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A short review of the less obvious aspects of two decades
of innkeeping.
Originally printed in Steppin' Out Magazine
Steppin'
Out publisher Jeanne Francis asked us if we wanted to
represent the "real" Mendocino for their summer
fall 2003 issue Originally conceived to be their "real
people" issue, the theme metamorphised into "creative
landscapes."
We
agreed to be featured and the following article was published.
Mendocino is truly a special place and we believe ourstory
is not unusual. We are re-publishing it here because the
story is about what has become most important to us.
Nurturing
Energies At Mendocino Stanford Inn
"When
we came here twenty-three years ago we had no idea the
twists and turns our lives would take,"
recounted Jeff Stanford who with his wife and partner,
Joan, are owner-innkeepers of the Stanford Inn by the
Sea in Mendocino. "We had fallen in love with Mendocino
as so many others," Joan added, "but never expected
to live here."
Picture
of Jeff on tractor 1980 and other old shots
The
story of how they came to purchase Big River Lodge, now
the Stanford Inn, is another story, however, their beginning
was auspicious.
The
sellers Art and Katherine Williams, who still live in
the 1850s farmhouse in front of the inn, provided significant
and decisive financial help.
The Stanfords started modestly moving into
a 375 square foot guest room, doing most of the work themselves
from housekeeping to installing fireplaces. In just
two years they had two children and were waking each morning
to serve their guests breakfast
"We
wanted to create something special and along the way the
land began to influence us." Jeff shares stories
of experience with energy. "This is real stuff; not
something I read about or sought out, but something experienced
and then researched."
"Transformation
takes place here physical, emotional and spiritual.
While we were transforming the buildings and the landscaping,
it was as if we had opened up a vein of co-creative
potential. It is a manifesting process," Joan explained.
"We love living things and it seemed natural to solve
landscaping problems with organic gardens." Jeff
and a close friend began digging double dug garden beds,
following the work of John Jeavons. He urged those working
in the gardens to become sensitive to the energies there.
1981
Looking from Lodge
Jeff
is purposefully vague about working with earth energies.
"I am not trying to make this mysterious. It isn't,"
he explains. "What I can tell you is how this 'working'
manifests: When we adjusted the footprints of buildings
we planned to build to save a Bishop pine, two smaller
trees which were in the way of construction just fell
down. There was no storm. It meant for us to go ahead."
However,
Jeff is not an ordinary environmentalist. He had mixed
feelings regarding the creation of the new Big River State
Park in spite of being involved in the effort. "It's
unfortunate that rather than insure healthy, sustainable
logging practices, we are forced to remove land from forestry
altogether to preserve it." He argues that it is
irresponsible to damage a forest's biodiversity and over-log.
"Taking land out of production here puts incredible
pressure on other timber areas."
Over the years, the Stanfords have worked
to develop fulltime jobs rather than the part time jobs
characteristic of a seasonal resort area. Catch A Canoe,
the Inn's canoe and kayak livery operated for only seven
months of the year until Jeff added & Bicycles, too!,
a bike shop, permitting the staff to become year around
employees.
The
creation of their California Certified Organic Farm created
full time jobs and now supplies the Inn's restaurant,
The Ravens, the area's only organic vegetarian/vegan restaurant,
creating more jobs.
"We
get a lot of people who come to work here because we are
vegetarian, organic. They believe this is a Shangri La.
It isn't. It is hard work," Jeff explained when asked
why some people "don't make it." "When
I began experiencing earth energies, I read a variety
of books including Dorothy MacClean's description of working
with angels at Findhorn, Scotland. Our angels, if you
want to call them that, are not etheric, they are hard
workers: 'buff,' if you know what I mean. They're tough
and those who work with them need to be tough, too.
Staff often becomes part of the family and
Jeff and Joan encourage them to develop interests and
aptitudes and to finish school and go on to college. For
years they have worked formally and informally with the
schools. Joan works in the schools addressing issues of
self esteem and peer counseling. The inn provides work
experiences, training in everything from cooking to bike
mechanics. Students have come to work to fulfill requirements
for graduation or simply for money and some have stayed.
One began working as a gardener when he was fifteen. Eventually,
Jeff made him manager of the new & Bicycles, too!
He helped grow the business, became an expert bike mechanic,
and worked in the community to raise money for a skate
park which unfortunately has yet to be constructed.
The
Stanfords look at their operation as a garden or farm.
They understand the energies they experience to be nurturing
and they believe they must reciprocate by nurturing not
only the gardens, but the people with whom they work and
the community. They provide meeting rooms at no charge
for local non profits and public agencies such as the
school district; canoes for local schools' recreational
and educational programs; and their gardens for the local
4-H club where the kids learn propagation, planting, and
composting from the staff.
Some
teachers bring students who have difficulty in traditional
schools to experience how the Stanfords work with nature
with the idea that a return to nature is healthful.
This
is life at the Stanford Inn. |