Small towns began losing their swagger about a century ago.
Once easy travel and communications revealed their society and traditions to be not the center of the universe -- indeed, made it all too obvious that they appeared pathetic, laughable and parochial to so-called sophisticates in the large cities -- a crisis of confidence, over several decades, destroyed the unique character and enthusiasm of most small towns.
The "Lake Wobegons" of the nation either transformed themselves into bedroom satellites of large cities, or dwindled in importance economically while their aging residents watched their children leave, one by one, after high school graduation.
But please. Bear with me. I promise I'm depressing you for a reason. I'm happy to report that -- despite this conventional sociological description -- some small towns still flourish, and some are even reviving.
I've just returned from our family's annual gathering in Sonoma, where we helped celebrate the 110th annual Valley of the Moon Vintage Festival. As the name suggests, the festival marks the harvest of the year's grape crop, a critical event in the life of California's wine country. And the festival celebrates not only another year's bounty of the fruit of the vine, but also Sonoma's rich history dating back to Spanish times.
The city dates its origin from the founding of Mission San Francisco Solano -- the northernmost of the chain of Franciscan missions, starting with San Diego in the south -- in 1823. Even today, the center of town remains the original Spanish plaza, a large park surrounded by the restored Mission, the Spanish Presidio, and the house of General Vallejo -- not to mention a sizable number of cafés, bars, and souvenir, antique and gift shops. Sonoma also proudly claims to be the spot where the Bear Flag of the California Republic was first hoisted in revolt against Spanish rule.
But for me, more than the stomping of the grapes and the reveling in history, Sonoma is interesting as a small town that has kept its swagger. The wine tasting attracts not primarily wine snobs from San Francisco -- although they certainly do come -- but local citizens who know their wine and whose lives -- directly or indirectly -- depend on its excellence. This is a town where many local kids can describe the difference between a cabernet and a merlot, and are able to taste the difference, long before they can legally consume them.
The plaza is the site of what is, in effect, a lively town fair. Side by side with tasting booths run by local wineries, local organizations still unashamedly sell corn dogs and beer and cotton candy, local restaurants offer samples of local cooking, and the Boy Scouts give you the chance to win a locally produced salami by pelting one from a distance with a well-pitched potato.
Men and women entertain you by stomping grapes in their purple-stained bare feet.
The Sunday parade marches around the periphery of the plaza -- kids hidden beneath masses of purple or green balloons and thus disguised as bunches of grapes, local auto dealers circling in decorated new cars, the Wells Fargo stagecoach filled with kids and pulled by a fine team of horses, children dressed in Spanish colonial costume throwing cheap candy at other kids scrambling for goodies along the parade route, the Sonoma Valley High School marching band in full regalia (tiny ninth graders with tubas and bass horns marching alongside senior linebackers playing flutes) and followed by a farm tractor proudly blowing a diesel horn that drowns out the brave efforts of the band.
The entire multi-day festival is a wonderful chaos of events and crowds, and an anachronistic display of small-town self-confidence. Aside from the tourists, everyone knows each other and each other's kids. They shop at each other's shops, and eat and drink at each other's bars and eateries. In all the years I've attended, I've never seen any doubt expressed by a soul that -- for this weekend, at least -- there is no place on earth better deserving of everyone's presence. Not a hint that you could have a better time living it up in San Francisco, or watching a show on TV. For one weekend, Sonoma was the center of their universe.
Sonoma is a small town, but not a typical small town. But even so, it serves as a reminder of the high spirits, good nature, enthusiasm and pride that citizens of small towns across America once shared in abundance.
Monday, October 1, 2007
A grape time was had by all
Posted by Rainier96 at 5:08 PM
Labels: small towns, sonoma, vintage festival
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7 comments:
Once again, wine shows its ability to work wonders. That reminds me of the local Winefest last month. For a whole day, the whole town was empty. It was a Saturday, and I had to ride a bus to go somewhere, and I was the only passenger...on a bus that's usually packed. I guess, for that day, Grand Junction remembered that it's really a small town at heart.
That's very cool. I had no idea that Colorado was a significant wine growing state, or that Grand Junction was one of its centers. I checked it out (on Yahoo, not Google, sorry!), and found lots of entries, including this Colorado map, showing the locations of a large number of wineries that participate in your Winefest. Looks like the Colorado River valley ("Grand Valley") upstream from GJ is a serious winegrowing region.
Gosh, maybe you guys aren't as out of it as I had assumed. :-)
If you were used to looking at maps of Colorado, that one would make you laugh. The western slope is stretched to ridiculous proportions (Palisade, shown on that map to be halfway between here and Glenwood Springs, is about 10-15 miles away, whereas Glenwood Springs is at least a hundred). I guess that just shows how many wineries there are here.
Or, as they so aptly put it on the right-hand side of the map: "Map is not to scale."
(and on the bottom of the page: "Palisade is 237 miles west of Denver on I-70; 249 miles east of Salt Lake City, just 10 miles east of Grand Junction, Colorado.")
It's like those N.Y. maps of the U.S. Most of the map is Manhattan, then the Hudson River way over on the left, with the New Jersey shore, then a bit of desert before you reach the Pacific. LOL. Not much room for Grand Junction.
A ha. I found a copy. It was a cover cartoon on the New Yorker.
Hi Donny, this is Toni here. I just read your blog with Denny and I have to say, you missed the most important part of the parade. Brian and I were riding on the "chicken truck" with members of a service club here in Sonoma. I was the one waving and clutching a red cup of Coors Light between my knees. As far as I'm concerned, that float was the only one that mattered.
Hiya Toni. Well, some experiences are so marvelous and fantastic that it would only cheapen them to try to describe them in words. Your entry in the parade, and your breathtaking display of Coorsmanship, fell into that category. Bravo!
I didn't mention dinner at Maya for more or less the same reason.
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