Regatta duo no longer on same track
Published: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 8:12 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 8:12 p.m.
Ty Jones and Spring Maxfield, founders and co-owners of the phenomenally popular Handcar Regatta, are ending their business relationship and moving on to other creative pursuits.
Will either seek to continue the 4-year-old “exposition of mechanical and artistic wonders”? Spring almost certainly will not.
“It has run its course,” she said Wednesday. She loved the regatta as a free-
admission, community art happening that she feels certain will live on through offshoots that will scatter like seeds on the breeze.
Spring said it was always a given that the regatta could use the tracks at Railroad Square/West End only until SMART needs to begin work to prepare for commuter rail service, and she can't see moving it.
“It was magic,” she said. “It's time to let the regatta go because there's a whole world of other things I'd like to experience.”
For his part, Ty said it appears that with SMART preparing to commence construction on the tracks in Santa Rosa, the regatta won't be able to return there.
“Certainly the future of the regatta is in doubt,” he said. He's not yet ready to say if he will or will not try to keep the regatta going, perhaps at a different location or without the element of races on rails.
Like Spring, he says he's ready to take on other challenges. One, “LuBu Nation,” a food event hailing the place Luther Burbank regarded nature's chosen spot, is set for next summer.
So it seems the Handcar Regatta was an act of magic that we were lucky to have for four straight years. If it happens again, in Railroad Square or elsewhere, that will be lucky, too.
THE GRAND OPENING at Sonoma County's Family Justice Center was grand.
Former District Attorney Stephan Passalacqua received props for bringing together public/private partners such as law enforcement, prosecutors, the YWCA and Verity, the rape crisis counseling group, to create a full-service haven for victims of domestic violence, elder abuse and child abuse.
It's a brilliant innovation in the quest to break the cycle of family violence — and already it's busy. Since opening Aug. 22, it has served 100-plus adult victims and 56 children.
STILL, SHE CRACKS UP: Rose Cliver, one of only three people known to have been alive during the great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 and to be breathing still, can't make a lick of sense of what just happened to her.
She turned 109.
“I thought when I hit 100, that was great. The end of the world!” the Santa Rosan said. “Now I'm still here, waiting for the world to end.”
Rose, who remembers being 3½ and watching the fire from Bernal Heights, deadpanned that at 109, “I haven't gone crazy all the way yet — half way.”
She added, “I can't do anything. What good am I?”
Staffers and fellow residents at the home know what good Rose is to them. She keeps them laughing.
Chris Smith is at 521-5211 and chris.smith@pressdemocrat.com.
All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be re-published without permission. Links are encouraged.