How to camp in San Francisco

Sonia Erneux Love Tanjane San Francisco 2001

How to camp in San Francisco

Yet another excellent reason to own (and use) a tote bag

This is a beautiful short film I came across via Reddit. Its voiced by Werner Herzog one of my favorite film makers. I’ve become very particular about using reusable organic tote bags, and tonight, I found myself in town without one and had to give life to a new black plastic friend with handles. Must be some sort of cosmic justice.

Enjoy, this fine piece of film making. Then go here and buy a bag that will truly make a difference in each of our lives.

Screen Printing t-shirts and rags for Highlove Company

Gnome & Fairy on a Chopper by Liz Ioseb for Highlove Company

Mark Highlove caught me at the Ojai Farmer’s Market a few weeks ago and for the second time asked me about printing some shirts. I’m used to idle idea banter in Ojai — heck I’ve been known to engage in totally awesome free forum mind storming sessions — so when it actually comes together and develops into a working project, I’m very pleased. I like to get some things done.

I followed up with Mark and what you see here is the result of some not so typical Ojai (slash) Meiners Oaks creative minds at work.

Gnome Fairy Chopper T-Shirt screen printed by Chris Wilson for Highlove Company

Gnome Fairy Chopper Artist Liz Ioseb

Mark proposed printing two designs in small runs, which is my specialty. For the t-shirts he showed me a Gnome and Fairy riding on a chopper drawn by Ojai Artist Liz Ioseb.

Mark will be taking the shirts and about 50 red shop towels printed with his website information and a big 1% design to the Dice Magazine 31st Issue Release Party in Oakland this weekend. Dice is a really fresh, digest sized biker magazine out of the UK that has expressed interest in publishing Marks designs, he tells me.

If you’re interested in getting one of the t-shirts, contact chris@pinkminute.com and I’ll print one for you.

Highlove Company 1% shop towels t-shirts

A stack of 1% Highlove shop towels and Gnome Fairy Chopper T-shirts

 Ojai Images | Thoughtful Gifts of Art | Ojai, CA

Ojai, California

A collection of Diane Steele's Ojai Art products

I was just up at the Stagecoach Station market in Upper Ojai and ran into a woman whose work I’ve admired for some time. Diane Steele’s coffee mugs, tiles and t-shirts can be found at a number of Ojai retailers and at her website.

Diane uses heat press sublimation printing to transfer the work of several local photographers, including Michael McFadden to ceramic tiles and coffee mugs. She sells these products and t-shirts at Rains, Attitude Adjustment, The Oaks Spa and many other places around town.

Diane also tells me she does well with her Alice in Wonderland and Wizard of Oz images that she prints on various items and sells in her Etsy shop Archetype Image.

Rainy Day Window Washing In(telligence) Ojai

I wash windows rain or shine

Those clouds are your friends.

In the past few weeks, as I’ve been out on the streets of Ojai and Upper Ojai canvassing for new window cleaning customers, the most common diversion I’ve come across from prospects is the desire to wait until the rain has stopped to have the window cleaning done.
Now, this is a classic diversion, and most of you who use tactics like this on door-to-door salesman of my ilk, are probably sitting back smugly now looking at the cloudy day through blurry, filthy windows.
You may be patting yourself on the back for holding tight to your duckets, but there’s a couple of things you to remember.
1. Rain doesn’t make windows dirty. Even in a torrential downpour, how much rain water even makes it onto your windows? That’s right, none. The windows are strategically placed under the eaves and thus remain dry even during a heavenly sobfest.
Here’s an article from a respected window washing service from the gray and drizzly Pacific Northwest, that clearly dispels the mythical thinking that hanging with your dirty windows is ever a good idea.

2. In fact, your windows will stay cleaner longer during the rainy season.
Some people realize that rain acts as an air purifier. Rain water acts like a giant negative ion generator that remove the dust, pollen and other airborne debris from the air that is magnetically attracted to the static charge often held by glass windows. When these particulates are conjoined by the army of flying insects attempting to invade or escape your abode, what you’re left with is a foggy gloomy mess. The little known secret is there’s a lot less dust, pollen and insect traffic happening right now than during the sunny days of late spring and summer. Which means that getting your windows washed now equals a big smart savings move. Your windows will stay cleaner weeks longer than if you wait. That equals a smart investment and the added light in your home will raise your seasonally affected spirits and offer new inspiration on your resolve.
Lets face it folks, durning the cold days of winter and the gray days of early spring, having clean windows may be the only way you’re actually going to enjoy the outdoors. From the inside, looking out.
So, do you want to look out at the world through dirty streaked sad windows? Or do you want to truly see those magnificent clouds, those trees bending gracefully in the breeze, and those peaks of sunlight sneaking through the gray?
Getting your windows cleaned now, before the rain is over may be one of the smartest low cost investments you could ever regularly make. Are you brave enough to enjoy windows that can remain cleaner for weeks longer than if you wait until the warmer days of spring and summer? Are you tough enough to handle clean windows right now? And are you savvy enough to know that your window washer’s schedule is slow right now and take advantage of their light calendar to negotiate a better deal on cleaning.
If you are an Ojai resident and mention this article when you call me over for an estimate before winter is officially over – prior to March 20, 2010 — I’ll reward you with a 20 percent intelligence discount.
How’s that for a rainy day special?

Call today 805-208-9254 or email chris(at)pinkminute(dot)com.

The Ojai Lifestyle via Hidden Hamlet

Here’s a post from Hidden Hamlet that I like.

Ojai Pink Moment

Ojai Arcade with Pink Moment

The Ojai Lifestyle
Ojai has been a great weekend getaway for Angelenos and was long thought to be the ideal place for a second home. Recently, however, we are seeing a new trend: professionals who choose to keep their main home in Ojai and who commute to northwest Los Angeles. And, of course, Ojai has citizens who do not commute by car, but walk or bike to their offices without leaving the Ojai Valley at all!

Perhaps, ultimately, Ojai’s charm is found in its diversity: it’s not just all celebrities and executives — there are bohemian artists, laborers, teachers, and all kinds of good folks from all walks of life who seem to comingle in Ojai’s relaxed and easy atmosphere.

But how would you describe Ojai’s lifestyle? How are we different from a typical town? Leave your own responses in the comments section!

Extreme Beach Cruising Ojai Dennison Grade

The Love Story.

A healthy portion of muscle and heartache.

Ledge Ability – Shelf Road Ojai Rescue

This is a piece I wrote for the Pink Minute paper edition in January 2006.

Shelf Road looking East

Shelf Road looking East. Photo by Mario Gonzalez via Facebook

My friend Todd and I are kicking it on Shelf Road. We’re following his two weimaraners and talking about his Pastease company, the subtle energy flow of the trail and lamenting the new pooper scooper invention, DISPOZ-A-SCOOP, Patent # 5280978. Sure it’s convenient, and spares hand-to-poo contact, but empty it doesn’t fit in any of your pockets and if filled and forgotten aside the trail, it reclines boldly as an ironic testimony to novel genious and half-assed responsibility.

When it comes to dog shit disposal, I say, flick it with a stick, stack rocks into a mighty cairn, or dig a shallow grave and give the dog’s last meal a proper funeral. But add a brown plastic bag, wire and colorfully labeled cardboard signage,
then the only thing missing from, ‘Ventura Countywide Stormwater Quality Management Program,’ are the bright and boldly stamped words “PROPERTY OF.” That’s Todd’s idea. He makes the cutest nipple stickers.

It’s distracting, but whatever. Shelf Road is a fine little hike, park at either end and stroll round trip for an hour or so, take in the sunny views of the Ojai Valley, and share pleasant “hellos” with other walkers. It’s no big sweat.

But this day is different. We aren’t half way from the Gridley Road gate when we hear a lone voice reporting from down in the oranges.

“Is someone calling for help?” We listen again, and definitely hear a man’s muffled cry calling from the forest of Valencias below. “Help…… help” the voice calls twice, then is silent. That’s surreal, and unexpected.

Between the trees I can see an old farm tractor, but I see neither body nor movement. Todd shouts back, “Do you need help?” But there is no answer until a few seconds later when we hear the voice again, calling in a hauntingly strong but
stationary manner. Someone needs a lift.

The hillside at this point is quite rough, steep and covered by a thick, scrappy chaparral. We continue on a bit looking for a place where we can barrel down into the grove. The voice keeps calling and I meddle with the what-ifs of the situation.
Just keep walking. Someone else can handle it. I’m afraid. It could be a bear, an OSL attack, or perhaps a phantom. Whatever, I’m going down into that grove and see who or what is calling for assistance.

Todd dials 911 on his cell, and I dial the local popo and immediately get transfered to dispatch. We’re in a race to describe where we are on the trail. That yonder road that leads up to the grove from Grand Avenue is probably Mercer, but
I’m not 100% from this vantage point. Ah, the vistas!

“We’re walking along Shelf Road and someone is calling for help down in an orange grove,” I boast. I see the house where they had that great New Years party that launched us into 2005. Snap back. I’m standing on a little berm at the side of
the trail looking down into a grove, talking to some headset at 800 South Victoria that doesn’t even have a computer screen map of Ojai to help me reference where we are. I want to shake my fist at the sky and cry like DiCaprio.

This is Ojai, a village, a town, a quirky mix of powerful women and lazy boys, a place where lost wallets are returned full of cash, and you never lose your lover, you just lose your turn. And the voice keeps calling, “help… help.” So I start
down the hill which is a slighter slope at this point, with softer grasses and fewer prickly things. The dogs grin and bound into the bush, they are in full adventure mode. They sniff things in this unknown world beyond the trails edge and pretend
to flush phesants out of the thicket. Todd follows, each of us nearly sprinting down the hillside. We’re talking to cops, on important business, oh you know… heros.

I get down to the level, I’m in full rescue mode. Gimme a challenge, I can take it. My adrenals are churning, “Let me call you back,” I say to the dispatcher and hang up. I side step a clump of poison oak like an enemy combatant. No matter,
over the stone wall, through the ancient leafless avocados trees and into the back of the grove. My Skechers can take it. “Help, help,” from off to the left. “Where are you? I’m coming.” Impatience competes with apprehension. I’m dreading blood,
crumpled limbs and rabid squirrels. I press on till I see the tractor. It’s one of those old red tractors, spotted with rust and big rubber tires in the back with opposing tread ridges for mud traction and little ones in the front with parallel tread for good tracking. A little trailer hitched to the back holds a small bunch of orange tree limbs. And there he was, grandpa farmer on his side with his right foot wedged under the big wheel. “What happened?” I huff, realizing that I’m getting some good exercise today. “I got my foot caught under the wheel. It rolled
a little when I got off and it just knocked me down and pinned me,” the old farmer groans.

It’s not everyday that you run down a hill into an orange grove and liberate a farmer from under his implement. But there are few things I find greater pleasure in than sensing the opportunity to serve and jumping on it. Which is precisely the
mission of the Pink Minute: I’m listening, I’m aware, call me, I can help.

This is Ojai’s gift: the typical is the extraordinary. Like anything I can do (see Seven Things – other side) I can handle  this. Todd is right behind me and he’s in good shape. He works out at the end of Fox Street. He does 50 pushups a day and he likes to help.

The old man is practically crying “ooooooh, oooooooh,” and struggling to pull his foot free. Todd appears from between the trees, still on speaker phone with 911, “Help me push,” I tell him. The old guy is wailing “ooooooh, ooooooh, almost,
almost, I can’t pull my foot out.”

Ben Mercer Ojai California Citrus Avocado Farmer Shelf Road

Ben Mercer - Ojai's Oldest Farmer

With both of us pushing we’re able to roll the tractor back far enough so he can slip his foot free of his shoe, which remained troublingly trapped and helpless beneath the massive treaded tire. The man struggles to his feet, wiggles his toes, refuses medical attention, announces that he’s 98 and his name is Ben Mercer. He climbs on his tractor, and drives away.

Later that day I ponder the relevance. And I realize other Ojai folk are calling for assistance. And with each Pink Minute I’m here to remind my community, I’m just around the corner, watching for sunset and ready for your call.

New Window Washing Post Cards for Upper Ojai

window cleaning postcard for Upper Ojai by Chris Wilson

I love washing windows in the fine homes of the Ojai Valley.

Its perfect window washing weather and so I got busy in Photoshop this afternoon and designed some new, simple marketing materials to share around the Upper Ojai neighborhoods. In my life, I prefer to keep things simple. I prefer to do things by hand. And I like to keep things fresh. That’s one reason I enjoy window cleaning for both residential and commercial customers in the Ojai Valley. And that’s why I like to create, print and cut my own business cards and postcards. This particular card is focused on my immediate neighbors in Upper Ojai which extends for several miles along California Highway 150 from Dennison Park Camping Area on the Western side of the Upper Ojai Valley to Koenigstein Road on the Eastern side of the valley.

Door to door canvasing for window cleaning jobs is probably the most effective way I’ve found for generating new customers. I love meeting new people. And I really do enjoy bringing Ojai’s beautiful sunlight into the homes of my Upper Ojai neighbors.

Text on the card, if you’re having trouble viewing it, reads: “Window Washing in Upper Ojai by Chris Wilson (805) 208-9254 www.pinkminute.com”

Call me on my cell (805) 208-9254 or email me chris@pinkminute.com if you would like a free estimate for one of the finest window cleaning experiences you’re likely to ever enjoy. You can also read testimonials from a collection of my clients here.

Thanks and have a wonderful day. I look forward to hearing from you and to serving your needs.

Chris Wilson, Upper Ojai.

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