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Mendocino County Today: Sunday, March 20, 2022

Warming | Let's Talk | Spring | Mariupol | Pet Truman | Hospital Budget | Fort Bragg | Ed Notes | 1972 Newsletter | Insurance Racket | Skeletons | Painting Class | Mendo Chosen | Medical Debt | Skunk Application | Albion Kids | AV Village | Sleepy Jack | Yesterday's Catch | Siphon Horizon | Purple Onions | Bulletdoogle | Capitalism | Revolution | Lumber Crane | Wires Underground | Cheerful Credit | Dogging | Russian Imperialism | Wagon Train | Marco Radio | Tourist Fidel | Managing Craig | Lifeguard Reagan | Cataclysmic Age | Jean MacCallum

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TODAY AND MONDAY WILL SEE A MIX of sun and cloud and gradual warming of temperatures each day. Winds will remain breezy, but slowly diminish. The warming is expected to continue on Tuesday with many of the valleys reaching the 80s. Offshore flow is expected to keep the coastal areas clear and warm as well. Mid to late week temperatures are expected to slowly cool off. (NWS)

YESTERDAY'S RAINFALL: Willits 0.31" - Leggett 0.20" - Yorkville 0.16" - Boonville 0.13" - Laytonville 0.13" - Ukiah 0.12" - Covelo 0.09" - Hopland 0.07"

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JUST IN: "Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday that he is ready to sit down with Russian leader Vladimir Putin to try and end Moscow's brutal invasion — adding that a failure to negotiate peace could result in World War III. 'I'm ready for negotiations with him. I was ready for the last two years. And I think that without negotiations we cannot end this war,' Zelensky told CNN's Fareed Zakaria. Kyiv's wartime leader said he is prepated to meet Putin in whatever format it takes to get the autocrat face-to-face. He also blasted Putin's claims that he's seeking to 'de-nazify' Ukraine, instead comparing the Russian leader's treatment of the port city of Mariupol to how German troops sieged Leningrad during the second World War. 'If there’s just 1 percent chance for us to stop this war, I think that we need to take this chance. We need to do that. I can tell you about the result of this negotiations — in any case, we are losing people on a daily basis, innocent people on the ground,' Zelensky said. He acknowledged his country's historic resistance effort against Russian forces, who believed Ukraine's major cities would collapse to Moscow's forces within a matter of days." (Daily Mail)

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First Day of Spring (photo mk)

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UKRAINE CRISIS: CLAIMS MARIUPOL WOMEN AND CHILDREN FORCIBLY SENT TO RUSSIA 

by Justin McCurry, and Lorenzo Tondo

Authorities in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol have said Russian troops have forcibly deported several thousand residents to Russia, as reports emerged that Russian forces bombed an art school in the city where 400 people were taking shelter.

“Over the past week, several thousand Mariupol residents were deported on to the Russian territory,” the city council said in a statement on its Telegram channel late on Saturday.

“The occupiers illegally took people from the Livoberezhniy district and from the shelter in the sports club building, where more than a thousand people (mostly women and children) were hiding from the constant bombing.”

The claims have not been independently verified, but the council’s statement is one of several reports about Mariupol residents being taken to Russia, where authorities have referred to “refugees” arriving from the strategic port.

In a statement posted Sunday on the Telegram channels of Mariupol council and the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada, the council said women, children and elderly people were inside and “are still under the rubble” of the destroyed G12 art school in Mariupol’s Left Bank district. The number of casualties was unclear. The Guardian has not independently verified the claim of the bombing.

The message accused the Russians of committing war crimes, echoing Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s earlier video address, in which he said of the attacks on Mariupol: “To do this to a peaceful city ... is a terror that will be remembered for centuries to come.”

Intense street fighting in the city has hampered attempts to free hundreds of survivors trapped for days inside a bombed theatre as Ukrainian forces held out against a larger Russian force inside the strategically important southern port city.

Jakob Kern, the World Food Programme’s emergency coordinator, described Russia’s tactic of preventing emergency food supplies to Mariupol as “unacceptable in the 21st century”. Ukrainian MP Dmytro Gurin described conditions in the city as “medieval”.

Across Ukraine, evacuations from cities continued on Saturday along eight of 10 humanitarian corridors, said the deputy prime minister, Iryna Vereshchuk. A total of 6,623 people were evacuated, including 4,128 from Mariupol, the scene of some of the war’s worst suffering.

Meanwhile, China has responded angrily to mounting western pressure to condemn the invasion, saying it stands on the right side of history over the crisis and is in line with the stances of most countries.

“China will never accept any external coercion or pressure, and opposes any unfounded accusations and suspicious against China,” the foreign minister, Wang Yi, said on Saturday evening.

China has refused to condemn Russia’s action in Ukraine or call it an invasion, although it has expressed concern about the crisis. Beijing has also opposed economic sanctions on Russia over Ukraine, describing them as unilateral and not authorised by the UN security council.

Wang’s comments came after the US president, Joe Biden, warned his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, on Friday of “consequences” if Beijing gave material support to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We have always stood for maintaining peace and opposing war,” Wang said, reiterating that China will make independent judgments. “China’s position is objective and fair, and is in line with the wishes of most countries. Time will prove that China’s claims are on the right side of history.”

An official in Mariupol accused Russian forces of taking thousands of Ukrainians across the border into Russia, adding he feared they could be used as forced labour, the New York Times reported.

Pyotr Andryushchenko, an assistant to the city’s mayor, said Russian forces had taken “between 4,000 and 4,500 Mariupol residents forcibly across the border to Taganrog” – a city in south-western Russia – the newspaper said. The residents had been taken without their passports, Andryushchenko said.

A Ukrainian police officer in Mariupol warned that it had been “wiped off the face of the earth”, and pleaded with the US and France to supply the country with a modern air defence system.

In a video appeal from a street strewn with rubble, Michail Vershnin publicly reminded Biden and the French president, Emmanuel Macron, that they had promised assistance “but what we have received is not quite it”, and urged them to save the civilian population.

“Children, elderly people are dying. The city is destroyed and it has been wiped off the face of the earth,” Vershnin said, speaking in Russian in the video filmed on Friday that has been authenticated by the Associated Press.

He then appealed directly to the US and French leaders. “You have promised that there will be help, give us that help. Biden, Macron, you are great leaders. Be them to the end.”

Pressure on China to abandon its neutral stance on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine increased after the British prime minister, Boris Johnson, urged leaders in Beijing to get off the fence and join global condemnation of the Russian leader, Vladimir Putin.

“As time goes on and as the number of Russian atrocities mounts up, I think it becomes steadily more difficult and politically embarrassing for people either actively or passively to condone Putin’s invasion,” Johnson said.

“There are considerable dilemmas now for people who thought they could sit this one out, who thought they could sit on the fence. And, yes, I think that in Beijing you are starting to see some second thoughts.”

China, however, has shown no sign of altering its stance. On Saturday its vice foreign minister, Le Yucheng, described western sanctions against Russia as increasingly “outrageous”.

Le also acknowledged Moscow’s position on Nato, saying the alliance should not further expand eastwards and force a nuclear power like Russia “into a corner”.

“The sanctions against Russia are getting more and more outrageous,” Le said at security forum in Beijing, adding that Russian citizens were being deprived of overseas assets “for no reason”.

“History has proven time and again that sanctions cannot solve problems. Sanctions will only harm ordinary people, impact the economic and financial system ... and worsen the global economy.”

The fall of Mariupol, a key connection to the Black Sea, would mark a major advance for the Russians, who are largely bogged down outside major cities more than three weeks into the biggest land invasion in Europe since the second world war.

Russian media have offered a very different explanation for the reported removal of Mariupol residents. The Tass news agency reported on Saturday that 13 buses were moving to Russia, carrying more than 350 people, about 50 of whom were to be sent by rail to the Yaroslavl region and the rest to temporary transition centres in Taganrog, a port city in Russia’s Rostov region.

RIA Novosti agency, citing emergency services, reported last week that nearly 300,000 people, including some 60,000 children, had arrived in Russia from the Luhansk and Donbas regions, including from Mariupol, in recent weeks.

Russia’s defence ministry said this month that more than 2.6 million people in Ukraine have asked to be evacuated – a claim that has not been independently verified.

(theguardian.com)

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UKIAH SHELTER PET OF THE WEEK

Truman is a feisty, frolicsome puppy. Like all puppies, he loves to play 24/7 (unless of course he’s sleeping!) His new family will need to have lots of time to spend with him and continue his training and socializing. We think Truman would do well with kids and other dogs. We want Truman to find his new home, where he will have the love and space a puppy needs. Truman is 5 months old and weighs 50-ish pounds. 

If you can’t adopt right now, think about fostering. Our website has information about the Shelter's FOSTER PROGRAM: mendoanimalshelter.com/programs-events/foster-program

Plus, don’t forget our on-going SPRING CANINE ADOPTION EVENT—half off adoption fees for all spayed/neutered dogs 6 months and older at the Ukiah and Ft. Bragg Shelters! While you’re on our website, check out our canine and feline guests, our services, programs, events, and updates. Visit us on Facebook at: facebook.com/mendoanimalshelter/

For information about adoptions, please call 707-467-6453.

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NORMAN DE VALL passes along this list of budget considerations being discussed by the Mendocino Coast Healthcare District (the remnant board left without a hospital when the Adventists took over Coast District Hospital.)

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Fort Bragg, Main Street

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ED NOTES

KELLIE-JAY KEEN, of Standing for Women, went viral after a clip of her in a discussion about Lia Thomas was posted online. It has now been seen 1.1 million times. Keen, watching on Friday in the stands, can be heard telling a male spectator: “Is he the same as the other girls in the pool?” The man replies: “Every body is different.” Keen says: “No. Are you saying he doesn't have male organs? I'm a woman - that is not a woman. Do you have ovaries?” The man counters: “Let me ask you, are you a biologist?” Keen replies: “Oh my God - don't be ridiculous. I'm not a vet, but I know what a dog is.”

REMEMBERING SALLY SCHMITT, a reader writes: “This brings back so many memories, and it was so fun to read how Sally's various ventures came to be. As a child, my parents made the trek from the East Bay to the Chutney Kitchen often. When French Laundry opened, we went there when I was about 12 (1982-ish). It was an unforgettable experience, like being a guest in someone’s home. It was a beautiful summer evening and hours of slow dining, with a walk through the garden in between courses. Later, we began visiting the Apple Farm in Philo and my parents built a house nearby. That is a fun place to visit, they sell chutney and other items on an honor system. The property and buildings are so beautiful. Rest in peace, Sally.”

Sally Schmitt

SUPERVISOR HASCHAK said the other day that he was “honored” to be a member of the Great Redwood Trail Agency. Supervisor Mulheren, also presumably honored, is also one of the persons on the committee rubber stamping expenditures of public money devoted to this mother of all boondoggles, advertised everywhere in sum by this sentence: “The Great Redwood Trail Agency will build the trail from Cloverdale to Humboldt Bay.”

NO, IT WON'T, but like the promise of eternal life if you don't lie, steal, and murder in this life, it's enticing. Who wouldn't like to bike it from Sausalito to Eureka through the wild and scenic Eel River Canyon, presently impassable but a bargain fixer-upper at maybe $2 billion? Hell, Ukiah's already completed three-mile stretch of the Great Redwood Trail which only cost a million-plus a mile.

THE GREAT REDWOOD TRAIL AGENCY had been the Northcoast Railroad Authority, a Democrat-created fiction that pretended for years that the Democrats would resume rail service between Marin and Eureka. In the meantime, however, they had to borrow several million dollars from former Congressman Doug Bosco, now due and payable, as the previous fiction of a railroad segues into the new fiction of The Great Redwood Trail.

A GRAY GHOST named Mitch Stogner, Bosco's former chief of staff when Congressman Bosco was running interference for Georgia-Pacific and Louisiana-Pacific as those mega-corps cashed in the Northcoast's forests, now apparently oversees the cash register for The Great Redwood Trail, a purely mythical project dreamed up by hustling little fellow out of Healdsburg, State Senator Mike McGuire, to lend dubious credence to Northcoast Democrats as people who get things done. (On further checking Stogner may have been replaced a female equivalent from the Coastal Conservancy; they’re not being very forthcoming on this stuff.)

STOGNER, incidentally, maintains an office at 419 Talmage, Suite M, Ukiah, in the same building as the Salvation Food Distribution operation. Stogner hasn't been the only prominent Democrat to enjoy pass-through pay pretending to run a railroad; former Northcoast assemblyman Dan Hauser was in charge of the non-existent train after he was termed out of office.

LOCAL DEMOCRATS Dave Nelson and John McCowen arranged to have a new county courthouse erected on contiguous lots owned by the NCRA at the McDonald's end of West Perkins, which the state's judge's office bought from the bogus railroad agency presided over by Stogner. The new courthouse, unneeded and logistically impossible if ever built, is on hold.

JOHN PINCHES has been a long-time critic of the North Coast Railroad Authority. Pinches knew first hand that a train would never run on the disappeared tracks along the Eel River near his home at Island Mountain, deep in the Eel River Canyon. 

PINCHES suggested years ago that we look into the NCRA’s books maintained under contract with the Sonoma County Auditor’s office. We emailed that office and the response — after going through several staffers — was that those books were the private property of the NRCA whose Executive Director Mitch Stogner would have to approve us looking at them. 

WE KNEW that Stogner would turn down our request. We considered filing a Public Records Act request for the reams of paperwork that would likely have to be involved, and they would fight it and delay it. But before we could, NCRA whistleblower Bernie Myers, wrote up a detailed, clear expose of the NCRA's fraud scheme from the inside: marinpost.org/blog/2021/11/9/the-ncra-boondoggle-from-bankruptcy-to-bankruptcy-in-30-years

And the Major didn’t need to pursue the question any further.

PS. THE NCRA website listed the newly renamed GRTA board meeting agenda on March 10 which had four items of “business.” Three of them were about themselves and one was about hiring their attorney — at $282 per hour. The New Boondoggle Has Begun.

(o) Discussion and Possible Action Regarding Resolution 2022-01 Authorizing Continued Teleconference Meetings 

(o) Discussion and Possible Action Regarding Election of Chair and Vice Chair 

(o) Discussion and Possible Action Regarding Approval of Sonoma County Legal Counsel Services Agreement 

(o) Discussion and Possible Action Regarding Establishment of Time and Place of Regular Meetings of Great Redwood Trail Agency 

Their next meeting will be June 13, 2022.

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GREAT MOMENTS IN PUBLIC DELIBERATION

Mendocino County Board of Supervisors Meeting, March 23, 2010.

Subject: Earthquake insurance for the courthouse. 

Cost: About $85k for a policy that covers up to $50 million; if the damage is more than that the state pays the rest. Mendocino County owns the land but the state Administrative Office of the Courts owns most of the building now (excluding the equipment and fixtures). 

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Supervisor John Pinches: If I own a third of a building, I'm responsible for a third of the insurance, not the whole bill.

County Counsel Jeanine Nadel: I don't disagree with you.

Pinches: Why is that?

Nadel: Because the law requires us to maintain the ins… the, um, earthquake insurance if the board, if the building has been declared a certain level, level 5, which it is, a level 5.

Pinches: It declares us to have the insurance?

Nadel: Yes. 

Pinches: To pay for the insurance?

Nadel: Yes. 

Pinches: Why don't we not pay the bill? I mean, if there's, if the Courthouse shakes down, we still got the land. Which ultimately, if they build a new courthouse they're going to have the expense of tearing it down anyway!

Nadel: That's correct. But unfortunately, that's the legislation we had to deal with when we transferred the facility.

Pinches: We're just going to lay back and take it?

General Services Director Kristin McMenomey: This legislation was fought very very hard by all the counties for several years and they went through several amendments and this is what we got stuck with. 

Pinches: (Long pause.) I'm opposed to spending the money. 

McMenomey: For the record, me too. But I don't think we have a choice. 

Pinches: Why don't we send them a letter and say we don't have the money? Which we don't.

Nadel: I don't recommend that because it is part of an agreement that this board has already authorized. 

Pinches: What account are going to write the check out of?

McMenomey: You're going to write… Well, it's out of risk management. Insurance. We budgeted for it. 

Pinches: Which is a general fund contribution.

McMenomey: Yes, it is. This one will be entirely a general fund contribution.

Pinches: On things like this if we don't start pushing back it's just going to get worse. [Looks around for support.] Thank you Supervisor McCowen for bringing this up. 

Supervisor John McCowen: Yeah. I wish we had a solution to it. 

Pinches: The solution is to not write them a check.

McCowen: Well, we're being told the law requires us to have insurance on the courthouse.

Pinches: Let them come over and arrest us. I mean, it's…

Board Chair Carre Brown: Board members, we need to move forward. By having a good discussion.

Pinches: Are we moving forward by letting the state push us around like this?

Brown: Well. Then. I… I will entertain a motion. Whatever that might be.

Pinches: Well, I'm not going to make the motion to approve it!

(Laughter in the room.)

McCowen: Reluctantly and to move it along I will, I will make a motion to approve the recommended action. 

Brown: Is there a second?

(Silence.)

Nadel: I need to remind this board that we had an agreement to transfer that facility and the earthquake portion is in that agreement. As required by law.

Kendall Smith: I will. I will second that. 

Brown: All those in favor say aye.

(All but Pinches say, Aye.)

Brown: Opposed?

Pinches: Opposed!

Brown: Ok, motion passes, and you-know-who is opposed. 

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PLEIN AIR PAINTING CLASS WITH MAEVE CROGHAN IN

Mendocino April 9 &10 ~ Locals discount & scholarships available!

Join me for a wonderful weekend of Plein Air Painting in beautiful Mendocino. I will teaching an in person Workshop April 9 & 10 though the Mendocino Art Center.

Locals pricing discounts and Scholarships are available!

Here is a link to the scholarship application: https://www.mendocinoartcenter.org/class-scholarships

Air, Nature Into Art

In-person painting class with Maeve Croghan, April 9 &10, 2022 — 9:30am-4:30pm 

For Registration: mendocinoartcenter.org/classes/plein-air-nature-into-art

In this in-person workshop with Maeve Croghan, explore the painting process while connecting with the natural world. Students will be guided by Maeve to keenly observe nature outside, en plein air, as she demonstrates and instructs how to paint from your observations and create an expressive and meaningful painting in oil or acrylic. The class will go to a different location each day, beginning a new painting en plein air. Maeve gives guidance throughout each day.

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CAN MENDOCINO COUNTY BECOME A BLUE ZONE OF HEALTH AND HAPPINESS?

Story by Joe Beeney, PhD. (Let's hope not)

"Blue Zones are places in the world where a surprising percentage of people routinely live (vividly) into their late nineties and beyond. Scientists with The Blue Zones Project have discovered keys to their longevity and designed a program to create Blue Zone Communities in other places in the world. One of the places they chose is Mendocino County. The mission to 'transform well-being,' will reduce rates of obesity, tobacco use, and chronic disease and create a healthier, happier place to live, work, and play."

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MEMO OF THE WEEK

TO: Louise Warren, Chief Counsel, California Coastal Commission

Re: Mendocino Railway Coastal Consistency Determination Review 

Dear Ms. Warren: 

In October 2021, Mendocino Railway submitted an application for a Railroad Rehabilitation & Improvement Financing Express (RRIF) loan with the Department of Transportation. As part of the environmental review of this application, Mendocino Railway has been directed to complete a Federal Consistency Determination with the California Coastal Commission prior to proceeding with work. 

We are providing this letter to make it known that the City of Fort Bragg (City) does not support Mendocino Railway’s application as it perpetuates the falsehood that the local tourism operator of the Skunk Train is a common carrier public utility. This determination would allow Mendocino Railway to strategically claim exemption from local and state regulations and bypass the community’s ability to participate in planning reuse of the site, which comprises approximately a third of the land within city limits. As such, we encourage the Coastal Commission to exercise its review and oversight authority carefully with this project and take the time to fully understand the implications of Mendocino Railway’s request, and how their project may impact the coastal environment, impede public access, and trigger cumulative impacts in the area. 

The loan application by Mendocino Railway is aimed at repairs to railroad ties, rebuilding track, improving bridges, acquiring equipment and purchasing new passenger trains, and repairing a tunnel. The company has indicated that this work is a precursor to a larger development plan, which could have major community and coastal impacts. The company has not yet entered direct discussion with the City or initiated a project review process with us, so we do not have a specific project plan to evaluate. However, the company’s public advertising about significantly expanded railroad operations throughout the coastal property is alarming. 

Mendocino Railway has stated in its loan application that it would like to bring new rail service to prime coastal property and to re-establish tracks within a historical footprint. This plan does not take into account the years of community planning efforts to determine future reuse of the former mill site, as well as the community’s involvement with the extensive environmental cleanup that continues to take place under the oversight of California’s Department of Toxic Substances Control. We do not want to see Mendocino Railway circumvent the local planning process and ignore local oversight and community input by simply activating a federal loan to intensify train operations. 

We bring to your attention a letter your agency wrote to the Department of Transportation on November 5, 2021, which noted, “there are a number of potential adverse environmental impacts to California’s coastal resources anticipated from approval of Mendocino Railway’s loan application.” The Commission noted that increased intensity and use of the railroad line would impact coastal zone resources, impact archaeological resources, create safety hazards for public access to the coastal trail, and more. As you conduct your consistency review to dig into those issues further, please know that the City is here as a resource and can provide information as you fully assess the scope of impacts. 

Other organizations have also expressed concern over Mendocino Railway’s loan application: 

Friends of the Eel River stated: “Because a RRIF loan would improve Mendocino Railway’s ability to seize and operate a railroad on the line the NCRA now seeks to railbank for trail use, DOT should carefully consider the potential impacts on sensitive communities, critically important natural areas, threatened and endangered species, clear water, and other public trust values that would be significantly impaired by the reconstruction and operation of a freight rail line in one of North America’s most unstable landscapes.” 

The Humboldt Trails Council wrote: “The history of railroad development in our country was a helter-skelter free enterprise scramble fueled by federal laws and tax money that ended in boom- and-bust cycles many times. The country is grateful that the same approach was not applied to the development of the National Highway System. It is important that in the future, federal railroading laws and money be applied to projects that fit the greater picture for our country and are solid. This is not one of them.” 

The North Coast Railroad Authority wrote: “The entire route of the former Northwestern Pacific Railroad, which at one point was essentially all part of NCRA, has had a checkered history, with slides, tunnel collapses, trains washed into the environmentally sensitive Eel River, bankruptcies, and service disruption. We question whether the United States Department of Transportation wishes to promote continuation of that cycle, or whether it is better to find wiser and more environmentally propitious uses for federal rail financial assistance.” 

These letters, as well as many other letters and comments from the public, demonstrate the importance of evaluating Mendocino Railway’s development plans, rather than giving a rubber stamp approval to the company’s request for Coastal Consistency Determination. We encourage the Coastal Commission to exercise its full authority to require the Mendocino Railway to comply with California’s Coastal Act for any of its planned development. 

The Coastal Act creates a unique partnership between the state and local governments through Local Coastal Programs to provide oversight in managing shoreline public access, recreation, terrestrial and marine habitats, views of the coast and scenic coastal areas, agricultural lands and more, by regulating proposed development within the Coastal Zone through a comprehensive planning and regulatory program. 

Our city government is eager to be an active participant in that planning and regulatory process for any development proposed on this former mill site land on the coast. 

Sincerely, 

Fort Bragg City Council

Bernie Norvell Mayor 

Teresa K. Albin-Smith Councilmember 

Lindy Peters Councilmember 

Jessica Morsell-Haye Vice Mayor 

Marcia Rafanan Councilmember 

cc: Mike Wilson, CA Coastal Commission North Coast Representative Melissa Kramer, North Coast District Manager, CA Coastal Commission 

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Albion Grammar School, 1927

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AV VILLAGE, UPCOMING EVENTS

AV Village Walking Group - all welcome
Tue 03 / 22 / 2022 at 9:30 AM
Where: Meet at the Community Park (near the AV Health Center)
More Information: https://andersonvalley.helpfulvillage.com/events/2205

AV Living Well: Techniques for Stress Relief
Tue 03 / 22 / 2022 at 11:45 AM
Where: AV Community Park next to the clinic
More Information: https://andersonvalley.helpfulvillage.com/events/2188

Senior Center Lunch
Tue 03 / 22 / 2022 at 12:00 PM
Where: Anderson Valley Senior Center , 14470 Highway 128, Boonville, CA 95415
More Information: https://andersonvalley.helpfulvillage.com/events/2212

Bookmobile in Boonville
Tue 03 / 22 / 2022 at 1:30 PM
Where: Mendocino County Fairgrounds, Boonville, 14400 Highway 128,
Boonville, CA 95415
More Information: https://andersonvalley.helpfulvillage.com/events/2196

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SLEEPY JACK

On Tuesday, March 15, 2022 a Mendocino County Sheriff's Deputy contacted Jack Waldrop, 53, of Kennewick, Washington, who was sleeping in the driver’s seat of a pickup truck parked in the 200 block of Sherwood Road in Willits.

Jack Waldrop

The pickup truck was running and parked along side of the road and partially blocking the southbound traffic lane.

The Deputy contacted Waldrop and asked him for his driver’s license, Waldrop refused and sped away in the vehicle. The Deputy pursued Waldrop as he proceeded to drive towards the city of Willits in a reckless manner.

Waldrop eventually drove back towards Sherwood Road with Deputies in pursuit and traveled approximately another 10-12 miles north on Sherwood Road. Waldrop eventually stopped at the intersection of Sherwood Road and Sherwood-Laytonville Cut-Off Road.

Waldrop exited his vehicle and was taken into custody for evading.

A wants/warrants check was conducted and Deputies learned Waldrop had an outstanding nationwide extradition felony arrest warrant from the State of Washington for first degree kidnapping.

Deputies noticed Waldrop exhibited symptoms of alcohol intoxication and was also arrested for DUI.

Waldrop was booked into the Mendocino County Jail where he was to be held in lieu of $35,000 bail.

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CATCH OF THE DAY, March 19, 2022

Britton, Eisele, L. Hernandez, T. Hernandez

WILLIAM BRITTON, Hopland. DUI.

ANTHONY EISELE, Willits. Failure to appear.

LENIN HERNANDEZ-PADILLA, Santa Rosa/Ukiah. DUI, reckless driving, probation revocation.

TROY HERNANDEZ, Fairfield/Fort Bragg. Shoplifting, tampering with vehicle, suspended license, burglary tools, controlled substance, pot for sale, conspiracy.

Kidd, Leggett, Lucas

ANDREA KIDD, Ukiah. Forgery.

JOSEPH LEGGETT, Willits. Concealed dirk-dagger, paraphernalia, stolen property.

VICTOR LUCAS, Ukiah. Burglary, attempted car theft, false ID, sale of lost ID card.

Martinez, McKinnis, Mora

JORGE MARTINEZ-GARCIA, Ukiah. DUI-alcohol&drugs, vandalism, reckless evasion, no license.

BRANDON MCKINNIS, San Francisco/Ukiah. DUI.

PABLO MORA, Ukiah. Parole violation. (Frequent flyer.)

O’Brien, Parisi, Ramirez

JAMES O’BRIEN, Ukiah. Burglary, burglary tools, stolen property, fugitive from justice.

LUKE PARISI, Ukiah. DUI, probation revocation.

ERIC RAMIREZ, Willits. DUI, swtichblade, child endangerment.

Rich, Simone, Stokes

STEVEN RICH, Ukiah. Parole violation.

JASMINE SIMONE, Sunnyvale/Ukiah. Domestic battery, DUI, suspended license.

TESSA STOKES, Fairfield/Fort Bragg. Controlled substance for sale, pot for sale, tampering with vehicle, conspiracy.

JACK WALDROP, Kennewick, Washington/Ukiah. DUI, reckless evasion, fugitive from justice.

MICAH WARNER, Willits. DUI.

DONALD WILLETT JR., Willits. Misdemeanor hit&run, suspended license, disobeying court order, failure to appear.

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SIPHONERS 

Editor: 

The price of oil is very near that magical tipping point where its value will entice the very needy or unscrupulous to begin siphoning gasoline from one tank to another. It happened back in the late 1970s under Jimmy Carter. Note the prevalence of copper theft when the price spiked or the theft of catalytic converters for their valuable metals. So, just a heads up prior to the inevitable upcoming news items about this phenomenon. If you park on the street overnight, your tank may be pretty light in the morning.

Nathaniel Roberts

Petaluma

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BIGGER BOONDOGGLE THAN THE GREAT REDWOOD TRAIL

In Sunday's NY Times (California's ambitious high-speed rail at a crossroads):

On an average day, 1,000 workers head to dozens of construction sites spread over 119 miles across California’s vast Central Valley.

Their task is monumental: Build the bridges and crossings designed to carry bullet trains that will form the backbone of a $105 billion, 500-mile, high-speed rail system whose scale has drawn comparisons to the construction of the interstate highway system.

Of course, 14 years after voters approved a nearly $10 billion bond to start building the rail system that would whisk riders from Los Angeles to San Francisco at speeds of more than 200 miles per hour, many California residents have long since lost track of what is being built where, and when or if it will ever be completed....

In 2008, when the bond measure passed, the project symbolized the state’s ambition to build and think big. But in the years since then, the project has become something else: an alarming vision of a nation that seems incapable of completing the transformative projects necessary to confront 21st century challenges. The rail’s planned route and scope have changed as a result of ballooning costs, political squabbles and legal challenges....

Some state lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats alike, now say the effort has become flawed and unwieldy, perhaps beyond saving. Critics say that rail officials are seeking a blank check from state coffers, and that their timeline for completion is stretching unaccountably into the future....

A report by the California legislative analyst’s office notes that while the state’s legislature could decide to extend funding for the project — including a portion of cap-and-trade revenues through 2030 — it’s unclear where the money will come from to build beyond the Central Valley segment....

(Courtesy, District5Diary)

* * *

* * *

THE ARM OF THE PEOPLE

Lenin, Moscow, February 18, 1920

(As channeled by Alan Brien, ‘Lenin’)

How little many political pundits and thinkers know what actually happened in the history of their own countries. Yet they still come here to preach moderation, tolerance, fair play, democracy, and the rest of the liberal claptrap, to me, a revolutionary who is in the middle of a revolution. A typical mixed bag of them toured the Kremlin this morning. I had to stop important work, decisions left untaken that might affect the lives of thousands, actions unauthorized that could alter our future, to listen to a lot of preachers, whiners and pedants.

One of them, Fossard by name, a French Communist of the most theoretical sort, was worried about our Terror. They all are. The very word makes them wet themselves. Halfway through a question which was really a sermon, very badly translated by an ancient waste of an ex-patriot Russian exile in Paris since 1897, I interrupted. In French. I was word-perfect. As I should have been since I had been practicing the remark with B.B. the evening before, recommending it as the stock response to be sent by him, on behalf of Soviet power, to any Gallic lefties who felt their consciences itch when enemies of the people bit the dust.

I said: "A French man has nothing to denounce in the Russian Revolution which in its methods and in its procedure recapitulates the French Revolution."

An American socialist then put his head above the parapet. He argued, in broken Russian, that this might be all right for our French supporters who had after all had their own revolution plus their own Terror. But it was not an argument that appealed to American workers for whom such traditions were alien. I wiped the self admiring, Holy Joe, piousness off his face, reminding him (in English) that his country too have been born in revolution and its leaders had supported the French. Thomas Jefferson could hardly be regarded as a radical extremist. Yet what had he said about the Terror? Naturally, the old, half-educated pragmatist had no idea. My English was running out a bit, so I quoted from a piece of paper I keep in my top right-hand drawer just for this purpose.

Jefferson said: "In the struggle which was necessary many guilty persons fell without the forms of trial and with them some innocent. These deaths I deplore as much as anybody and shall deplore some of them to the day of my own death. But I deplore them as I should have done had they fallen in battle. It was necessary to use the arm of the people, a machine not quite so blind as balls and bombs, but blind to a certain degree."

I couldn't have put it better myself. I advise you to print it in a box once a week on the back of the Party paper.

How is it these creatures come here and presume to advise us on how to make a revolution? We have already begun. But how many of them ever ask for our advice on how to start one in their own countries?

* * *

Union Lumber Electric Crane, 1928

* * *

ON LINE NOTE OF THE DAY:

I haven’t travelled abroad extensively, but have been to a few foreign countries. In Southern England, in the rural “designated areas of outstanding natural beauty,” there are no power or utility lines in view. Almost everything is underground (the really big towers with the cross country main lines are still in view), no overhead wires in town, the sidewalks are large pavers set in sand which can be picked up (no saw cuts on concrete sidewalks like here) and the underground conduits accessed. Really too smart, looks way better. Also those “designated areas” have no abandoned cars on view, no random piles of trash on the side of the road, everywhere I thought I needed a restroom there was one, with hot water even. Mendocino county, as far as the public infrastructure is concerned, looks a lot like Equador, all helter skelter and completely uncoordinated and mostly an eyesore. Rural Argentina does better in a lot of ways than Mendocino County, or California for that matter. Why not just get the wires underground and be done with this? No power outages everytime the wind blows hard or it snows, no wildfires caused by transmission lines, all those tree trimmer crews can find another job. In the long run it HAS to be cheaper.

* * *

THE BASIC TROUBLE with people like us, I said to myself, is that we all imagine we’ve got something to lose. To begin with, nine-tenths of the people in Ellesmere Road are under the impression that they own their houses. Ellesmere Road, and the whole quarter surrounding it, until you get to the High Street, is part of a huge racket called the Hesperides Estate, the property of the Cheerful Credit Building Society. Building societies are probably the cleverest racket of modern times. My own line, insurance, is a swindle, I admit, but it’s an open swindle with the cards on the table. But the beauty of the building society swindles is that your victims think you’re doing them a kindness. You wallop them, and they lick your hand. I sometimes think I’d like to have the Hesperides Estate surmounted by an enormous statue to the god of building societies. It would be a queer sort of god. Among other things it would be bisexual. The top half would be a managing director and the bottom half would be a wife in the family way. In one hand it would carry an enormous key—the key of the poorhouse, of course—and in the other—what do they call those things like French horns with presents coming out of them?—a cornucopia, out of which would be pouring portable radios, life-insurance policies, false teeth, aspirins, French letters, and concrete garden planters.

As a matter of fact, in Ellesmere Road we don’t own our houses, even when we’ve finished paying for them. They’re not freehold, only leasehold. They’re priced at five-fifty, payable over a period of sixteen years, and they’re a class of house, which, if you bought them for cash down, would cost round about three-eighty. That represents a profit of a hundred and seventy for the Cheerful Credit, but needless to say that Cheerful Credit makes a lot more out of it than that. Three-eighty includes the builder’s profit, but the Cheerful Credit, under the name of Wilson & Bloom, builds the houses itself and scoops the builder’s profit. All it has to pay for is the materials. But it also scoops the profit on the materials, because under the name of Brookes & Scatterby it sells itself the bricks, tiles, doors, window-frames, sand, cement, and, I think, glass. And it wouldn’t altogether surprise me to learn that under yet another alias it sells itself the timber to make the doors and window-frames. 

Suddenly the builders arrived and houses began to go up on Platt’s Meadows. There was a howl of agony from the Hesperides, and a tenants’ defense association was set up. No use! Crum’s lawyers had knocked the stuffing out of us in five minutes, and Platt’s Meadows were built over. But the really subtle swindle, the one that makes me feel old Crum deserved his baronetcy, is the mental one. Merely because of the illusion that we own our houses and have what’s called “a stake in the country,” we poor saps in the Hesperides, and in all such places, are turned into Crum’s devoted slaves for ever. We’re all respectable householders—that’s to say Tories, yes-men, and bumsuckers. Daren’t kill the goose that lays the gilded eggs! 

And the fact that actually we aren’t householders, that we’re all in the middle of paying for our houses and eaten up with the ghastly fear that something might happen before we’ve made the last payment, merely increases the effect. We’re all bought, and what’s more we’re bought with our own money. Every one of those poor downtrodden bastards, sweating his guts out to pay twice the proper price for a brick doll’s house that’s called Belle Vue because there’s no view and the bell doesn’t ring—every one of those poor suckers would die on the field of battle to save his country from Bolshevism.

— George Orwell, as Insurance Salesman George Bowling. ’Coming Up For Air,’ 1938

* * *

Ukraine, March 2022

* * *

DISPENSABLE TRADITIONS

by Paula Erizanu

In 1990, twenty years after winning the Nobel Prize in Literature ‘for the ethical force with which he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature’, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote an essay entitled How to Rebuild Russia? He argued that the USSR should splinter along ‘ethnic’ lines: the Baltic states, Moldova, the South Caucasus and most of the Central Asian republics should be let go, while a new Russian nation would include Ukraine, Belarus and the ethnic Russian parts of Kazakhstan. The essay overemphasised the similarities between the peoples who would live in this imagined country, and brushed off the repression they suffered under the tsarist and Soviet regimes.

Solzhenitsyn at least acknowledged that ‘if the Ukrainian people really wanted to secede, no one would dare to keep them by force.’ Vladimir Putin – who once called Solzhenitsyn a ‘true and real patriot’ – must have missed that sentence. Solzhenitsyn returned the compliment, expressing his admiration for Putin on several counts. ‘I would like to praise the prudence and soundness of his decisions and judgments,’ he said in September 2000, months after the obliteration of Grozny. In 2006 he praised Putin’s ‘efforts to save the country’s lost statehood’. Anna Politkovskaya was murdered that year. In 2007 Solzhenitsyn accepted the State Prize of the Russian Federation from Putin.

Dostoevsky, too, embraced authoritarianism in later life and adopted an imperialist, messianic view of Russia, as he became a friend and supporter of the conservative thinker Konstantin Pobedonostsev, future imperial high commissioner of the Most Holy Synod. In The Devils, Shatov asks: ‘Do you know who are the only God-bearing people on earth, destined to regenerate and save the world in the name of a new God, and to whom are given the keys of life and of the new world?’ The answer, of course, is ‘the Russian nation’. Dostoevsky restated the idea in The Diary of a Writer:

Isn’t there in Orthodoxy alone both the truth and the salvation of the Russian people, and in the forthcoming centuries – of mankind as a whole? Hasn’t there been preserved in Orthodoxy alone, in all its purity, the Divine image of Christ? And, perhaps, the most momentous preordained destiny of the Russian people, within the destinies of mankind at large, consists in the preservation in their midst of the Divine image of Christ, in all its purity, and, when the time comes, in the revelation of this image to the world which has lost its way!

A hundred and fifty years later, Patriarch Kirill has expressed his full support for Putin’s attack on Ukraine, justifying it as a ‘metaphysical’ struggle against Western depravity and ‘gay parades’.

As Russian society will – I pray – try to come to grips with its imperialist politics, it will also have to become more critical of the cultural foundations of its dangerous dream of national grandeur. Tolstoy had nothing but contempt for Pobedonostsev, who was a model for Toporov in The Resurrection, his last novel, for which he was excommunicated from the Russian Orthodox Church. And many writers today – including Boris Akunin, Dmitry Bykov, Yulia Latynina, Irina Prokhorova, Vladimir Sorokin, Ludmila Ulitskaya and Mikhail Zygar – are among those speaking out against Putin’s war of aggression. Yet others, including the former dissident and head of PEN Russia, Evgeny Popov, have expressed their support for Putin’s ‘military operation’. The bestselling novelist Zakhar Prilepin even fought in the war in Donbas and boasted of ‘killing many’. Eduard Limonov, too, celebrated the annexation of Crimea.

While I have nothing but contempt for Prilepin and Limonov, I am not suggesting Dostoevsky or Solzhenitsyn should be ‘cancelled’, though Western institutions could put more emphasis on studying Russian culture critically, rather than buying into mystical ideas of the ‘Russian soul’. But above all, I sincerely hope that once the terrible war that Russia has inflicted on Ukraine ends, Russian society confronts its imperialism, and looks to build a nation that serves the everyday needs of its impoverished citizens, rather than terrorising and annihilating its neighbours. Otherwise, as the Ukrainian writer Serhiy Zhadan has put it, ‘Russia’s “great humanist” culture is going to the bottom like the invincible Titanic. Sorry, I mean like a Russian warship.’

(London Review of Books)

* * *

Wagon Train, Washington State, 1880

* * *

WALK LIKE A GIANT.

"At me too someone is looking, of me too someone is saying, he is sleeping, he knows nothing, let him sleep on."

Here's the recording of last night's (2022-03-18) Memo of the Air: Good Night Radio show on KNYO-LP Fort Bragg (CA): https://tinyurl.com/KNYO-MOTA-0480

Thanks a lot to Hank Sims for all kinds of tech help over the years, as well as for his fine news site: https://LostCoastOutpost.com

And thanks to the Anderson Valley Advertiser, which provided at almost an hour of the above eight-hour show's most locally relevant material, as usual, without asking for anything in return. Though I do pay $25 annually for full access to all articles and features, and you can too. As well as go to KNYO.org, click on the big red heart and give what you can. Also email me your work on any subject and I will read it on the radio this coming Friday night.

BESIDES ALL THAT, at https://MemoOfTheAir.wordpress.com you'll find a fresh batch of dozens of links to not necessarily radio-useful but nonetheless worthwhile items I set aside for you while gathering the show together. Such as:

Time-lapse aurora.

https://boingboing.net/2022/03/17/this-otherworldly-timelapse-of-the-aurora-borealis-is-astonishing.html

Ukrainian sand art.

https://tywkiwdbi.blogspot.com/2009/08/kseniya-simonova-ukrainian-sand-artist.html

And magic for dogs. This is like all the times we voted for somebody who would bring universal health care and free college and a guaranteed basic income and cut back on the military bases and aircraft carriers and nuclear missile submarines and trillion-dollar fighter jet bullshit and properly tax the zillionaires and bust up the too-big-to-fail banks and predatory monopolies and the financial and real estate market mafia and shut down the torture prisons, not to mention de-privatize the entire prison racket and nationalize the fossil fuel industry. and so on. And then, ha ha, so funny, they were kidding, none of that is practical, just a sweet dream for maybe someday. Which dog are you?

https://misscellania.blogspot.com/2014/03/magic-for-dogs.html

— Marco McClean, memo@mcn.org, https://MemoOfTheAir.wordpress.com

* * *

Fidel Castro at Lincoln Memorial, 1959

* * *

MANAGING CRAIG, A DIALOGUE

Craig Stehr: 

Awoke this morning at the Building Bridges homeless shelter in Ukiah, shaved/showered and then checked for email messages, and of course viewed the AVA online. And now, will return to the bed area and go back to sleep. I have nothing else to do anymore on the planet earth. OMing on the out breath to keep the mind united with God, or its Source, and therefore all actions will proceed from there. As ever, if anybody in postmodern America would care to actually do anything of importance with me, such as peace & justice which includes radical environmentalism, please go ahead and let's make that happen! Contact the staff here at (707) 234-3270 to coordinate moving me outta here, and getting me back on the activist/organizing frontlines. 

P.S. If you are tight with any cannabis dealers, feel free to encourage them to contribute money to me here: PayPal.me/craiglouisstehr 

After all, if it weren't for this insane motherf*cking dope friendly county, I would not have been displaced from my residence in Redwood Valley, I would not now be homeless, and heck, I might not have needed the pacemaker installed due to extreme stress! 

PPS. TO THE PUBLISHER: PLEASE PLEASE LEAVE THIS MESSAGE WITH "MOTHERF*CKER" IN, AND/OR ELSE FORWARD THIS TO YOUR HIGHER END POLITICAL CONNECTIONS IN CALIFORNIA. 

Let's get some action started on changing my stupid, crazy situation in postmodern California. Can we agree on this? Thanks to all of the the sane people in Mendocino County. It's good to be one of you.

AVA: No cursing, Craig.

Stehr: Sorry. I was being honest.

AVA: Go in peace, my child.

Stehr: Thank you. I appreciate your allowing me the freedom to "tell it like it is", and also (as I believe I wrote to you some time ago), I do fully accept that the final decision insofar as what appears in the AVA, is yours O Publisher. I am 100% satisfied with this. Lucky we are to even have a place like the AVA to freely express the truth.

* * *

Ronald Reagan serving as a lifeguard in 1927 at Lowell Park in Dixon, Illinois

* * *

WENDELL BERRY’S ADVICE FOR A CATACLYSMIC AGE

by Dorothy Wickenden

Hidden in the woods on a slope above the Kentucky River, just south of the Ohio border, is a twelve-by-sixteen-foot cabin with a long front porch. If not for the concrete pilings that raise the building high off the ground, it would seem almost a living part of the forest. Readers around the world know the “long-legged house” as the place where Wendell Berry, as a twenty-nine-year-old married man with two young children, found his voice. As he explained in his essay by that name, he built the cabin in the summer of 1963—a place where he could write, read, and contemplate the legacies of his forebears, and what inheritance he might leave behind.

The cabin began as a log house built by Berry’s great-great-great-grandfather Ben Perry, one of the area’s first settlers, and it lived on as a multigenerational salvage operation. In the nineteen-twenties, with the original house in disrepair, Wendell’s bachelor great-uncle Curran Mathews painstakingly took apart what remained and used the lumber to make a camp along the Kentucky River, where he could escape “the bounds of the accepted.” Wendell, “a melancholic and rebellious boy,” found peace in the tumbledown camp, even though it flooded every time the river overflowed. Eventually, it became uninhabitable, and he pried off some poplar and walnut boards to use in building his own cabin, on higher ground—a “satisfactory nutshell of a house,” he wrote. Standing on its long legs, it had “a peering, aerial look, as though built under the influence of trees.”

Berry, who is eighty-seven, has written fifty-two books there—essays, poetry, short stories, and novels—most of them while also running a farm, teaching English at the University of Kentucky, and engaging in political protests. This summer, he’ll publish a sprawling nonfiction book, “The Need to Be Whole,” followed by a short-story collection in the fall.

Last October, Berry showed me the camp, asking only that I not say where it is. Although he has laid bare his entire life in print, he tightly guards his privacy. The single room, containing an antique woodstove against the back wall and a neatly made cot in one corner, was dominated by his worktable, set before a forty-paned window—“the eye of the house”—that looks out onto the porch, the woods, and the river below.

The camp has no plumbing or electricity. Half a dozen well-sharpened pencils were lined up on the worktable, alongside small stacks of paper. On top of one stack was a note Berry had made, and crossed out, about Marianne Moore’s poem “What Are Years?” Above a small safe, curling photographs were taped to a wall: Wallace Stegner, Ernest Gaines, Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon, Thomas Merton. Berry pointed out a youthful shot of his wife, Tanya, with cropped, wavy hair, striding along a hillside by their house. He had made a bird feeder and fastened it to the porch railing, so he could watch the comings and goings of chickadees, titmice, juncos, and jays. I remembered a line from “The Long-Legged House”: “One bright warm day in November it was so quiet that I could hear the fallen leaves ticking, like a light rain, as they dried and contracted, scraping their points and edges against each other.”

The place was so inviting, I wondered if anyone had ever broken in—seeking, perhaps, a little food and a furtive night’s rest. “Yes, once,” Berry said. He was pretty sure he knew the culprit. “Someone took out a few panes and tried to get into my safe. I wrote him a note—‘Dear Thief, if you’re in trouble, don’t tear this place up. Come to the house, and I’ll give you what you need.’ ”

From this sliver of vanishing America, Berry cultivates the unfashionable virtues of neighborliness and compassion. He divides his time between writing and farmwork, continuing his vocation of championing sustainable agriculture in a country fuelled by industrial behemoths, while striving to insure that rural Americans—a mocked, despised, and ever-dwindling minority—do not perish altogether. Whenever the country struggles with a new man-made emergency, Berry is rediscovered. A Twitter feed called @WendellDaily recently circulated one of his maxims: “Rats and roaches live by competition under the law of supply and demand; it is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy.”

Berry’s admirers call him an Isaiah-like prophet. Michael Pollan and Alice Waters say that he changed their lives with five words: “Eating is an agricultural act.” Pollan became a scourge of the meat industry, genetically modified food, and factory farms; Waters launched the farm-to-table movement. The cultural critic bell hooks, another Kentuckian, began reading Berry in college, finding his work “fundamentally radical and eclectic.” Decades later, she visited him at his farm to talk about the importance of home and community and the complexities of America’s racial divide.

Berry’s critics see him as a utopian or a crank, a Luddite who never met a technological innovation he admired. In “Why I Am Not Going to Buy a Computer,” an infamous 1987 essay that ran in Harper’s, he announced, “I do not see that computers are bringing us one step nearer to anything that does matter to me: peace, economic justice, ecological health, political honesty, family and community stability, good work.” When indignant readers sent a blizzard of letters to the editor, Berry noted in reply that one man, who called him “a fool” and “doubly a fool,” had “fortunately misspelled my name, leaving me a speck of hope that I am not the ‘Wendell Barry’ he was talking about.”

I first heard of Wendell Berry when I was ten years old. One evening in 1964, my father, Dan Wickenden, came home from his editorial office at Harcourt Brace, in midtown Manhattan, and described his new author: a lanky youth of thirty, who sat with his elbows on his knees, talking in a slow Kentucky cadence and gesturing with large, expressive hands. An image lodged in my mind—busy men in dark suits, their secretaries typing and taking dictation, while Berry told amusing stories in bluejeans and scuffed shoes. (Tanya disabused me of that part of the memory: “Khakis, maybe. Not bluejeans.”

I remembered this encounter not long ago when I pulled from a bookshelf “A Continuous Harmony,” a collection of Berry’s essays that my father edited in 1971. With its homely brown jacket and yellowing pages, it looked its age, yet it spoke urgently to our current compounding crises. One of the pieces, “Think Little,” announced, “Nearly every one of us, nearly every day of his life, is contributing directly to the ruin of this planet.” Berry went on to say that he was “ashamed and deeply distressed that American government should have become the chief cause of disillusionment with American principles.”

I was curious about Berry’s evolution from a self-described “small writer” into an internationally acclaimed man of letters. After my father died, my mother xeroxed his correspondence with Berry and gave it to me—a pile of letters that covered the years they worked together, 1964 to 1977. The two were well matched. My family lived rather austerely in what Dan called “exurban” Connecticut, where he chopped wood for our fireplace and tended an organic vegetable garden. His father, Leonard Wickenden, a chemist, had been writing for decades about the dangers of fertilizers and pesticides. Dan and Wendell shared a love of the land, a droll wit, and a punctilious commitment to proper usage. Dan wrote to Wendell about a load of horse manure that had just been delivered for his garden. Wendell tutored Dan in the mating habits of toads: “Sometimes the male is found still clinging to the dead female who has perished in his embrace.”

There were moments of tension, as there always are between writer and editor. In July, 1966, as Berry entered the seventh year of trying to tame his unwieldy novel “A Place on Earth,” my father presented him with “extensive suggestions” for excision, notifying him that, “unless further and fairly drastic cuts are made, the book in print will be some 672 closely set pages.” Wendell replied, “Let me make myself perfectly clear. I am damned doubtful that I’ll cut anything like a hundred more pages out of this book.” Yet, he added, “if I keep finding so much to agree with in your complaints I ought to get the MS back and rewrite it from one end to the other.”

Thinking that the elderly Berry might like to reacquaint himself with the young Berry, I mailed a letter to introduce myself. He replied on the pages of a yellow legal pad: “Dear Dorothy, I’m hurrying to answer, and I hope you don’t mind being written to with a pencil. I no longer have the courage to write if I can’t erase.” He recalled that his work on “A Place on Earth” had been “a long and awkward struggle, and so having Dan’s help and encouragement at that time was wondrous good fortune.” After more letters and phone calls, he and Tanya invited me to visit.

A few hours west of the decapitated mountains of Appalachia is the part of Kentucky known as the Bluegrass region. The Kentucky and Ohio Rivers wind through hills dotted with sheep, cows, horses, and handsome old tobacco barns. Lanes Landing Farm sits in this landscape, a white clapboard farmhouse on a hundred and seventeen acres. Wendell and Tanya share the house with their amiable sheepdog, Liz, who greeted me in a light rain as I climbed a set of steep stairs from the road. Wendell—rangy, with a slight writer’s stoop—stood on the porch, holding the door open with a wide smile. Tanya, petite and cordial, led me into their kitchen, where I sat with Wendell at a round wooden table by a wall of books and a window overlooking a grapevine.

The Berrys live barely a mile from the town of Port Royal, which has not prospered over the years. It consists of about sixty residents, Parker Farm Supply and Restaurant, a Baptist church and a Methodist church, a fire station, and a post office, where Berry drops off and picks up his mail six days a week. On Sundays, he sometimes accompanies Tanya to the Port Royal Baptist Church (“not Southern Baptist”), where they worship with neighbors and four generations of Berrys. Tanya, who grew up in a bohemian, academic family in Lexington, is the pianist for the choir. “Never did I dream I would end up playing Baptist hymns in a Baptist church,” she wrote to me. “But it has become such a pleasure.”

In the early sixties, the Berrys seemed to be launched on a very different life. After Wendell received a Guggenheim Fellowship, they lived for a year in Tuscany and southern France, then moved with their children, Mary and Den, to New York, where Wendell taught at New York University. In 1964, he announced to his astonished colleagues that he had accepted a professorship at the University of Kentucky, in Lexington, and that he was going to take up farming near his family’s “home place.” That year, he and Tanya bought their house and their first twelve acres. His New York friends, imagining him surrounded by moonshine-swilling hillbillies and feuding clans, were sure he had consigned himself to intellectual death. He set out to prove them wrong, even as he admitted, “I seem to have been born with an aptitude for a way of life that was doomed.”

He found a kind of salvation, and a subject, in stewardship of the land. With renunciative discipline, he tilled his fields as his father and grandfather had, using a team of horses and a plow. And he took up organic gardening. I’d learned from the letters that it was my father who introduced Berry to the practice, sending him Leonard’s book “Gardening with Nature,” and recommending the works of Sir Albert Howard. An early-twentieth-century English botanist, Howard had studied traditional farming methods in India and emerged as an evangelist for sustainable agriculture. In 1977, Berry quoted Howard, his defining guide on the topic, as “treating the whole problem of health in soil, plant, animal, and man as one great subject.”

I confessed that I’d never read Howard. Berry, turning professorial, retrieved “An Agricultural Testament” and read aloud, enunciating each word: “ ‘Mother Earth never attempts to farm without livestock; she always raises mixed crops; great pains are taken to preserve the soil and to prevent erosion; the mixed vegetable and animal wastes are converted into humus; there is no waste.’ ” Berry closed the book. “That’s it,” he said. “That’s the pinch of the hourglass.”

Two years ago, in The New York Review of Books, Verlyn Klinkenborg complained about Berry’s habit of pointing out our “hollow lives, our degenerate bodies, our feelings of dislocation and spiritual bankruptcy.” True enough. Berry made his name with “The Unsettling of America,” a furious polemic published in 1977. The immediate villain was President Nixon’s Agriculture Secretary, Earl Butz, who warned small farmers to “adapt or die.” But Berry had a bigger target, which he came to call “technological fundamentalism”: “If we have built towering cities, we have raised even higher the cloud of megadeath. If people are as grass before God, they are as nothing before their machines.”

When I told a friend, a dedicated organic gardener, that I was writing about Wendell Berry, she replied, “I wonder if your father ever asked Berry to lighten up.” Readers of his fiction and poetry might find that line of inquiry puzzling. The novelist Colum McCann told The Atlantic in 2017 that Berry’s poems “have a real twinkle in their eyes in the face of a dark world.” He recited “The Mad Farmer’s Love Song,” which features one of his favorite figures in the canon:

O when the world’s at peace

and every man is free

then will I go down unto my love.

O and I may go down

several times before that.

Bobbie Ann Mason, a Kentucky novelist who has known Berry for decades, e-mailed with me about his fictional universe of Port William. Like Port Royal, it is a vest-pocket farm town on the west side of the Kentucky River. From the Civil War to the present, Port William has been home to a dozen families and to an entertaining supporting cast. Mason cited Miss Minnie and Ptolemy Proudfoot, a couple she found particularly endearing. Miss Minnie is a neat, ninety-pound schoolteacher. Ptolemy, known as Tol, is a tall, dishevelled, three-hundred-pound farmer. Minnie adores him—even though, as Berry writes, “The only time Tol’s clothes looked good was before he put them on.”

I asked Mason how Berry managed to be funny about his characters without patronizing them. She replied, “In a small community, humorous banter has to affirm energy and purpose. It can’t be hostile, or gossipy.” She suggested that Berry’s storytelling grew naturally from long hours of working with other farmers: “Stripping tobacco, for instance, is hard, tedious labor, and a group gets through it by telling jokes and stories.”

When Wendell and his three siblings were young, Henry County was famous for a light-leafed, unusually fragrant crop known as burley tobacco. The small farmers of the “burley belt”—including parts of Kentucky, Missouri, Indiana, Ohio, and West Virginia—saw themselves as part of a centuries-old culture that produced the most labor-intensive agricultural product in the world. In “Tobacco Harvest: An Elegy,” a book of photographs that Berry’s college friend James Baker Hall took in 1973 at a neighbor’s farm, Berry writes about the cultivation of tobacco as “a sort of agrarian passion, because of its beauty at nearly every stage of production and because of the artistry required to produce it.” At harvest time, neighbors “swapped work,” as they did when putting up hay or killing hogs, undertakings that took days and required intense collective labor. In one story, Andy Catlett, Wendell’s fictional counterpart, tells a young helper, “If you don’t have people, a lot of people, whose hands can make order of whatever they pick up, you’re going to be shit out of luck.”

I had always associated tobacco with lung cancer. Seeing that I needed help understanding it as a cultural touchstone, Berry said, “I’d better tell you about my daddy.” His father, John Marshall Berry, had a searing early experience that shaped his life, as well as the lives of his children and grandchildren. In January, 1907, when John was six, he woke up in what he called “the black of midnight” to the sound of his father’s horse on the gravel driveway. He was heading for the annual tobacco auction, in Louisville. The family had sat around the fire earlier, speculating about how much he would get for the year’s crop, and how they would use the money to pay down their debts. Instead, he returned empty-handed. The American Tobacco Company, a trust run by the tycoon James B. Duke, had forced the price of tobacco below the cost of production and transport. Wendell said, “My dad saw grown men leaving the warehouses crying.”

John Berry became an attorney, married Virginia Erdman Perry, from Port Royal, and established himself as a prominent citizen of Henry County. According to Tom Grissom, who is writing a book about the local history of tobacco, Berry was a member of his town’s bank board, a trustee of his college, and a Sunday-school teacher at the Baptist church. He was also a fervent advocate of a new organization, the Burley Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association. It enabled farmers to free themselves from the grip of the trust by establishing production controls and parity prices, and by selling their tobacco directly to manufacturers.

In 1933, as prices plummeted during the Great Depression, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Administration passed the Agricultural Adjustment Act, to save farmers from ruin. The act introduced production controls in return for price supports—a federal version of the regional Burley Association. John Berry served as the association’s president from 1957 until 1975, and insisted that the programs were not handouts but the equivalent of a minimum wage. Wendell maintained that the purpose of the Burley Association was to “achieve fair prices, fairly determined, and with minimal help from the government.”

Berry often writes of trying to nurture a “human economy”—the antithesis of America’s “total economy,” run by latter-day robber barons and the politicians who count on their donations. By his definition, a corporation is “a pile of money to which a number of persons have sold their moral allegiance.” Objecting to Supreme Court rulings that treat corporations as persons, Berry argues that “the limitless destructiveness of this economy comes about precisely because a corporation is not a person.” In other words, “It can experience no personal hope or remorse, no change of heart. It cannot humble itself. It goes about its business as if it were immortal, with the single purpose of becoming a bigger pile of money.”

When the rain let up, Berry and I drove south from Port Royal toward New Castle, to see his “native land,” where he and his brother, John, rambled as boys. We drove along a creek called Cane Run, through a forest of sycamores, hickories, and maples, in shades of gold and rust. He stopped where the woods by the creek gave way to an open field and a tobacco barn. The land was part of a fifty-acre tract that Wendell’s maternal grandfather sold in 1931, to a man Wendell referred to as Mr. Arthur Ford and his sons Melvin and Marvin. Wendell and Tanya bought the tract after Melvin died, in 1984.

As we climbed a steep rise, Wendell talked about how the Fords had felled trees and extracted rocks, so that the hill could be plowed for tobacco. Before the advent of commercial fertilizers, hill farmers needed the highly fertile fresh-cleared soil. The Fords used a team of horses or mules to pull a jumper plow, with a vertical blade called a coulter. “If you came to a root or a rock,” Wendell said, “the coulter would raise the plow. You need a very settled team, because when it rose up, if you didn’t look out, it would break your leg—or your neck.”

When Wendell was a boy, he became close to Melvin and Marvin, contemporaries of his father whom everyone called Meb and Mob. The brothers stopped going to school after the eighth grade, but Wendell considers them among his most knowledgeable teachers. He especially loved Meb, who on Sunday afternoons took him through the countryside, on foot and horseback, teaching him about the wildlife and telling him stories about his parents and grandparents, who’d lived entirely off the land.

Mr. Arthur Ford was famous for his feats of strength. Once, Meb told Wendell, his father “carried in a sack on his back fifty rabbits and a big possum” up the slope we were climbing, and across the ridge to the road to Port Royal, where he sold the animals at the farm store. Meb recalled, “It was the tiredest my daddy ever got.”

School held little interest for Wendell. “I didn’t like confinement,” he said. Second-grade teachers gave boys knives for perfect attendance, but he spurned the bribe, and by the eighth grade was earning F’s in conduct. When he was fourteen, his parents, determined to see their bright children buckle down, sent him and John to Millersburg Military Institute; their younger sisters, Mary Jo and Markie, later went to a private school in Virginia.

Millersburg had an effect on Wendell, but not the one his parents had intended. “The highest aim of the school was to produce a perfectly obedient, militarist, puritanical moron who could play football,” Berry writes in “The Long-Legged House.” His greatest lesson from those years: “Take a simpleton and give him power and confront him with intelligence—and you have a tyrant.” Each year, when school let out for the summer, Wendell headed to his great-uncle Curran’s camp with an axe and a scythe, to mow the wild grass and horseweed. “It was some instinctive love of wilderness that would always bring me back here,” he wrote, “but it was by the instincts of a farmer that I established myself.”

He turned himself around at the University of Kentucky, where he earned undergraduate and master’s degrees in English. He studied creative writing with Robert Hazel, a charismatic poet and novelist with a gift for shaping raw talents, including Ed McClanahan, James Baker Hall, Gurney Norman, and Bobbie Ann Mason. Wendell recalled, “He did me the great service of never allowing me to be satisfied with any work I showed him.”

Among the students at the university was Tanya Amyx, the daughter of an art professor and a textile artist, who was studying French and music. Wendell spotted her standing beside the newel post of a staircase in Miller Hall. When he learned afterward that the building was being remodelled, he told a workman, “Look, when you tear that post out, I want it.” Wendell and Tanya were married a year and a half later, and they spent their first summer together at the camp. “For me, that was a happy return,” Wendell wrote. For Tanya, it meant “hardships she could not have expected.” His gift to his bride was a new privy, “which never aspired so high as to have a door, but did sport a real toilet seat.” In a letter to me, Tanya dismissed the talk of hardships: “We had helpful family (of Wendell’s) close around who offered a bathtub if necessary.”

She became her husband’s first reader and best critic. She was also, in mechanical terms, his typist, a fact that outraged feminists when Berry mentioned it in his Harper’s essay. (Tanya looks back on the controversy with amusement: “Did I tell you several women have greeted me with ‘Oh, you’re the one who types!’ ”) Berry responded that he preferred his admittedly old-fashioned view of marriage—“a state of mutual help”—to the popular idea of “two successful careerists in the same bed,” and “a sort of private political system in which rights and interests must be constantly asserted and defended.”

In 1958, Berry was awarded a Wallace Stegner writing fellowship at Stanford. He and Tanya packed their things and three-month-old Mary in their Plymouth and drove across the country. Berry prized his seminars with Stegner, whom he considers the West’s foremost “storyteller, historian, critic, conservator and loyal citizen.” In a Jefferson Lecture in 2012, he quoted Stegner’s description of Americans as one of two basic types, “boomers” and “stickers.” Boomers are “those who pillage and run,” who “make a killing and end up on Easy Street.” Stickers are “those who settle, and love the life they have made and the place they have made it in.” They are “placed people,” in Berry’s term—forever attached to the look of the sky, the smell of native plants, and the vernacular of home.

At Stanford, Berry attended seminars with Ken Kesey, and, improbably, they became lasting friends. He grew particularly close to Ernest Gaines, another Stegner Fellow. Gaines was one of twelve children from a sharecropping family who lived in former slave quarters on a sugar plantation in Louisiana. Berry was descended from slaveholders on both sides of his family. But, as he puts it in “The Need to Be Whole,” he and Gaines had “a shared sense of origin in the talk of old people and our loyalty to the places and communities that nurtured us.” bell hooks liked to quote a line of Berry’s about Gaines: “He has shown that the local, fully imagined, becomes universal.” She saw the same gift in Berry.

Although Berry is enviably prolific, he doesn’t find writing easy. When I asked about his process, he replied with a parable. On a bitterly cold winter day, he had to leave the comfort of the house: his livestock was out, and a fence had to be mended. His gloves made his fingers clumsy, so he took them off, freezing his hands as he twisted the wire. “What’s curious to me is that, once started, you’re interested, you’re into it, you’re doing your work, and you’re happy,” he said. “That applies to writing. Sometimes I don’t believe I can stand it another day, but then I’m working at problems I know how to deal with, to an extent.

In 1960, as he embarked on “A Place on Earth,” he felt lost. “I didn’t know anything, you see,” he told me. He wanted to write an ambitious regional novel, but he was “just stuck and depressed.” At one point, Tanya suggested, “Maybe you need to mature a bit.” But his cussedness prevailed, and year by year the novel grew. He’d long since forgotten his prickly response to my father’s insistence that he cut those final hundred pages. I read the exchange to him, and he listened thoughtfully. Then he said, “Your father must have known what an ass I was making of myself.”

When it came time to design the book’s jacket, Berry refused anything that might be construed as self-promotion. He wrote to Dan that he’d like to forgo an author photo, and asked that the flap copy, “if there must be any at all, be kept to a description of the book, objective as possible.” As for author interviews: “Why, before I have come to any coherent understanding myself of what I’m doing here, should I admit some journalist to render it all in the obvious clichés?” He finally relented about the photo, after Dan pleaded, “Perhaps absurdly, it can help to persuade people to read the book it adorns, and we do want people to read your book, and I dare say even you won’t mind too much if people read your book.”

In those days, the best-seller lists were filled with novels by Bernard Malamud, Philip Roth, Joseph Heller, and Saul Bellow—not to mention Jacqueline Susann and Harold Robbins—and it wasn’t clear that Berry would ever find an audience. The sales figures were grim. Wendell wrote to Dan in June, 1969, about “The Long-Legged House”: “I’m glad you told me the book hasn’t yet sold 2,000 copies. The particularity of that saves me a lot of trouble trying to imagine how poorly it must be doing.”

Almost despite himself, Berry built a following. Most readers first discovered his fiction and poetry, then his essays, where they found a lyrically rendered view of a peril-stricken world. In 1972, after spending two days flying over the coalfields of Kentucky, he wrote, “The damage has no human scale. It is a geologic upheaval.” Entire mountaintops were “torn off and cast into the valleys,” he added. “It is a scene from the Book of Revelation. It is a domestic Vietnam.” My father, responding to an essay about war and ecological degradation, asked, “Hasn’t ‘civilized’ man almost always been out of tune with the natural world, a parasite and a destroyer of his planet?” Berry replied, “Thomas Merton says man went wrong when he left the Stone Age.”

In 1977, as my father was being ushered into retirement, Berry was told that it was time to find a new publisher. Two years later, he said, North Point Press “adopted me.” North Point was a new venture in Berkeley, co-founded by Jack Shoemaker, a thirty-three-year-old former bookseller. Shoemaker, who now edits Berry at Counterpoint Press, told me that his books were popular with environmentalists, hippies, and civil-rights advocates: “Wendell was a hero to those people, saying the unsayable out loud.” His ideas about the virtues of agrarian societies had sweeping implications—to solve the problems of the modern world required thoroughly reconceiving how we live. Wallace Stegner once wrote to him, “Your books seem conservative. They are actually profoundly revolutionary.”

Berry distrusts political movements, which, he writes, “soon decline from any possibility of reasonable discourse to slogans, shouts, and a merely hateful contention in the capitols and streets.” Still, he is a lifelong protester. In 1967, he helped lead the Sierra Club’s successful effort to block the Red River Gorge Dam, in east-central Kentucky. The following year, he marched against the Vietnam War in Lexington, where he told the crowd that, as a member of the human race, he was “in the worst possible company: communists, fascists and totalitarians of all sorts, militarists and tyrants, exploiters, vandals, gluttons, ignoramuses, murderers.” But, he insisted, he was given hope by people “who through all the sad destructive centuries of our history have kept alive the vision of peace and kindness and generosity and humility and freedom.”

On Valentine’s Day weekend, 2011, Berry joined a small group of activists to occupy Governor Steve Beshear’s office in Frankfort, as hundreds more marched outside with “I Love Mountains” placards. They aimed to convince the Governor to withdraw from a lawsuit that the Kentucky Coal Association had filed against the E.P.A. for its efforts to clean up waters polluted by toxic mining runoff. Beshear agreed to visit a few particularly afflicted towns. In Hueysville, a resident named Ricky Handshoe took him to Raccoon Creek, which had turned a fluorescent orange. Aghast, Beshear asked, “But you’re on city water, aren’t you?” Handshoe said recently that the Governor meant well, but was no match for the coal lobby: “After he left, nothing much happened.”

Berry puts his faith in citizens who are committed to restoring their communities. One of the people at the sit-in was his friend Herb E. Smith, from a family of miners in Whitesburg. In 1969, at the age of seventeen, Smith and seven other young people founded a film workshop, called Appalshop, to produce stories about eastern Kentucky that countered the conventional narrative about benighted Appalachians. Smith told me that in the past half century, as coal jobs have disappeared, Appalshop has grown. With support from government agencies and foundations, it runs a radio station, a theatre program, an art gallery, a filmmaking institute, and a record label. Another nonprofit in town provides health care to the uninsured. A bakery up the road employs recovering opioid addicts. Addressing political disagreements in a solidly red state, Smith said, “These are people with deep concerns about community survival, even in places thought of as full of reactionaries. In reality, people accommodate each other.”

Berry hailed the concentration of talent, work, and courage in Whitesburg, citing its most famous resident, Harry Caudill, whose history of Appalachia, “Night Comes to the Cumberlands,” came out in 1963 and “brought the war on poverty to eastern Kentucky.” He also talked about a married couple, Tom and Pat Gish, who in 1956 bought the local newspaper, the Mountain Eagle, and ran it for fifty-two years. Their first decision was to replace its anodyne motto, “A Friendly Non-Partisan Weekly Newspaper,” with “It Screams.” Not everyone welcomed the paper’s candor about the hazards of mining and the misdeeds of corrupt officials. In 1974, someone threw a firebomb into its offices. The Gishes moved the paper’s operations to their house and got out the next issue. Chuckling, Berry noted that the only thing they changed was the slogan: “It Still Screams.” He added, “That story has been worth a lot to me. And so much has gathered there and kept on right in the presence of the permanent destruction of the world.”

In the kitchen at Lanes Landing Farm, I heard a tap at the door and saw a dark-haired young woman with a blond toddler in her arms: the Berrys’ granddaughter Virginia and her daughter Lucinda. Lucie, already full of the Berry hospitality, let me hold her stuffed bunny as Virginia conferred with her grandmother about who would host Thanksgiving, and about friends in the church who hadn’t been well. (After they departed, Tanya told me that Lucie had asked excitedly to “say goodbye to Dorothy.” I was charmed, until she said, “Our donkey is named Dorothy.”

Wendell explained that Lucie was named for his great-grandmother Lucinda Bowen Berry, the heroine of stories he told his children and grandchildren. Lucinda, a tall, lean, no-nonsense woman married to John J. Berry, was a young mother during the Civil War. Kentucky was a border state, and civilians were subject to routine acts of lawlessness by bands of soldiers, Confederate and Union. On a summer night near the end of the war, Lucinda saw men in uniform making off with her husband on horseback, and set out behind them on foot, in her nightgown. Finding their camp, she reached for John’s hand and took him home. I recognized the story, which he included in a piece of fiction in a recent issue of The Threepenny Review.

Despite Berry’s veneration of his ancestors, he can be unsparing about their sins. “I am forever being crept up on and newly startled by the realization that my people established themselves here by killing or driving out the original possessors, by the awareness that people were once bought and sold here by my people, by the sense of the violence they have done to their own kind and to each other and to the earth,” he wrote in his 1968 essay “A Native Hill.” He saw the rapacious practices of modern agribusiness, Big Coal, the military-industrial complex, and Wall Street as the perpetuation of “some intransigent destructiveness” that drove the European settlers in America.

That year, Berry began writing “The Hidden Wound,” a book that examines racism as “an emotional dynamics which has disordered both the heart of the society as a whole and of every person in the society.” The title refers to an ugly story handed down through generations of Berrys, in which John J. Berry sold a slave who, the story went, was “too defiant and rebellious to do anything with.” Although it showed the “innate violence of the slave system,” it was relayed “as a bit of interesting history.” Berry admitted, “I have told it that way many times myself. And so the wound has lived beneath the skin.”

The hero of the book is Nick Watkins, a Black man who worked for Wendell’s grandfather and lived in a two-room house on the Berry property. As a boy, Wendell tagged along with Nick on his daily rounds, talking about Nick’s old foxhound Waxy, about how to judge a good saddle horse, and about the prospect of camping together in the mountains. This idyll was shattered on his ninth or tenth birthday, when his grandmother threw him a party, inviting the family and some of the neighbors. Wendell invited Nick. Writing about the tense reaction of his elders, he observed, “I had scratched the wound of racism.” Nick knew that Wendell would be stricken if he did not attend, so he came and sat on the cellar wall behind the house. Wendell spent the party with him, bringing out ice cream and cake to share.

belle hooks, who taught “The Hidden Wound” at Berea College, told Berry how moved she was by the image of a little boy intervening in a scene “charged with the hidden violence of racism.” Berry, though, wrote almost twenty years later that he considered it perhaps the least satisfying book he’d ever written—he’d barely begun to make sense of the subject. Now he has tried again. In “The Need to Be Whole,” he argues that the problem of race is inextricable from the violent abuse of our natural resources, and that “white people’s part in slavery and all the other outcomes of race prejudice, so damaging to its victims,” has also been “gravely damaging to white people.” The book’s subtitle is “Patriotism and the History of Prejudice.”

Before sending me the manuscript, Berry wrote that he belongs to “a tiny side but no party.” Indeed, this “pondering and ponderous book,” as he calls it, contains something to offend almost everyone. “A properly educated conservative, who has neither approved of abortion nor supported a tax or a regulation, can destroy a mountain or poison a river and sleep like a baby,” he writes. “A well-instructed liberal, who has behaved with the prescribed delicacy toward women and people of color, can consent to the plunder of the land and people of rural America and sleep like a conservative.”

Thomas Friedman, of the Times, is scolded for a preening column in which he calls himself a “green capitalist” and blames Congress for not cracking down on coal, oil, and gas producers. Berry observes, “The deal we are being offered appears to be that we can change the world without changing ourselves.” This kind of thinking enables us to continue using too much energy “of whatever color,” hoping that “fields of solar panels and ranks of gigantic wind machines” will absolve us of guilt as consumers. Which is not to say that Berry renounces the use of green energy. He posed for a photograph several years ago in front of the solar panels by his house, grinning and flashing a peace sign.

Berry summons writers, from Homer to Twain, who extended “understanding and sympathy to enemies, sinners, and outcasts: sometimes to people who happen to be on the other side or the wrong side, sometimes to people who have done really terrible things.” In this spirit, he offers an assessment of Robert E. Lee, whom he calls “one of the great tragic figures of our history.” He presents Lee as a white supremacist and a slaveholder, but also as a reluctant soldier who opposed secession and was forced to choose between conflicting loyalties: his country and his people. “Lee said, ‘I cannot raise my hand against my birthplace, my home, my children,’ ” Berry writes. “For him, the words ‘birthplace’ and ‘home’ and even ‘children’ had a complexity and vibrance of meaning that at present most of us have lost.”

Berry wants readers to hate Lee’s sins but love the sinner, or at least understand his motives. War, he suggests, begins in a failure of acceptance. He writes of exchanging friendly talk with Trump voters at Port Royal’s farm-supply store, a kind of tolerance that is necessary in a small town: “If two neighbors know that they may seriously disagree, but that either of them, given even a small change of circumstances, may desperately need the other, should they not keep between them a sort of pre-paid forgiveness? They ought to keep it ready to hand, like a fire extinguisher.” Without this, we risk conflagration: “A society with an absurdly attenuated sense of sin starts talking then of civil war or holy war.”

If readers were incredulous about Berry’s claim that a pencil was a better tool than a computer, it’s not hard to imagine how many will react to his plea that we extend sympathy to a general whose army fought to perpetuate slavery in America. Several of Berry’s friends urged him to abandon the book, anticipating Twitter eruptions and withering reviews. He writes, “My friends, I think, were afraid, now that I am old, that I am at risk of some dire breach of political etiquette by feebleness of mind or some fit of ill-advised candor.” He listened, and fretted, but kept going. “They are asking me to lay aside my old effort to tell the truth, as it is given to me by my own knowledge and judgment, in order to take up another art, which is that of public relations.” In a letter, he told me that he didn’t want to offend “against truth or goodness,” although the book “at times certainly does offend, I think necessarily, against political correctness.” Tanya crisply told him, “It’s too late for it to ruin your whole life.”

When the Berrys’ children were growing up, the family had two milk cows, two hogs, chickens, a vegetable garden, and a team of draft horses. These days, Den, a master woodworker, raises cattle and hay with his wife, Billie, at their farm nearby. He also helps Wendell at Lanes Landing, and grazes some of his cattle on his parents’ land. Mary and her husband, Steve Smith, own a steep, heavily wooded three-hundred-acre farm in Trimble County. But for the past decade Mary has spent most of her time as the executive director of the Berry Center, a nonprofit in New Castle, which promotes “prosperous, well-tended farms serving and supporting healthy local communities.” Next door, Mary’s daughter Virginia runs the Agrarian Culture Center and Bookstore, and a literary league that sponsors a county-wide reading program

The headquarters of the Berry Center occupy a capacious white brick Federal-style house on South Main Street. In the center’s library, Mary said that the project began a decade ago, when she went to talk with her father about how the local-food movement, so popular among urbanites, wasn’t doing enough to support small farmers in their region. Mary told Wendell that she imagined a liberal-arts program that would teach students how to raise livestock and grow diversified crops, and encourage them to pursue farming as a life’s work. Wendell said to her, “It sounds like you’re starting a center.” Mary had no idea how to run a nonprofit, but, she told me, “I had what was left of a pretty good farm culture and a well-watered landscape.”

She admits that growing up on her parents’ farm wasn’t easy: the outdoor composting privy, the absence of vacations, the mandatory chores that pulled her out of bed each morning before dawn. “It was a subsistence farm,” she said. “Mom and Dad were producing eighty to eighty-five per cent of what we were eating.” She thought that they were poor: “We didn’t live in a ranch house, drink Coke, or have a TV.” A friend, taking pity on her, got on the phone each week to offer a running narration of popular shows. Mary complained to her father, “Why do we always have to do things the hardest way?” But she never considered moving away.

The Berry Center, with a staff of eight and a board of ten, attracts visitors from around the world who share many Americans’ sense of deracination. “They want to know how to belong to a place,” Mary told me. When they express alarm about climate change, she tells them, “You can’t throw up your hands in despair. You’re not responsible for solving the whole problem—you just do what you can do.”

Four years ago, the Berry Center and Sterling College, an “experiential learning” school in Craftsbury, Vermont, started the Wendell Berry Farming Program, which provides twelve students tuition-free study on Henry County farms. Leah Bayens, the program’s dean, told me that the students spend much of their time working outside. “Ultimately, we’re using the curriculum as a way for farmers to make decisions informed by poetry, history, and literature, as well as the hard sciences.”

It sounded impossibly idealistic, given the number of family-farm foreclosures. According to a study by the University of Iowa, the suicide rate for farmers is three and a half times that for the general population. Bayens said that everyone in the program worried about the risks: “We are in a terrible situation. Most U.S. farmers, regardless of scale, receive off-farm income”—working other jobs to stay afloat. The tobacco program launched under the Agricultural Adjustment Act collapsed in 2004, and the Burley Association soon followed, done in by sustained assaults from cigarette manufacturers, health advocates, and globalization. Today, some eighty per cent of U.S. government subsidies go to farms with revenues of more than a million dollars a year.

Ashland Tann, a 2021 graduate of the farming program, who is Black, is clear-eyed about the difficulties. Black farmers contend with structural inequities that date back to Reconstruction. There were a million of them in 1920; today, there are fewer than fifty thousand. Tann plans eventually to open an agrarian-science center—a “farm-to-table Wonka factory,” where he’ll serve locally sourced meals and proselytize about diversified farming. In the meantime, he works in a Louisville restaurant, North of Bourbon, and volunteers with the nonprofit Feed Louisville.

Tann said that his studies in New Castle were transformative, but he was sometimes made to feel out of place. He grew up in Baltimore, surrounded by Black “market owners, Morgan State graduates, mayors, murals, and Maya Angelou poems.” Henry County is ninety-four per cent white. As he drove into Kentucky for the first time, he said, “I felt like the air pressure changed.” Taking a walk one day with his foxhound, he was stopped by a white man: “He gives me the third degree—‘Who are you? Why are you here?’ ” Ashland replied, “Actually, sir, I’m a member of the Wendell Berry Farming Program.”

In 2017, Mary started Our Home Place Meat, a beef program inspired by the Burley Association. Currently, a dozen farming families participate. When the cows reach weight, Home Place arranges for the meat to be butchered and sold. Mary admits that progress has been slow: “That’s where the nonprofit work comes in. Philanthropy gives us time to work out the problems.” Tom Grissom, the tobacco historian, is affiliated with the center, but he doesn’t think that Home Place is comparable to the Burley Association: “Price supports and parity worked with tobacco because the product was addictive.”

Mary put me in touch with two members of the program, Abbie and Joseph Monroe, a couple in their thirties with two young children and another expected this April. Seven years ago, the Monroes moved onto a hundred and sixteen acres, about ten miles from Port Royal, which they named Valley Spirit Farm. I drove slowly along a rutted, muddy lane, to avoid hitting a party of ducks. As I got out of the car, three dogs bounded up, followed by Abbie and Joseph. The ducks, I learned, belong to their partners, Caleb and Kelly Fiechter, who live across the road. The Fiechters sell the duck eggs, along with pigs and mushrooms that they raise.

Joseph grew up in Dupont, Indiana (population three hundred and forty), where his parents ran two small farms and his father worked full time for the Department of Natural Resources. After the town’s school closed, along with its bank and its grocery store, Joseph was bused to school in Madison, fifteen miles away; he met Abbie in junior high. At first, he wanted to become a pastor, but his father asked him, “You want to live off the plate, and be dependent on others’ hard work?” Joseph and Abbie decided that he was right about the value of producing something on your own. They put a down payment on the farm, using money that Joseph’s grandparents had left him.

We walked through a greenhouse and their five-acre vegetable garden—asparagus, squash, carrots, cucumbers, tomatoes, garlic, onions, potatoes, celery, and lettuce—and on to the Fiechters’ pigs, a five-way cross between Red Wattle, Duroc, wild boar, Wessex Saddleback, and Meishan. The Monroes’ cattle were grazing on seventy acres that they lease from a neighbor. The two couples sell the vegetables and much of the pork and beef at Louisville’s two farmers’ markets, to the local Community Supported Agriculture organization, and to a recently opened restaurant, the New Castle Tavern. Our Home Place Meat markets and sells the rest of the beef.

Nothing went to waste at Valley Spirit Farm—Sir Albert Howard would have approved. Joseph said they’d use the hay bales in the far field as winter feed for the animals, spreading it around their cropland to make sure that the manure was evenly distributed, enriching the topsoil. Produce that can’t go to market—bolted lettuce, oversized zucchini, frostbitten Brussels sprouts—becomes more food for the livestock, and for the family. Walking me to my car, Joseph leaned down and pulled up a fat, misshapen carrot, which he washed under a spigot and presented to me as a parting gift.

I called Abbie after I got back to New York. She was outside, and one of the roosters was crowing raucously. I said I’d thought they crowed only at dawn. “They do get excited early in the morning,” she replied. “But often it’s just to check in on the hens—like I call for the kids.” She admitted that farmwork is gruelling and filled with uncertainty. “At times, we haven’t felt all that optimistic. I think what gives us the most hope is collaborating with others. C.S.A. and Home Place take so much of the burden off a small farmer. We see a lot of young farmers with the dream and the drive, but without the starter money.” She went on, “It’s about expectations—knowing not to expect a super-glamorous life, and being willing to appreciate what you do have. Like when the cats leave you a dead mouse on the doorstep.” It upsets her daughter, but, she said, “I kind of love it when they do that. It means the mouse isn’t in my pantry.”

Back at Lanes Landing Farm, Berry said that it was time to feed the sheep, so we set out in his battered pickup. Liz jumped onto the cargo bed. I sat in the passenger seat, resting my feet on a chainsaw, one of Berry’s few labor-saving devices. It was “dangerous and a polluter,” he acknowledged, but also “handy and fast.” On the dashboard were two lengths of wood, sharpened at one end, which he identified as tobacco sticks. Back when the harvest was performed by hand, the sticks were made by using a maul to drive a froe into a log until it was split to the proper size. The sticks were “jobbed upright into the ground” at even intervals in “stickrows” between rows of tobacco. The tobacco stalks were cut down with a hatchet, pierced with a spear, then slid onto a stick, before being hung in a tobacco barn to dry.

As Liz ran into the pasture, Wendell and I went into the barn. Pouring feed for the animals, he shouted, “Liz, bring ’em on!” She quickly rounded up a flock of thirty—white-faced, bare-legged, their torsos wrapped in shaggy fleece. Wendell explained that they were Cheviot sheep, a breed from the border of England and Scotland. They were known for the quality of their wool, but he’d found it too costly to have them shorn. In the early winter, he takes some ewes to the steep lots near the house, where they serve as lawnmowers, then brings them back to the barn for lambing.

Berry’s writing, like the seasons, has a cyclical quality, returning again and again to the same ideas. Tanya once told him that his knack for repeating himself is his principal asset as a writer. He noted a few years ago, “That insight has instructed and amused me very much, because she is right and so forthrightly right.” In his new book, he has a characteristically bittersweet message: “Because the age of global search and discovery now is ending—because by now we have so thoroughly ransacked, appropriated, and diminished the globe’s original wealth—we can see how generous and abounding is the commonwealth of life.” But he has never suggested that everyone flee the city and the suburbs and take up farming. “I am suggesting,” he once wrote, “that most people now are living on the far side of a broken connection, and that this is potentially catastrophic.”

I asked him if he retains any of his youthful hope that humanity can avoid a cataclysm. He replied that he’s become more careful in his use of the word “hope”: “Jesus said, ‘Take no thought for the morrow,’ which I take to mean that if we do the right things today, we’ll have done all we really can for tomorrow. OK. So I hope to do the right things today.”

At the old Ford acreage, he showed me where the tobacco was taken after the harvest. He opened the barn doors onto a cavernous space, where light filtered through the siding boards. Craning my neck, I could imagine how the tobacco sticks, laden with heavy leaves, were once hung on the rafters to dry. It was a perilous undertaking called “housing tobacco”—each man supporting a sheaf of leaves larger than he was, balancing on a beam like a circus performer as he set the stick in place.

Wendell picked up a maul, which Meb had made from a hickory tree. It had a smooth handle and a bulbous head, squared off at the end. “With it,” he told me, “you can deliver a blow of tremendous force to a stake or a splitting wedge.” Thinking about a modern sledgehammer, I asked how the handle was inserted into the head. He put his hand on my shoulder and said, “No, no, honey,” then hastily explained himself: “That’s our way of taking the sting out of it, you see, when we correct someone.” He showed me the swirling grain of the maul’s head, chopped from the roots of a tree, and swung it over his shoulder to demonstrate how it becomes a natural extension of the body.

When I was back home, he sent me a diagram and explained how the strength of the wood came from the tree’s immersion in the soil: “The growth of roots makes the grain gnarly, gnurly, snurly: unsplittable.” After you cut the tree, you square off the root end. Then, above the roots, where the grain isn’t snurly, you saw inward a little at a time, “splitting off long, straight splinters to reduce the log to the diameter of a handle comfortable to hold. And so you’ve made your maul. It is all one piece, impossible for the strongest man (or of course woman) to break.” He scrawled at the bottom of the page, “There is a kind of genius in that maul, that belongs to a placed people: to make of what is at hand a fine, durable tool at the cost only of skill and work.” 

(The New Yorker)

* * *

Three year old Jean MacCallum, 1883

19 Comments

  1. John Sakowicz March 20, 2022

    You wonder how a guy like Jack Waldrop of Kennewick, Washington, made his way to lil’ ole Willits.

    • M Hahn March 20, 2022

      See possible passing resemblance to sketch from recent Santa Rosa kidnap attempt. A coincidence, surely…
      M

  2. Eli Maddock March 20, 2022

    RE: SIPHONERS

    Rest easy, your car’s gas is safe thanks to an anti-siphon device in the filler neck.
    Tractor-trailer rigs with their large exposed tanks had better lock up and stay vigilant!

  3. Bill Pilgrim March 20, 2022

    “UKRAINE SAYS MARIUPOL ART SCHOOL BOMBED” !!!
    Western media have reported that Russia’s military deliberately attacked the Donetsk Academic Regional Drama theater in Mariupol, Ukraine, claiming that it was filled with civilians and marked with signs reading “children” on its grounds.
    …A closer look reveals that local residents in Mariupol had warned three days before the March 16 incident that the theater would be the site of a false flag attack launched by the openly neo-Nazi Azov Battalion, which controlled the building and the territory around it.
    Civilians that escaped the city through humanitarian corridors have testified that they were held by Azov as human shields in area, and that Azov fighters detonated parts of the theater as they retreated. – thegrayzone.com
    Mariupol has the largest concentration of neo-nazi brigades.
    The majority of western news reports headlined “Ukraine says…” are being managed by US and NATO intelligence operatives.
    The discovery of US bio-weapons labs in Ukraine will be distorted then flushed down the memory hole with all other evidence of US meddling in the country before Russia moved on it.

  4. Bill Pilgrim March 20, 2022

    “But above all, I sincerely hope that once the terrible war that Russia has inflicted on Ukraine ends, Russian society confronts its imperialism, and looks to build a nation that serves the everyday needs of its impoverished citizens, rather than terrorising and annihilating its neighbours. ” (LRB)
    And THIS… from a publication in one of the oldest, most brutal western imperial and colonial powers in modern history! Being read and shared by citizens of the newest most brutal western imperial powers!
    The rank hypocrisy is breathtaking. It prohibits any rational debate because the writer and his/her acolytes are so steeped in their self-righteousness they only see the world and events through the lens of self-justification. When we commit war crimes it’s for a noble cause. Others? Evil criminals.

  5. chuck dunbar March 20, 2022

    Albion Grammar School, 1927

    What a lovely photo of these young girls and boys–my wife and I smiled at the sweet kids with their shy grins, wondering if maybe the photographer had told them a little joke. Amid all the horrid news and photos these days, it’s good to be reminded of the better side of life. Thank you, AVA.

    • chuck dunbar March 20, 2022

      …or maybe the photographer just said, “Oh my goodness, you’re all so beautiful!”

  6. izzy March 20, 2022

    There is something a little odd in the flow of things here.
    On the one hand, we see a healthy cynicism about the way things work in the Kellie-Jay Keen piece, The Great Redwood Trail boondoggle, the John Pinches citations, and the ongoing Skunk Train rip-off. On the other, a simple parroting of MSM propaganda about the Ukraine situation. It’s as though, briefly, the piercing light of a questioning intelligence just goes out.

    • Bruce Anderson March 20, 2022

      OK. We take it all back. Ukraine needed to be invaded, Putin isn’t a dictator, the Ukrainians are faking it.

      • Bill Pilgrim March 20, 2022

        That’s too damn black & white, man! Why are so many not seeing the bigger picture? This is a major confrontation between the current hegemon – that’s us – and another power seeking a multi-polar world, but having to defend itself from the hegemon’s military and financial aggression.
        The Ukrainians are, tragically, pawns in this “grand game,” that goes way back to Brzensenski.
        Obviously you haven’t taken seriously any of the dissenting columns – Hedges, Solomon, etc. – you’ve published. And, you didn’t publish Chomsky’s advice on how to de-escalate and eventually end the conflict. Why? Because he didn’t blame and demonize Putin and the Russians enough to your liking?

        • Bruce Anderson March 20, 2022

          We posted Chomsky. The problem with considering Ukraine in the abstract of hegemons and so forth is that these particular pawns are dying and displaced in their many thousands, millions considered as refugees.

          • Bill Pilgrim March 20, 2022

            Fair enough.
            But consider this: Fallujah.
            When we invaded & occupied Irag we reduced that city to rubble because of the resistance to our invasion. The Russians have so far not bombed ANY city in Ukraine back to the stone age. But that doesn’t matter, does it.
            It’s 2022 and the “United States of Amnesia” ( Gore Vidal ) erases its past war crimes in a self-delusional propaganda campaign to make the Russians seem like some kind of aberration in geopolitical arm-wrestling.
            Meanwhile, the slaughter continues in Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, Palestine, etc., while we cry crocodile tears for the poor white folks in Ukraine – who did nothing while their neo-nazi brigades killed 14 THOUSAND citizens in the Donestk since the US backed coup in 2014.
            I’m reminded of the stupid, clueless trope in the US after the attack of 9/11: “Why do they hate us?”
            The Russians have ONLY been trying for 30 years to warn us that encircling them with adversarial military forces and missile batteries would lead to a confrontation.
            But that doesn’t matter. They have no right to challenge our quest to dominate Eurasia.

        • George Hollister March 20, 2022

          “The Ukrainians are, tragically, pawns in this “grand game,” that goes way back to Brzensenski.”

          People standing up, and willing to fight. and die for their own freedom, and independence would not consider themselves pawns of anyone. In the War Of 1812 was the USA a pawn? That is an. argument that could have been made, but certainly not by us.

          • Lazarus March 20, 2022

            I heard a Retired US General mention if Kiev falls, Putin could call it a day and declare victory. He’ll take everything to Kiev and leave the rest alone, for now…Under the circumstances it makes sense.
            Going further west gets messy with NATO, and the Article Five deal.
            Laz

          • Bill Pilgrim March 20, 2022

            Freedom and Independence?
            That’s a joke. They will be under the thumb of the US & NATO hegemon.
            They will be constrained by western financial rules – IMF, World Bank – with a grasp on their throats.
            Time for some education on the history of how western capitalist institutions suck the life blood from every country they dominate.

            • George Hollister March 20, 2022

              Mr. Pilgrim, you have the last word.

  7. Craig Stehr March 20, 2022

    Meanwhile, in Ukiah California: Finally got out of the bed early afternoon, and walked up to Plowshares for the week end bag lunch. Delicious cheese sandwiches, chips and cookies, a tangerine, and water. Walked back to Building Bridges homeless shelter and laid back down on the bed at 4 p.m. with nothing to do until tomorrow. Have given up entirely! Chanting the Hare Krishna Mahamantram constantly, no devotional service to do, and eagerly looking forward to leaving this world and going back to Godhead.

    Craig Louis Stehr
    Email: craiglouisstehr@gmail.com
    Telephone Messages: (707) 234-3270
    PayPal.me/craiglouisstehr
    Blog: http://craiglstehr.blogspot.com
    Snail Mail: P.O. Box 938, Redwood Valley, CA 95470
    March 20th, ’22

  8. Marshall Newman March 20, 2022

    Ah, spring. When poison oak shows fresh, shiny green.

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