The Paucity of Gaslamp Grass Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter with Dr. Andy

This week’s newsletter is dedicated to the memory of Lindsay Jaclyn Nedwin Gonzales, a 32-year old onetime Davisite who filled her home, the patient rooms of hospitals where she worked, and sometimes even our own Irish Pub with laughter and kindness. May her memory be a blessing to all who knew her and loved her. To find out more about Lindsay, and the good work being done and planned in her name, see her recent obituary in the Davis Enterprise.

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

Dog-owners who stay in hotels in the Gaslamp District of San Diego need a smartphone app to help them find grass, or even just dirt, where they can walk their dogs. 

Not every city has greenbelts and numerous public parks, as Davis does. Places like San Diego make me feel grateful both to have a chance to visit and to live where I do. When I asked Kate if she would like to retire on Coronado Island, home to some of our favorite beaches, she reminded me that we have too many friends in Davis to live anywhere else. There go my plans to move to Costa Rica or Thailand when I turn 67!

Speaking of time off, I am supposed to be vacationing, rather than writing newsletters, so I will repurpose here for your reading pleasure an essay about this part of California that I published on my blog on August 14, 2017, and that the Sacramento Bee published, with a color photo by Kate, about ten days later (If you want to look it up behind the SacBee paywall, search for “article169238542”). Enjoy.

As Jukie and I walked south along Coronado Beach, we could see Tijuana, Mexico on the horizon. Called the best beach in the world in 2012, Coronado Beach is home to the famous Hotel del Coronado, filming location for arguably the best film comedy, Some Like It Hot.

During our walk, Jukie and I passed a family of Frenchmen – a dad and three sons – who had made soccer goal markers out of the abundant seaweed. One of them had overshot the goal, sending the ball ten meters into the Pacific, which promptly gave it back. I could almost decipher some of their French exclamations. Perhaps ten years older than me and with a look of concentration, the father had better soccer skills but less gusto than his sons. He had opportunities to hone his skills when each new son came of age, perhaps preparing for this afternoon on Coronado Beach.

Soon we encountered three middle-aged Americans – a man and two women – digging ever deeper with juice pitchers. They were determined, but not frantic. Soon the man got out his metal detector again, and accepted the advice of the women as to where to place and how to angle the cumbersome machine. “We will just have to dig deeper,” one said. I expected that eventually they would find a metal bolt rather than a diamond ring.

Farther along the beach a Middle-Eastern couple in their 50s were walking with their daughter in her 20’s. Thinking of racial tensions in Charlottesville, I offered a friendly greeting, and they returned it. They might have been locals, or they might have been visiting from 8,000 miles away. I’m about as far from Davis as one can be and still be in California, but I still want people to know that we love and welcome strangers here. The most diverse state in the union, we depend upon the great mix of thinkers, inventors, and workers to power our state, and keep the ongoing dialogue lively and engaging.

The Middle-Eastern family had paused to take pictures, and I could see why. Well after 7 PM last night, we had reached that “magic time” for photographers when the sun’s light is diffused by the rising marine layer. It makes us all feel and look beautiful, especially on film. At that hour Jukie and I could see an engagement photographer, a family photographer, and many amateurs who wanted to take advantage of the incredible light.

Jukie lead the two of us for a mile or more on the wide beach. If it had not been getting darker, we might have walked for a few more miles until we heard the actual sounds of Tijuana nightclubs. We soon received a text from my wife Kate – I’m freezing, she said – so we started walking back, the setting sun filling our faces with light. By the time we returned to Kate, we saw the photographers packing up their equipment and nodding optimistically to their clients, we saw the French dad walking arm and arm towards the del Coronado Hotel, and we saw the middle-aged Americans climbing out of their hole to exchange a high five.

Perhaps, like Kate with her photography of Truman jumping over waves, and like Jukie and me on our walk, these three prospectors had finally found their diamond ring in the sand.

Tonight’s Pub Quiz will be guest-hosted by Schuyler (pronounced SKY-LAR), one of the friendliest and most erudite bartenders at de Vere’s Irish Pub. I’m so glad that Schuyler was one of the staff members to return after the long Covid hiatus of 2020 and 2021. He is ebullient, witty, and wry. He also proposed a handful of Pub Quiz questions that were too difficult even for me to consider including. I told him that he’d have to identify which questions he wrote so that the regulars know just whom to boo.

In addition to topics glancingly raised above, expect also questions on the following: toys, tech companies, fighters, U.S. presidents, unicorns, California cities, hurried meals, dishes unlikely to attract even the most committed carnivores, retirements, reservoirs, strangers, sinister butterflies, lances, spouses, open-world video games, carpenters, explorers, botanical varieties, Napa Valley pests, musical imperatives, fashion, adjacent bodies, accomplished foreigners, null points, departed legends, current events, and Shakespeare. If you would like to receive printed pub quizzes from me every week, please support these efforts on Patreon

Thanks in advance to Quizmaster Schuyler. Please give him your attention and your feedback during (or after) tonight’s performance. I will see you in the pub on the 24th! Poetry Night returns to the Natsoulas Gallery on September 2nd at 7 PM.

Best,

Dr. Andy

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

P.S. Here are three questions from last week’s quiz:

  1. Actors and Actresses. Who played the female lead and love interest in the 1994 film Forrest Gump?  
  1. Science. What five-syllable word do we use for the process of heat production in organisms?  
  1. Books and Authors. Having replaced David Souter on the U.S. Supreme Court, what Princeton and Yale grad authored the 2019 book, Just Ask! Be Different, Be Brave, Be You?  

P.P.S. “The purpose of a vacation is to have the time to rest. But many of us, even when we go on vacation, don’t know how to rest. We may even come back more tired than before we left.” Thich Nhat Hanh, with a warning to all of us

P.P.P.S. The family and I think of you often, Melissa Skorka. We hope you are safe.