New Leaf Community Markets brand manager Lindsay Gizdich said the store is moving from Pacific Avenue in order to have…
City Life
Watsonville Film Festival celebrates 10th anniversary with expanded hybrid program
New Leaf Community Markets brand manager Lindsay Gizdich said the store is moving from Pacific Avenue in order to have…
2022 Watsonville Film Festival honors landmark American film
New Leaf Community Markets brand manager Lindsay Gizdich said the store is moving from Pacific Avenue in order to have…
BOLO Best Bets: Welcome back, chowderheads, and warm up with theater and art
Your place to go for things to do in Santa Cruz County.
Live your beach-house dreams with this nautical Seabright abode
Colorful Santa Cruz Victorian unit with an attractive open floor plan and a large backyard available now. Ready for your…
Hard Core Compost receives grant from CalRecycle to improve site
The worker-owned Hard Core Compost recently received a grant from CalRecycle to expand its operations — as the state mandate for composting goes into effect. Lily Belli takes us on a tour of the bicycle-powered group and how their work is improving the local environment.
Cabrillo poised to unveil ‘Befana’ at the Crocker, plus Mermen news and Avant Garden Party returns
Yes, “Befana” is a Christmas fable, and Omicron delayed its premiere. But, Wallace Baine writes as he looks ahead to what’s coming on the local arts scene, the mini-opera’s spirit extends well beyond the holiday season.
Wallace Baine: John Craigie’s longing for home stands out among the best songs ever written about California
A Santa Cruz cameo in a Super Bowl ad brings columnist Wallace Baine to thinking about one of Ingelwood’s native sons — the venue of this year’s football fest — and that person’s contributions to the musical mystic that is California. John Craigie, who performs locally next month, went to UCSC in the 90s and was transformed by the experience.
BOLO Best Bets: Celebrate Black theater and otherwise get your groove on
Your place to go for things to do in Santa Cruz County.
‘A shift in what will be tolerated’: It’s a Clock Tower standoff between city, Food Not Bombs over permits
Organization leader Keith McHenry says ‘We don’t need to seek permission from a city that refuses to make sure its residents are fed’ while a city spokesperson says the group must ‘operate under the rules and regulations and guidelines that any other organization within the city would be required to do.’

