The travel section in the Sacramento Bee had an article on Point Arena. Thought it was pretty good including the part on our quirkiness. here it is...
By
Sam McManis The Sacramento Bee
Last modified:
2014-02-01T05:43:49Z
Published: Sunday, Feb. 2, 2014 - 12:00 am
POINT ARENA -- As you crane your neck to take in
the 145 iron stairs – 115 feet of climbing in all – that await, you can’t help
but grumble that, dang it, the view from the top of the Point Arena Lighthouse
had better be stunning for all this vertical effort you’ll be undertaking.
Once you alight atop this dizzying height, you catch your breath and a first
glimpse. You are not disappointed.
Most people will turn westward and peer at the unfathomable blue, bordered
by jagged cliffs eroded into statuesque pinnacles and arches that send spouts
of mist skyward. On this day, whales were breaching in the distance and, closer
to shore,
sea lions barking for
attention.
Look inland, though, and you’ll see something equally as amazing, if more
subtle in its presentation.
Open space abounds. Vasts swaths of tawny bluffs and coastal plains,
punctuated by stands of wind-swept cypress trees, stretch northward beyond the
mouth of the Garcia River and up to Manchester State Beach and south beyond
Point Arena proper. Less visible, but no less important, are native mountain
beavers, red-legged frogs and Behren’s silver-spotted butterflies that call the
grassland home.
To think that this pristine patch of shoreline, mostly unchanged since the
Pomo Indians first caught sight of it, once was slated to be the site of a
nuclear power plant and, in more recent years, a small
housing development.
Yet, this is Point Arena, a quirky, charming and contentious liberal small
town in southern
Mendocino County
that doesn’t agree on much but does value preservation above all else.
Over the decades, the citizenry has saved and rehabilitated the lighthouse
after the
Coast Guard
decommissioned it, renovated and reopened a classic art-deco movie theater on
Main Street, rebuilt its fishing pier down by the cove and turned the wharf
master’s former quarters into a boutique hotel and the erstwhile
Coast Guard house into a charming
bed-and-breakfast, even turned an aging general store into a library. Heck,
there’s even a former corporate executive here who has opened an African wild
animal preserve in town (see “Discoveries” column).
But the most sustained civic effort, aided by governmental programs and
nonprofits, has been the preservation of the Stornetta Public Lands, acquired
from the dairy-farming family in 2005, and, farther south, the acquisition last
summer by the Trust for Public Land of 409 acres belonging to the Cypress Abbey
Co. That open land, which abuts Point Arena’s City Hall to the east, had been
tabbed for a PG&E nuclear plant in 1973, before public opposition scuttled
the plan. Small
housing development
proposals had been floated over the years, fought by locals.
To ensure the open space stays open, Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, has
been pushing a bill that would expand the California Coastal National Monument
– at present incorporating only offshore areas on the northern coast – to cover
most of the public lands bordering Point Arena. Three months ago, Secretary of
the Interior Sally Jewell hiked the area, climbed the lighthouse steps and held
a town meeting about giving the land monument status. Executive and
congressional action are pending.
“We have an opportunity here to not only support the community’s vision to
conserve the land,” Jewell said, “but also to create a world-class destination
for outdoor recreation and the study of coastal resources and to strengthen the
local economies.”
Such sentiments went over well among townsfolk. But not even the town’s most
ardent cheerleaders truly believe Point Arena will achieve “world-class” travel
status. They are fine with that and, really, would just like a little more
tourist business to boost the economy still recovering from the recession,
maybe siphon off a few travelers from Mendocino, the bucolic enclave 35 miles
north.
“Our town isn’t gorgeous like Mendo,” said Lauren Sinnott, a local artist
and former two-term mayor, “but it’s
interesting.”
Indeed, Point Arena, with 440 residents, is one of California’s smallest
incorporated cities. Over the years, it’s passed quirky resolutions such as the
2000 declaration that “corporations are not persons.” When you say it leans to
the left, that’s not just because of the shifting ground from the nearby
San Andreas fault. In 2008, when the
city celebrated its centennial, Sinnott produced a satiric town seal declaring:
“Point Arena. Home of Opinions. Where Humility Goes to Die.”
But it’s just this type of passion that has kept Point Arena vibrant,
solvent and interesting, said Mia Gallagher, owner of the
Coast Guard House Historic Inn with
husband Kevin.
“The really great thing about Point Arena is that the people make things
happen,” Gallagher said. “We put together our own theater, our own library,
renovated entirely by our own hands. We put together a bank building and got
ourselves a
credit union.
We built a clinic, a dental building. When the lighthouse needed to be
renovated, that was mostly – there was some matching funds from the feds – done
locally by fundraising. It’s a self-sufficient community made up of a lot of
different types of people.”
A distinct hippie patina, with shades of redneck rural daubed in, colors
Point Arena. Take Lena Bullamore, owner for the boutique Everything Under the
Sun for 25 years. In lieu of a sign showing store hours, Bullamore wrote a note
taped to the window: “This is the true story about Lena and the hours she
keeps. ... She loves this shop and all it stands for and the wonderful and
interesting people who come here. However, she ... has such a hard time leaving
(home) to come here. ... She does not want to be a hippie flake but can’t seem
to stop having SO MUCH FUN at home.”
In other words, uh, the store was closed. Time is malleable here. At Uneda
Eat, a locavore restaurant/market, hours are listed as “5ish to 8ish.”
Sinnott is another interesting type you’ll find along Main Street, amid the
bars, small
grocery stores
and a quirky bakery named Franny’s Cup and Saucer. A mixed-media artist whose
home/gallery is called Art Goddess and is adorned by winged figures sculpted
onto the roof and facade, Sinnott has an MFA from
Rice University and, in the late
’90s, bought an old school bus and drove from Texas to California to remake her
life, landing in Point Arena because “friends told me it was liberal.”
She draws and paints – she has an ornate series of Renaissance-period “face
card” watercolors of “The Queen of Diamonds Paying Bills” and “The Queen of
Clubs Drinking Coffee and Reading the
New Yorker.” She also produces a
series of purses called Velvet Vulva, shaped like the female genitalia, which
the local paper reported offended some residents.
Her flamboyance, people here says, is one reason she and three other council
members were recalled in a special election in 2011. (Another reason is that
the council fired a city clerk.) To show just how small a town it is, “One of
my recallers is my neighbor. He also was my son’s teacher. It’s crazy. We’re
all so connected. And, like most littler places, people feel they have to band
together for the important things. But that doesn’t mean the town is not
without its complexities.”
Small-town squabbling aside, nowhere is the community spirit of Point Arena
exemplified more than at the lighthouse, arguably the town’s main attraction.
“The
Coast Guard shut down the
operation in 1977, brought up the automatic light and dismissed all the
maintenance people and, in ’82, they said they were going to shut the lighthouse
down altogether,” said Thayer Walker, lighthouse docent. “The local folks
organized. It took a long time, but they saved the lighthouse. This is a small
town. Go 30 miles north or 30 miles south, and there’s still only a total of
4,000 people. So if you’re trying to raise millions of dollars, you don’t have
a lot of resources. But they got it done by 2008. They even renovated the
lighthouse keeper’s houses. They used to leak.”
Not anymore. Those cottages a few feet from the lighthouse now are upscale
rental condos, ranging from $185 to $320 a night. Thayer says, back in the day,
keepers and their families living at the lighthouse didn’t have the modern
amenities – no satellite TV, no Wi-Fi. But you can still get a feel for what
life might have been like. Once evening falls, the area turns pitch black, so
black it’s almost a nullity. That only heightens the reverberative sounds of
waves crashing into the cliffs. Come sunrise, you awake to whitecaps breaking
along the exposed coast where the Garcia River meets the ocean.
The scene evokes a feeling of impermanence. Every year, Walker said, erosion
takes away 6 to 8 inches from the bluffs. He showed a photo of the lighthouse
area in 1880 and one today, and the loss of
land mass is striking. The lighthouse
itself, Walker said, may become history, since “the Coast Guard has been making
sounds about shutting down all lighthouses, not even using the (automated
lights). This is a historic anachronism. You don’t need lighthouses.
Everybody’s got GPS to navigate by.”
Walker, perhaps sensing that his tour group felt a little deflated,
backpedaled.
“Oh,
this will still be here,” he added, meaning the lighthouse
itself. “It just may not be operating.”
Of course, Mother Nature might have the last word. For all the preservation
efforts townsfolk have made, for all the plans for growth, Point Arena is right
on the San Andreas fault. In 1906, when the Great San Francisco Quake hit, the
land mass here moved 16 feet in fewer than 15 seconds. Walker said the area
hasn’t felt a significant jolt since then. It’s due.
“Nothing was left standing – except the lighthouse, the one thing you’d
expect to tumble over, right?” Walker said. “There were a lot of cracks, and
(in 1908) as they started tearing it down to build a reinforced lighthouse,
they removed bolts from the staircase – the same staircase you’ll be walking
down – until someone finally figured out it was the staircase that was flexible
enough and strong enough to absorb the shock. So the chief engineer said, ‘Why
should we built a new staircase? It survived an 8.3 quake. We’re using that
sucker again.’ ”
They certainly know their preservation here.