled white vinegar<br />
• 2/3 cup vegetable oil<br />
• 1 teaspoon celery salt<br />
• ½ teaspoon cracked black pepper<br />
• ½ teaspoon dry mustard<br />
Directions:<br />
Cook several fresh ears of corn<br />
and cool. Slice corn kernels off of<br />
the cob and measure 2 cups. Add<br />
corn to shredded cabbage and red<br />
and green bell peppers. Toss in<br />
large bowl. Blend sugar vinegar,<br />
oil, celery salt, pepper and dry<br />
mustard in a separate bowl. Pour<br />
over cabbage mixture and toss.<br />
Cover and refrigerate several hours<br />
or overnight to blend flavors.<br />
Try this last recipe for Lemon<br />
and Egg Dressing on 2 pounds of<br />
cooked fresh green beans with 1<br />
small red onion sliced paper-thin,<br />
to make a delicious summer salad.<br />
Lemon and<br />
Egg Dressing<br />
Ingredients:<br />
• 5 tablespoons fresh lemon juice<br />
• 1tablespoon sugar<br />
•½ teaspoon salt<br />
• ¼ teaspoon cracked black pepper<br />
• ¼ cup vegetable oil<br />
• 1 tablespoon minced fresh thyme<br />
• 1 hard-cooked egg, finely<br />
chopped.<br />
Directions:<br />
Combine all dressing ingredients<br />
in small bowl and<br />
whisk to blend.<br />
Pour over green beans and red<br />
onion in large bowl and toss well.<br />
Cover and chill at least 3 hours to<br />
blend flavors.<br />
Enjoy the rest of summer!<br />
28 | pasomagazine.com PASO <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
<strong>COLONY</strong> TASTE<br />
ANCIENT PEAKS WINERY<br />
Ranch families bring singular vision to life in Santa Margarita<br />
Ancient Peaks Winery is<br />
the story of three families<br />
with one vision — to be<br />
proud stewards of a land steeped<br />
in Mission-era history and Wild<br />
West mythology.<br />
Doug Filipponi, Rob Rossi and<br />
Karl Wittstrom, a trio of local<br />
winegrowers and ranchers, and<br />
their families are the proprietors<br />
of the 14,000-acre Santa Margarita<br />
Ranch, one of California’s<br />
oldest continuously-operated<br />
ranches located in the hamlet of<br />
Santa Margarita. Here the partners<br />
founded the Ancient Peaks<br />
Winery in 2005 with wines produced<br />
from the coveted Margarita<br />
Vineyard. The only vineyard in<br />
the Santa Margarita Ranch AVA<br />
(American Viticultural Area) is<br />
cradled along the foot of the Santa<br />
Lucia Mountains, just 14 miles<br />
from the Pacific Ocean.<br />
Recently remodeled, the Ancient<br />
Peaks tasting room on El<br />
Camino Real is furnished in an<br />
eye-catching contemporary farmhouse<br />
style. However, the Santa<br />
Margarita Ranch’s illustrious<br />
pedigree harks back to the Chumash<br />
and Salinas Indians more<br />
than 10,000 years ago.<br />
Visiting the ranch is like stepping<br />
back in time. Several years<br />
ago I first experienced the sprawling<br />
ranch in a Jeep tour with<br />
Wittstrom, gathering large white<br />
oyster fossil shells scattered in the<br />
hundreds on the ranch — a testament<br />
to the area’s origin as an uplifted<br />
seabed, our host explained.<br />
From luscious rich reds to crisp,<br />
fresh whites, the Santa Margarita<br />
AVA produces distinctive wines.<br />
The region’s pronounced marine<br />
influence allows the grapes to enjoy<br />
a long growing season. Add to<br />
that five types of soils — ranging<br />
from volcanic and granite to rocky<br />
alluvial, shale and ancient seabed,<br />
formed as result of tectonic friction<br />
in the surrounding Santa<br />
Lucia mountain peaks — and<br />
you get a richly complex portfolio<br />
of some 18 different types of<br />
wines produced at Ancient Peaks<br />
each year.<br />
“Only six wines are available<br />
through distribution channels<br />
and the rest at the tasting room<br />
or through wine club,” said Mike<br />
Sinor, when I recently met with<br />
the director of winemaking at<br />
the tasting room. We were joined<br />
by Amanda Wittstrom Higgins,<br />
fourth-generation vintner and<br />
vice president of operations. We<br />
started with some deliciously<br />
crisp white wines, savoring an<br />
aromatic 2016 Blanco, a blend of<br />
chardonnay and muscat blanco.<br />
“Good for a concert in the park<br />
or on the porch,” Higgins said.<br />
The 2017 chardonnay, fragrant<br />
with tropical fruit, was a<br />
standout for its affordable price<br />
point at $19.<br />
“It’s a competitive category,”<br />
Higgins offered. “I was looking<br />
for a food-friendly profile for<br />
chardonnay under $16 per bottle,<br />
with not too much oak or acid.”<br />
Higgins gathered more than<br />
200 chardonnays for her research<br />
and the winemaking team came<br />
up with the versatile chardonnay.<br />
During the tasting line up,<br />
Sinor recalls an interesting period<br />
Amanda Wittstrom and Mike Sinor<br />
Photo by Mira Honeycutt<br />
of the vineyard’s history. The late<br />
Robert Mondavi, known as the<br />
Godfather of Napa Valley, took<br />
a lease on 1,000 acres of Santa<br />
Margarita Ranch in 1999 from<br />
the trio of partners. “When Mondavi<br />
saw the location and weather,<br />
it was his vision that planted this<br />
vineyard,” Sinor said about the<br />
Margarita Vineyard. “He signed<br />
up for a 30-year lease.”<br />
Mondavi’s initial planting in<br />
1999, concluded in 2001, was<br />
of cabernet sauvignon and other<br />
Bordeaux varieties to blend<br />
with Napa Valley fruit to produce<br />
high-end wines. A few<br />
years later, though, the faltering<br />
Robert Mondavi Winery<br />
was sold to Constellation<br />
Brands. In 2005 the three<br />
families bought the lease<br />
back from Constellation.<br />
It was a blessing in disguise.<br />
Now the three families got in the<br />
business of producing wine and as<br />
Ancient Peaks it became an estate<br />
winery, Sinor noted.<br />
Ancient Peaks is known for its<br />
flagship Oyster Ridge, a lush cuvèe<br />
of cabernet sauvignon-driven<br />
Bordeaux style blend, and other<br />
distinctive reds. The 2016 merlot<br />
is loaded with dried cherries<br />
and layered with black fruits, the<br />
2015 zinfandel rings with heady<br />
aromas of blackberries with traces<br />
of brisk minerality and the<br />
grainy tannins add depth and a<br />
long finish to the 2016 cabernet<br />
sauvignon. The 2014 petite sirah<br />
is a mouthful of rich cherry cola<br />
while the inky, muscle-flexing<br />
2016 syrah-driven Renegade is<br />
seamlessly blended with zinfandel,<br />
malbec, petit verdot and<br />
petite sirah.<br />
Higgins is in charge of sales<br />
and marketing as well as human<br />
resources and special events. She<br />
has pioneered several projects<br />
at the winery — among them a<br />
three-month internship program<br />
at Ancient Peaks Winery and<br />
Dream Big Darling, a nonprofit<br />
agency offering full scholarships<br />
to women in the wine industry.<br />
This year Higgins launched Wine<br />
Speak Paso Robles in Atascadero,<br />
a four-day immersive experience<br />
filled with seminars, workshops<br />
and tastings.<br />
The 2019 event is scheduled<br />
from Jan. 7-10 and promises to<br />
foster camaraderie and collaboration<br />
between wine aficionados<br />
and industry professionals.<br />
<strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 29
EVENTS<br />
Special Events<br />
Sept. 1-3 — Morro Bay Art in the Park, Fine Art & Quality Crafts located<br />
at City Park, on the corner of Morro Bay Blvd. and Harbor Drive. Open to the<br />
public Satrday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monay 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.. More<br />
information available by visiting morrobayartinthepark.com.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 8 & 9 — 12th Annual Dog Splash Days at the Templeton<br />
Community Pool for dogs to come for a swim as a fundraiser for Vineyard Dog<br />
Park. Special sessions available for small, senior, or disabled dogs. Space is<br />
limited. Prepaid reservations and details at www.parks4pups.org/splash-days<br />
or 805.239.4437.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 9 — Don your best pajama outfit for Pajama Party Movie, a fundraising<br />
event. A $10 ticket gets popcorn, soda and a vintage movie on the big<br />
screen at Park Cinemas. Viewing of 1969’s original “Support Your Local Sheriff”<br />
begins at 7 p.m. For tickets or more information, call 805-238-4103.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 14 — An Evening in Santa Margarita takes place from 5 to 9<br />
p.m. This family-friendly event takes place at various businesses through town<br />
and benefits the Friends of the Santa Margarita Library. Enjoy food, music, drinks<br />
and crafts while strolling through historic Santa Margarita.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 15 — 20th Annual Taste of Downtown in Downtown Paso. Starting<br />
at 11 a.m., sample food from Paso Robles restaurants and wineries and “take a taste<br />
of downtown.” Day passes are $25 and available from pasoroblesdowntown.org<br />
<strong>September</strong> 16 — The Paso Robles Art Association presents the 16th Annual<br />
Arte De Tiza, beginning at 8 a.m. Chalk art supplies will be provided and all ages<br />
are welcome to participate and have fun with this creative and colorful event.<br />
Sidewalk space is limited, so come early.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 22 & 23 — The 3rd Annual Showdown Cornhole Tournament<br />
will take place in Sunken Gardens in Atascadero, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The<br />
tournament benefits the Atascadero High School Greybots robotics team. See<br />
visitatascadero.com for more information.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 29 & 30 - Three Speckled Hens Antiques and Old Stuff Show<br />
is back for its bi-annual show. This two-day show brings many local vintage and<br />
antique dealers to the Paso Robles Event Center. Visit threespeckledhens.com<br />
for early bird or general admission tickets.<br />
October 5 — Tent City After Dark will take place in Sunken Gardens the<br />
evening prior to historic Colony Days parade. This event will run from 5 to 10<br />
p.m. with food, wine and beer, live music and so more! For more information,<br />
visit colonydays.org.<br />
October 6 — The 45th Annual Colony Days celebration invites you to join<br />
in on the Mudhole Follies, a fun and engaging show. The parade begins at 10<br />
a.m., followed by food and fun in Sunken Gardens in Atascadero including<br />
musical performances, weiner dog races, the Tent City historical re-enactment<br />
and more. Visit colonydays.org for more information.<br />
October 13 — Paso Robles Pioneer Day highlights the heritage and traditions<br />
of Paso Robles in and around the downtown area during the annual Pioneer<br />
Day event. Bring the whole family to downtown to enjoy a parade, the free bean<br />
feed and daylong, fun-filled activities. Parade begins at 10 a.m.<br />
Fundraisers<br />
Submit listings to events@nosloco.com, and visit nosloco.com for more information on events.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 8 — 18th Annual Champions of Youth Charity Dinner and<br />
Auction honoring Todd Evenson will take place at the Paso Robles Event<br />
Center beginning with cocktails at 5:30 p.m. The evening brings a lively<br />
social hour with fun games of chance, a delicious five-course dinner with<br />
wine pairings, live and silent auctions and dancing. For more information<br />
or to purchase tickets, visit BGCSLOC18.givesmart.com<br />
<strong>September</strong> 16 — 2nd Annual Cow Pie Bingo will take place at the Printery<br />
Building, 6351 Olmeda Ave. in Atascadero from 4 to 7:30 p.m. Live music<br />
provided by Shelly and the Classics. Food, drinks and dessert will be available<br />
for purchase. Visit atascaderoprintery.org for more information or to<br />
purchase raffle tickets.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 21 — Women in Business Scholarship Fundraiser, 6 to 9 p.m.,<br />
Two-Steppin’ Under the Stars is an evening at Harris Stage Lines where<br />
you will enjoy exciting live music, dancing, dinner and libations from local<br />
wineries and breweries.<br />
October 6 — Paso’s Pink Moto Ride is a full day event. We enjoy a PINK<br />
pancake breakfast at BarrelHouse, a 75-mile ride through the backroads<br />
and return for barbecue lunch, live music, Pink Beer and fun at BarrelHouse!<br />
This event benefits the Cancer Support Community California Central Coast<br />
division. Visit cscslo.org to register.<br />
Concerts & Entertainment — Visit NoSLOCo.com for More Info<br />
Movies in the Garden — Atascadero Sunken Gardens, Sept. 1 and 9,<br />
8 to 11 p.m. To see the movie schedule, go to visitatascadero.com<br />
Whale Rock Music Festival — Castoro Cellars, Sept. 15 and 16, see whalerockmusicfestival.com<br />
for schedule and ticket information.<br />
Culture & The Arts<br />
Winery Partners Wine Bar — Wine Tasting at Studios on the Park every Friday<br />
and Saturday, 5 to 9 p.m., benefits the free arts education program for local<br />
kids. studiosonthepark.org<br />
Art After Dark Paso — first Saturday, wine tasting, 5 to 9 p.m., Downtown<br />
Paso, hosted by Studios on the Park.<br />
Farmers Markets<br />
Atascadero - Wednesdays 3-6 p.m., Sunken Gardens, 5942 West Mall;<br />
Special Event: Summer Sizzle event through Aug. 8.<br />
Paso Robles - Tuesdays 3-6 p.m., Paso Robles City Park at 11th Street<br />
and Spring Street<br />
Templeton<br />
Saturdays, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., Templeton Community Park at 6th and Crocker<br />
Street<br />
30 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, August <strong>2018</strong>
Annual music festival benefits THS music<br />
Whale Rock Music Festival<br />
keeps getting better.<br />
The two-day party<br />
at Whale Rock Vineyard, right<br />
next door to Castoro Cellars in<br />
Templeton has become an annual<br />
must-attend live music event<br />
for <strong>September</strong>.<br />
“The most important factor is<br />
quality,” said Luke Udsen, Director<br />
of California Sales and<br />
Marketing at Castoro Cellars.<br />
“We only book artists that are<br />
high-quality performers that we<br />
know will put on a great show.”<br />
Tickets for Whale Rock Music<br />
Festival are already surging<br />
ahead of last year, which sold<br />
out. Seventeen bands and artists<br />
will perform on Sept. 15 and 16.<br />
They include Aloe Blacc, Lake<br />
Street Dive, Orgone, Fruition,<br />
Con Brio, Rayland Baxter, Joey<br />
Dosik, Mipso, Jade Jackson, Coffis<br />
Brothers and the Mountain<br />
Men, Nicole Stromsoe, Band the<br />
Hive, Samba Loca, Mannequins<br />
by Day, Mama Tumba, Arthur<br />
Watership and Miss Leo and<br />
Her Bluegrass Boys.<br />
“All of the bands have become<br />
friends of ours over the years,<br />
which is awesome,” Luke said.<br />
“Nicole Stromsoe, who is opening<br />
the main stage on Saturday, went<br />
to Templeton High and graduated<br />
the same year I did.”<br />
Artists on the Main Stage will<br />
start at 1 p.m. on both days, and<br />
Stomping Grounds Stage bands<br />
will begin playing promptly at<br />
noon. The final performances for<br />
both days will begin at 8 p.m.<br />
“We are featuring a full-blown<br />
kids area called ‘Kit’s corner’<br />
that has a musical petting zoo,<br />
face painting and a tree fort,”<br />
Luke said. “There will also be kids’<br />
yoga and lots of other activities.<br />
Kids love Whale Rock!”<br />
There will be food and drink<br />
vendors aplenty for this year’s<br />
concerts including beverages from<br />
Toro Creek Brewing, Firestone<br />
By Melissa Chavez<br />
Walker, Barrelhouse Brewing,<br />
Tin City Cider, Bristol’s Cider,<br />
Whalebird Kombucha, Dark<br />
Nectar Coffee and more.<br />
Whale Rock Music Festival<br />
strongly supports music education<br />
programs at Templeton High<br />
School, which helps fortify the gap<br />
between budgetary constraints<br />
and talented students. Last year,<br />
the event raised $24,268 for the<br />
Templeton Instrumental Music<br />
Boosters Association (TIMBA).<br />
“We also raised $2,000 for ‘Do<br />
It for the Love,’ a nonprofit started<br />
by Michael Franti,” Luke said.<br />
“The donations for TIMBA go<br />
directly to the Templeton High<br />
School music program.”<br />
Visitors are encouraged to dress<br />
in layers and comfortable walking<br />
shoes for variable temperatures,<br />
bring low-back chairs or blankets,<br />
a day pack for hats, sunglasses,<br />
sunscreen, and water bottles (water<br />
is provided), ID’s for those<br />
21 and over, and phone chargers<br />
for Whale Rock’s charging station.<br />
(Please, no pets or outside<br />
food and beverages.)<br />
For tickets and information,<br />
visit whalerockmusicfestival.com.<br />
E85<br />
Diesel<br />
Propane<br />
Car Wash<br />
Hwy 41 & 101 Exit 219 Atascadero, CA 93422<br />
August <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 31<br />
®
EVENTS<br />
At the Library<br />
Atascadero Library<br />
6555 Capistrano, Atascadero • 805- 461-6161<br />
Tuesday & Wednesday — 10:30 a.m., Preschool<br />
Story time for 1-5 year olds<br />
Thursday — Pyjama Drama 3:30 to 4:30 p.m., open<br />
to school age children, registration is required<br />
Friday — 10:30 a.m., Toddler Story time for 1-3<br />
year olds<br />
Special Events<br />
<strong>September</strong> 4 — Gems in the Stacks Book Discussion<br />
11 a.m. to 12 p.m., open to adults<br />
<strong>September</strong> 12 — What is Bitcoin? 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.,<br />
open to adults<br />
<strong>September</strong> 15 — How to Publish Your Book 10:30<br />
a.m. to 12 p.m., open to adults and teens<br />
<strong>September</strong> 20 — Mixed Minds Book Group 2:30-<br />
3:30 p.m., open to adults<br />
Chambers of Commerce<br />
<strong>September</strong> 29 — Audiobooks & the voices telling<br />
the stories 2 to 3 p.m., open to teens<br />
October 1 — Gems in the Stacks Book Discussion<br />
11 a.m. to 12 p.m., open to adults<br />
Paso Robles Library<br />
1000 Spring St., Paso Robles • 805- 237-3870<br />
Monday & Friday — 10:30 a.m. & 11:30 a.m., Preschool<br />
Story time for 1-3 year olds<br />
Wednesday — 2:30 p.m., Grandparents & Books<br />
for kids of all ages<br />
Thursday — 10:30 a.m., Mother Goose on the Loose<br />
for ages 0-18 months<br />
Special Events<br />
<strong>September</strong> 7 — Club Ghibi 4 p.m., open to 13-17<br />
year olds<br />
<strong>September</strong> 10 — LEGO Build 4 p.m., open to all ages<br />
<strong>September</strong> 29 — Maker Monday 4 p.m., open to<br />
7-12 year olds<br />
Creston Library<br />
6290 Adams, Creston • 805- 237-3010<br />
No events in <strong>September</strong><br />
San Miguel Library<br />
254 13th St, San Miguel • 805- 467-3224<br />
No events in <strong>September</strong><br />
Santa Margarita Library<br />
9630 Murphy Ave, Santa Margarita • 805- 438-5622<br />
<strong>September</strong> 1 — Young People’s Reading Round<br />
Table & Movie, 4 to 5:30 p.m., open to 12 to 16<br />
year olds<br />
<strong>September</strong> 4 — E-help at the Library, 1 to 3 p.m.,<br />
open to all ages<br />
Shandon Library<br />
195 N 2nd St, Shandon • 805- 237-3009<br />
No events in <strong>September</strong><br />
Atascadero Chamber of Commerce<br />
Atascaderochamber.org • 805-466-2044<br />
6907 El Camino Real, Atascadero, CA 93422<br />
<strong>September</strong> 15 — California Coastal Cleanup Day, 9 a.m to 12 p.m., visit<br />
coastal.ca.gov for more information or registration<br />
<strong>September</strong> 27 — <strong>September</strong> Mixer, 5:30 to 7 p.m., hosted by Rabobank at<br />
6950 El Camino Real<br />
Paso Robles Chamber of Commerce<br />
pasorobleschamber.com • 805-238-0506<br />
1225 Park St, Paso Robles, CA 93446<br />
Office Hours with District Supervisor John Peschong — third Thursday, 9 to<br />
11 a.m., Paso Robles Chamber of Commerce Conference Room. Contact<br />
Vicki Janssen for appointment, vjanssen@co.clo.ca.us, 805-781-4491<br />
Office Hours with Field Representative for Senator Bill Monning — third<br />
Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m., Paso Robles Chamber of Commerce Conference<br />
Room. Contact Hunter Snider for appointment, 805-549-3784<br />
Paso Robles Chamber of Commerce Restaurant of the Month Appreciation<br />
— first Tuesday, time/location TBA, pasorobleschamber.com<br />
<strong>September</strong> 4 —Restaurant Appreciation, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.,<br />
<strong>September</strong> 12 — Chamber Membership Mixer, 5:30-7 p.m., Hosted by A<br />
Heavenly Home, 1920 Prospect Ave.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 26— Wake Up Paso, 7:30 to 9 a.m., Paso Robles Inn Ballroom<br />
Templeton Chamber of Commerce<br />
templetonchamber.com • 805- 434-1789<br />
321 S. Main Street #C, Templeton, CA 93465<br />
Chamber Board of Directors Meeting — 4 to 5:30 p.m., every 2nd Wednesday<br />
of the month. Pacific Premier Bank Conference Room on Las Tablas Blvd.<br />
<strong>September</strong> 5 —Templeton Women’s Club Meeting, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. with<br />
Speaker Assemblyman, Jordan Cunningham, bring a sack lunch<br />
<strong>September</strong> 22 —Denim and Diamonds, 5 to 10:30 p.m., Guests must be<br />
21 or over<br />
<strong>September</strong> 29 — Templeton Oktoberfest, 2 to 6 p.m. in Templeton Park<br />
Taking Care of Business<br />
North County Toast ‘N Talk Toastmasters — Mondays,<br />
6:15 to 7:30 p.m. Keller Williams Real Estate,<br />
Paso, 805-464-9229<br />
Early But Worth It Chapter — Business Networking<br />
International — Tuesdays, 7 to 8:30 a.m.,<br />
Culinary Arts Academy, Paso, Visitors welcome,<br />
bniccc.com<br />
Taking Care of Business<br />
Business Networking International — Wednesday,<br />
7 to 8:30 a.m., Cricket’s, 9700 El Camino Real,<br />
#104, Atascadero. Visitors welcome, bniccc.com<br />
Above the Grade Advanced Toastmasters — first<br />
Thursday, 7 to 9 p.m. Kennedy Club Fitness, Paso,<br />
805-238-0524, 930206.toastmastersclubs.org<br />
Partners in $uccess — Business Networking International<br />
—Thursday, 7 to 8:30 a.m., Paso Robles<br />
Assn. of Realtors, 1101 Riverside Ave. Visitors<br />
welcome, bniccc.com<br />
Speak Easy Toastmasters Club — Friday, 12:10<br />
to 1:15 p.m. Founders Pavilion, Twin Cities Community<br />
Hospital. 9797.toastmastersclubs.org.<br />
805-237-9096<br />
Almond Country Quilters Guild Meeting<br />
— <strong>September</strong> 10: General Membership<br />
Meeting & Trunk Show 6:30 to 9 p.m at<br />
Trinity Lutheran Church, 940 Creston<br />
Road, Paso. Community Quilts, <strong>September</strong><br />
15: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Bethel Lutheran<br />
Church, 295 Old County Rd, Templeton.<br />
Contact kajquilter@ gmail.com or<br />
lisajguerrero@msn.com, acqguild.com<br />
Coffee with a CHP — second Tuesday,<br />
8:30 a.m., Nature’s Touch Nursery & Harvest,<br />
225 Main St., Templeton.<br />
Exchange Club — second Tuesday,<br />
12:15-1:30 p.m. McPhee’s, Templeton.<br />
805-610-8096, exchangeclubofnorthslocounty.org<br />
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA)<br />
Chapter 465 — second Wednesday, 7<br />
p.m. at Paso Airport Terminal. Getting<br />
youth involved with aviation, EAA465.org<br />
North County Multiflora Garden Club<br />
— second Wednesday, Noon to 3 p.m.<br />
Public is welcome, no charge. PR Community<br />
Church, 2706 Spring St., contact<br />
Carolyn Fergoda 805-237-2534, guests<br />
welcome, multifloragardenclub.org<br />
Monthly Dinner at Estrella Warbirds<br />
Museum — first Wednesday, 6 p.m., guest<br />
speakers. 805- 296-1935 for dinner reservations,<br />
ewarbirds.org<br />
North County Newcomers — <strong>September</strong><br />
5, General Membership Meeting at<br />
The Grove on 41, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.<br />
Gatherings held first Wednesday for<br />
residents living here less than 3 years.<br />
RSVP and more information available<br />
at northcountynewcomers.org<br />
Daughters of the American Revolution<br />
— third Thursday in <strong>September</strong>. For time<br />
and place, email dmcpatriotdaughter@<br />
gmail.com<br />
Active Senior Club of Templeton — first<br />
Friday, 10:30 a.m., Templeton Community<br />
Center, 601 S. Main St, Templeton<br />
North County Women’s Connection<br />
Luncheon — second Friday, 11 a.m.,<br />
Templeton Community Center. $12.00.<br />
Reservations by <strong>September</strong> 9 to JoAnn<br />
Pickering, 805-239-1096.<br />
Central Coast African Violet Society —<br />
Meetings are located at Brookdale Senior<br />
Living, Activity Room, 1919 Creston<br />
Rd, Paso Robles from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.<br />
Meetings are held on the 2nd Saturday of<br />
the month, October the 3rd Saturday of<br />
the month due to Pioneer Days.<br />
Classic Car Cruise Night — second Saturday<br />
(weather permitting), 5 to 7 p.m.,<br />
King Oil Tools, 2235 Spring St., Paso.<br />
Tony Ororato, 805-712-0551.<br />
32 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, August <strong>2018</strong>
EVENTS<br />
Service Organizations<br />
American Legion Post 50 • 240 Scott St., Paso<br />
Robles • 805-239-7370<br />
Commander John Irwin, 805-286-6187.<br />
Hamburger Lunch — every Thursday, 11 a.m.-1<br />
p.m., $5<br />
Pancake Breakfast — 3rd Saturday, 8-11 a.m., $6<br />
Post Meeting — 4th Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.<br />
American Legion Post 220 • 805 Main Street,<br />
Templeton<br />
Post Meeting — 2nd & 4th Wednesday, 6 p.m.<br />
Elks Lodges<br />
Atascadero Lodge 2733 • 1516 El Camino Real<br />
• 805-466-3557<br />
Lodge Meeting — second and fourth Thursdays<br />
Paso Robles Lodge 2364 • 1420 Park Street •<br />
805-239-1411<br />
Lodge Meeting — first and third Wednesdays<br />
El Paso de Robles Grange #555<br />
627 Creston Rd., • 805-239-4100<br />
Zumba — Tuesday and Thursday, 8:45 a.m.<br />
Do Paso Square Dancers — second Thursday,<br />
7-9 p.m.<br />
Pancake Breakfast — 2nd Sunday, 7:30-11 a.m.<br />
Kiwanis International<br />
Atascadero • 7848 Pismo Ave. • 805-610-7229<br />
Key Club — every Wednesday, 11:55 a.m.<br />
Health & Wellness<br />
WELLNESS KITCHEN AND RESOURCE CENTER<br />
1255 Las Tablas Rd., Templeton. Visit thewkrc.<br />
org, 805-434-1800 for information on Healing<br />
and Wellness Foods meal programs, volunteer<br />
opportunities, and classes (to RSVP, register and<br />
pay online.) Hours: Monday through Friday 10<br />
a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday until 6 p.m.<br />
August 16 — Healthy Cooking Class: Thirst<br />
Quenchers — Instructor Evan Vossler. 5:30-7:30<br />
p.m., FREE for those facing illness, otherwise<br />
$20. No one will be turned away for lack of<br />
funds.<br />
August 17 — Healthy Cooking Class: Thirst<br />
Quenchers — 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. at Idler’s Home,<br />
122 Cross St., San Luis Obispo. RSVP required to<br />
805-434-1800 or nancy@TheWKRC.org.<br />
August 22 — Intro to Wellness: A Taste of Change<br />
with Registered Dietitian Hayley Garelli. Learn<br />
10 simple ways to begin your clean eating journey,<br />
5:30-6:30 p.m. Please RSVP. Class is FREE.<br />
CANCER SUPPORT COMMUNITY<br />
1051 Las Tablas Road, Templeton provides support,<br />
education and hope. 805-238-4411. Cancer<br />
Support Helpline, 888-793-9355, 6 a.m.-6<br />
p.m. PST. Visit cscslo.org for support groups,<br />
social events, education and kid’s programs.<br />
SPECIAL PROGRAMS:<br />
Please NO drop-ins to support groups! If you<br />
would like to attend please call Jamie 238-4411<br />
for an orientation time slot first.<br />
9/5 • Life Beyond Cancer, 11:30 a.m.;<br />
9/12 • Young Survivors Peer Gathering, 6 p.m.<br />
in Templeton;<br />
9/19 • Potluck Social, 11:30 a.m.;<br />
Kiwanis Club — every Thursday, 7 a.m.<br />
Paso Robles • 1900 Golden Hill Rd. (Culinary<br />
Arts Academy)<br />
Kiwanis Club — every Tuesday, 12 p.m.<br />
Board Members — 1st Tuesday, 1 p.m.<br />
Night Meeting — third Wednesday, 6 p.m., Su<br />
Casa Restaurant (2927 Spring St.)<br />
Lions Club Meetings<br />
Atascadero Club 2385 • 5035 Palma Ave.<br />
Meeting – second & fourth Wednesday, 7 p.m.<br />
Paso Robles Club 2407 • 1420 Park St.<br />
Meeting – second & fourth Tuesday, 7 p.m.<br />
San Miguel Club 2413 • 256 13th St.<br />
Meeting – first & third Thursdays, 7 p.m.<br />
Santa Margarita Club 2418 • 9610 Murphy St.<br />
Meeting – second & fourth Monday, 7:30 p.m.<br />
Shandon Valley Club • 630-571-5466<br />
Templeton Club • 601 Main St. • 805-434-1071<br />
Meeting – first & third Thursdays, 7 pm<br />
Loyal Order of Moose<br />
Atascadero #2067 • 8507 El Camino Real •<br />
805-466-5121<br />
Meeting — first and third Thursday, 6 p.m.<br />
Bingo — first Sunday, 12-2 p.m.<br />
Queen of Hearts — every Tuesday, 7 p.m.<br />
Pool League — every Wednesday<br />
9/20 • Advanced Cancer Support Grp, 11 a.m.;<br />
9/25 • Art Time with Katie, 1:30 p.m.;<br />
9/26 • Mindfulness Hour, 11:30 a.m., Must RSVP<br />
9/27 • Breast Cancer Support Group, 12 p.m,;<br />
Young Survivors Peer Support Gathering SLO, 6<br />
p.m., Wilshire Community Services, 277 South<br />
St, Ste. J, SLO;<br />
10/3 • Art Time with Katie, 1:30 p.m.<br />
WEEKLY SCHEDULE: MONDAY: Therapeutic<br />
Yoga at Dharma Yoga, 11:30 a.m.<br />
TUESDAY: Educational Radio Show, 1 p.m.<br />
WEDNESDAY: Living with Cancer Support<br />
Group — Newly Diagnosed/Active Treatment, 10<br />
a.m.<br />
FRIDAY: 8/10 & 8/24-Grupo Fuerza y Esperanza,<br />
6 p.m.<br />
Healthy Lifestyle — Navigate with Niki-Thursdays<br />
by appointment, call 805-238-4411; Cancer<br />
Well-Fit® at Paso Robles Sports Club, Mondays<br />
and Thursdays 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., pre-registration<br />
required with Kathy Thomas at kathytho<br />
mas10@hotmail.com or 805-610-6486.; Beautification<br />
Boutique offers products for hair loss<br />
and resources for mastectomy patients knitted<br />
knockers.org.<br />
SUPPORT & ENCOURAGEMENT<br />
North County Overeaters Anonymous — 5:30<br />
p.m., Trinity Lutheran Church, Fireside Room,<br />
940 Creston Rd., Paso, OA.org.<br />
MOPS — Mothers of Pre-schoolers — first & third<br />
Tuesday, 9:30 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church,<br />
940 Creston Road, Paso, Ashley Hazell, 805-459-<br />
6049, nocomops@gmail.com.<br />
Chronic Pain Support Group — CRPS (Chronic<br />
Paso Robles #243 • 2548 Spring St. • 805-239-<br />
0503. Visit mooseintl.org for more information.<br />
Optimist Club<br />
Atascadero • dinner meetings second and<br />
fourth Tuesday, 5:30 p.m., Outlaws Bar & Grill,<br />
9850 E. Front Rd. or call 805-712-5090<br />
Paso Robles • dinner meetings second and<br />
fourth Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., Paso Robles Elks<br />
Lodge, 1420 Park St.<br />
Rotary International<br />
Atascadero • 9315 Pismo Ave.<br />
Meeting — every Wednesday, 12 p.m. at<br />
Atascadero Lake Pavillion<br />
Paso Robles Sunrise • 1900 Golden Hill Rd.<br />
Meeting — every Wednesday, 7 a.m. at Culinary<br />
Arts Academy<br />
Templeton • 416 Main St.<br />
Meeting — first and third Tuesday, 7 a.m. at<br />
McPhee’s Grill<br />
Veterans of Foreign Wars<br />
Atascadero #2814 • 9555 Morro Rd., • 805-<br />
466-3305<br />
Meeting — first Thursday, 6:30 p.m.<br />
Paso Robles #10965 • 240 Scott St., • 805-239-<br />
7370<br />
Meeting — first Tuesday, 7 p.m.<br />
Regional Pain Syndrome), third Tuesdays, 5 to 6<br />
p.m. Rabobank, 1025 Las Tablas Rd, Templeton.<br />
Suzanne Miller 805-704-5970, suzanne.miller@<br />
ymail.com.<br />
North County Parkinson’s Support Group —<br />
third Tuesdays, 1 p.m., Templeton Presbyterian<br />
Church, 610 So. Main St. Info: Rosemary Dexter<br />
805-466-7226.<br />
Overeaters Anonymous — 7 p.m. Lutheran<br />
Church of the Redeemer, 4500 El Camino Real,<br />
Atascadero. Irene 818-415-0353.<br />
North County Prostate Cancer Support Group<br />
— third Thursday, 7 p.m., Twin Cities Community<br />
Hospital Pavilion Room. Bill Houston 805-995-<br />
2254 or American Cancer Society 805-473-1748.<br />
Lupus/Auto Immune Disorder Support Group —<br />
fourth Saturday, 10:30 a.m. Nature’s Touch, 225<br />
So. Main St., Templeton.<br />
GRIEF SUPPORT GROUPS<br />
Meetings at RISE: 1030 Vine St., Paso Robles<br />
Sponsored by Hospice SLO, 805-544-2266, hospiceslo.org<br />
Bereaved Parents Group - Tues, 5:30 to 7 p.m.<br />
Suicide Bereavement Support — fourth<br />
Wednesdays, 3 to 4:30 p.m.<br />
General Grief Support – Wednesdays, 5 to 6:30<br />
p.m. Meeting at 517 13th Street, Paso. No cost,<br />
no pre-registration.<br />
GriefShare All Saturdays in August, A 13-week<br />
seminar/support group for people grieving loss.<br />
10 a.m. to noon. $15 enrollment. Trinity Lutheran<br />
Church, Fireside Room, 940 Creston Rd., Paso.<br />
Call Deaconess Juliet Thompson, 805-238-3702,<br />
ext. 205 to RSVP.<br />
August <strong>2018</strong>, <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> colonymagazine.com | 33
LAST WORD<br />
Boys & Girls Club of North SLO County<br />
Celebrates CHAMPIONS OF YOUTH<br />
Outside of his volunteerism<br />
with Boys & Girls Club, Evenson<br />
is a residential mortgage lender<br />
and co-owner of Connect Home<br />
Loans in Paso Robles. “I got into<br />
the mortgage industry shortly after<br />
arriving from Orange County<br />
in the late ‘90s,” Evenson said. “I<br />
knew I wanted to pursue real estate<br />
and the loan side of the business<br />
intrigued me.”<br />
Evenson lives in Paso Robles<br />
with his wife of 26 years, Tressa.<br />
They have three adult daughters:<br />
Nicole, Natalie and Katie. In his<br />
free time, he also enjoys yard projects,<br />
camping and traveling. “The<br />
bulk of my community involveor<br />
the 18th year, Boys & Girls<br />
Club of North SLO County<br />
will honor a dedicated community<br />
member and their contributions<br />
to the organization. “The Board<br />
of Directors reviews contributions<br />
of our Board members and community<br />
partners — current and<br />
past — who have made a significant<br />
impact,” Board member Pat<br />
Bland said. This year, former Board<br />
Chair Todd Evenson was selected<br />
as the honoree for the Champions<br />
of Youth event scheduled on <strong>September</strong><br />
8th.<br />
“Todd has<br />
served on our<br />
Board since<br />
2012 and has<br />
been Board<br />
Chair for the<br />
Todd Evenson<br />
past fouryears,<br />
recently<br />
passing the<br />
gavel over to<br />
Nadine Sullivan,”<br />
Bland said. Bland added<br />
that some of the accomplishments<br />
achieved during Evenson’s time as<br />
Board Chair include expanding the<br />
number of children served as well<br />
as establishing community partnerships<br />
and adding a Clubsite<br />
in Atascadero.<br />
“I have been passionate about<br />
serving kids for quite some time,”<br />
Evenson said. “I started with<br />
coaching both soccer and softball<br />
while my own kids were still playing.<br />
The satisfaction from giving<br />
back and especially in helping kids<br />
improve not only their sports skills<br />
but also in navigating through life<br />
was very rewarding. As coaches, we<br />
were able to instill good character<br />
development that we knew could<br />
last a lifetime. Transitioning to the<br />
Boys & Girls Club was a natural<br />
fit in that our clubs are all about<br />
lifetime results and very intuitive<br />
programs. The<br />
organization<br />
focuses on academic<br />
success,<br />
character development<br />
and<br />
healthy lifestyles.”<br />
Evenson<br />
added that<br />
the Board also<br />
knows that it is<br />
important for<br />
children to be<br />
in a safe environment after school.<br />
“Ultimately, I can’t think of a better<br />
way to give back than to the future<br />
of our country, our kids,” he said.<br />
“I was humbled to be honored, but<br />
also felt there could be 30-plus<br />
honorees for this event. In order<br />
to achieve the success that we have<br />
as an organization, it takes many<br />
wonderful volunteers throughout<br />
our community to put all of the<br />
pieces together.”<br />
“Ultimately, I can’t think of a<br />
better way to give back than to the<br />
future of our country, our kids,”<br />
By Heather Young<br />
ment came in the form of coaching<br />
until transitioning to the Boys &<br />
Girls Club,” Evenson said.<br />
“The Champions of Youth<br />
Dinner event was started as our<br />
primary annual fundraiser to support<br />
the operating expenses for the<br />
organization 18 years ago,” Bland<br />
said. The organization has been in<br />
operation in North SLO County<br />
for over 28 years. “The award has<br />
been given to previous and current<br />
Board members, including local<br />
community superstars such as<br />
Sandy Viborg, Jeb Brown, Robert<br />
Covarubius, Dale Gomer and JED<br />
Nicholson,” Bland said.<br />
On Saturday, <strong>September</strong> 8, the<br />
Club will host its annual Champions<br />
of Youth Dinner & Auction<br />
at the Paso Robles Event Center,<br />
2198 Riverside Avenue, at 5:30<br />
p.m. Approximately 200 guests<br />
come together each year for a lively<br />
social hour, passed appetizers and a<br />
four-course dinner catered by Chef<br />
Jeffrey Scott with local wine pairings,<br />
live and silent auctions and<br />
dancing.<br />
Tickets to the Champions of<br />
Youth dinner are available by calling<br />
Karen, Club Office Manager,<br />
at 805-440-8783 or by visiting<br />
bgcslocounty.org.<br />
Heather Young can be reached<br />
at Heather@pasomagazine.com<br />
JEFF RAILSBACK<br />
JOINS THE CLUB<br />
Boys and Girls Club Hires Jeff<br />
as Development Coordinator<br />
Jeff Railsback<br />
The Boys and Girls Club of the<br />
North SLO County welcomed Jeff<br />
Railsback to the position of Development<br />
Coordinator as the program<br />
focuses on growth and development.<br />
With an already-strong<br />
presence in Paso Robles, he will<br />
help expand the program to serve<br />
more kids, and grow the Atascadero<br />
program into maturity.<br />
As the Development Coordinator,<br />
Jeff will be the face of the<br />
North County Boys & Girls Club<br />
with on-the-job duties including<br />
donor relations and stewardship,<br />
building new partnerships and<br />
donor bases and fundraising.<br />
“We want to make sure that we<br />
are communicating to the community<br />
what we are doing,” Jeff said,<br />
“and properly acknowledging the<br />
people that are supporting us.”<br />
With Jeff’s role, the club will continue<br />
to work along its established<br />
longterm goals of finding a new<br />
facility in Paso Robles to meet the<br />
demand for its services, and grow<br />
awareness and participation in the<br />
Atascadero program into a facility<br />
of its own.<br />
“I’m going to be spending a<br />
lot of my time in Atascadero,” Jeff<br />
said. “Most of the donors we have,<br />
we’ve had for the past 10 years,<br />
before we even had a club in<br />
Atascadero. There is a huge need<br />
to find a facility and let people<br />
know about our services.”<br />
The North SLO County program<br />
serves over 500 kids through the<br />
year, and Jeff said they are working<br />
to dramatically increase that.<br />
“We are not just after-school<br />
care,” Jeff said. “We are more than<br />
a ‘drop off’ solution. We work on<br />
character, development, and growing<br />
better human beings.”<br />
76 Gas Station 31<br />
American West Tire Pros 15<br />
Arlyne’s Flowers 10<br />
Atascadero Greyhound<br />
Foundation 21<br />
Atascadero Pet Hospital 22<br />
Awakening Ways 17<br />
Baby’s Babble 27<br />
Bob Sprain’s Draperies 27<br />
Bottom Line Bookkeeping 23<br />
Cal Paso Solar 22<br />
CAPS 05<br />
CASA 31<br />
CB - Diane Cassidy 15<br />
Colony Days Committee 35<br />
Cotton and Rust 10<br />
Five Star Rain Gutters 36<br />
Frontier Floors 14<br />
DIRECTORY TO OUR ADVERTISERS<br />
Glenn’s Repair 26<br />
Greg Malik RE Group 07<br />
Healthy Inspirations 19<br />
Hearing Aid Specialists<br />
of the Central Coast 03<br />
Heather Desmond Real Estate 09<br />
Hope Chest Emporium 07<br />
LivHOME 23<br />
Lube N Go 19<br />
Mic’s Jewels & Marketplace 12<br />
Michael’s Optical 12<br />
Morro Bay Art in Park 23<br />
Natural Alternative 08<br />
Nautical Cowboy 09<br />
Odyssey World Cafe 17<br />
Pioneer Day-Parade 02<br />
Reverse Mortgage Pros. 31<br />
San Joaquin Valley College 11<br />
Solarponics 26<br />
Spice of Life 12<br />
Susan Funk for<br />
Atascadero City Council 19<br />
Templeton Door & Trim 12<br />
The Laundromat 23<br />
Three Speckled Hens 07<br />
Triple 7 Motorsports 23<br />
Triple 7 Tractor 15<br />
Whit’s Turn Tree Service 05<br />
Wine Country Theatre 13<br />
Writing Support Group 23<br />
34 | colonymagazine.com <strong>COLONY</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, <strong>September</strong> <strong>2018</strong>
Celebrate Atascadero<br />
Colony Days Parade & Festival<br />
Tent City After Dark Concert, featuring:<br />
Friday, Oct.5<br />
4:30 - 10 pm<br />
Tent City After Dark<br />
Concert<br />
Live Music •Beer & Wine<br />
5 lb Burger Eating Contest<br />
Food vendors & more!<br />
Saturday, Oct.6<br />
10 am - 4 pm<br />
7 am Pancake Breakfast<br />
10 am Parade • Food<br />
Tent City Re-enactment<br />
Dogtoberfest • Vendors<br />
Amusements & more!