Merlot at The Market?

Robbie Jaffe (left) and niece Kate Jaffe at the Condors Hope stand. Photo by Curtis Cartier.

“Olive oil, jams, wines—we do the whole thing,” says Steve Gliessman, proprietor of Condors Hope wines. Having sold his wines at the Westside farmers market for several years, Gliessman says it’s an excellent fit. “We can tell our story directly to the consumer, what it means to us as a family,” he says. “This is a relationship, not just a product. People want to know where their food comes from, and here they can get the in-person story.”

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Leading the Fight Against Legalization

Leading the Fight Against Legalization

You might think that pot growers are at the forefront of the fight to legalize marijuana in California. Irony of ironies, you’d be wrong. Many Bay Area growers oppose the Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010, which would transfer regulation to cities and counties. They simply don’t want to pay taxes on it, and they don’t want to open the door to competition.

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Santa Cruz Firm High on Wind

A Joby Energy graphic shows the ladder-shaped high-altitude wind turbine catching air.

Who can forget the grand finale of Disney’s Mary Poppins, “Let’s Go Fly a Kite.” Certainly not the people at Santa Cruz’s Joby Energy. They’re flying their kites to the highest height, up through the atmosphere, up where the air is clear … and the wind blows. Unlike the All-American Rejects, they won’t leave “When the Wind Blows.” They’ll be sending their wind turbines way up, 2,000 feet in fact, in order to generate electricity.

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Watsonville School Introduces iPad

Watsonville School Introduces iPad

Stephen Sharp, headmaster of the Monte Vista Christian School in Watsonville, has a dream. He wants to cut down on the cost of books that the school lays out each year. He also has a plan. Buy brand new iPads instead of books, and then rent digital copies of the books for the students at a fraction of the cost. This way, he claims, the iPads will pay for themselves in about a year.

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The Farmers Market Share

Stella Schlesinger  shows off Dirty Girl Produce’s beets and leeks. Photo by Curtis Cartier

On Earth Day, regulars of the Santa Cruz Downtown Farmers Market wandered into a dazzling feast of new sights and smells. On tree-shaded aisles occupied the previous week by parked cars, the aromas of rotisserie chicken and hot pizza mingled while shave-ice vendors hawked the flavors of the tropics. Next to an array of colorful dishware by master ceramicist Mattie Leeds, the knife sharpener in his thick apron joked with visitors. The strains of bluegrass by Harmony Grits drifted off the new stage, background to the hiss of the Lulu Carpenter’s espresso machine and the chatter at information booths and the fishmonger’s. And anchoring it all, of course, were three aisles of farm-fresh fruits, vegetables, herbs and flowers, the bustling heart of the market.

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Santa Cruz Writer Recalls Kent State Shootings

National Guardsmen poured onto the Kent State University campus in May 1970.

It was the evening of April 30, 1970, a Thursday. In the middle of a film festival that had been going on all week, someone from the projection room interrupted with the announcement, “We’ve just learned that Nixon has sent troops into Cambodia.” The atmosphere of the auditorium had been quite the party, so the seriousness with which the statement was made didn’t register. We’d been acting like kids, throwing popcorn and paper airplanes, applauding, hissing and booing, and shouting out comments. The film we were watching, Bambi Meets Godzilla, had sent our already high spirits over the top.

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