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Tag: well

  • Venezuela’s oil industry is in ruins. Reviving it won’t be easy

    The pumps that brought prosperity from deep in the Earth’s crust are now mostly rusted relics of a storied past.

    The buildings that housed a prideful labor force are vandalized, colonized by squatters or boarded up.

    The schools, clinics, the manicured golf course — onetime amenities from an industry awash in petrodollars — gone or overgrown with weeds.

    “Our biggest problem is depression and anxiety,” says Manuel Polanco, 74, a former petroleum engineer whose recollections of the good times only highlight a dystopian present. “We barely survive. We have just enough to feed ourselves, to get by.”

    This is the dismal tableau today in Venezuela’s Maracaibo Basin, which, for much of the last century, was one of the globe’s leading sources of petroleum.

    A monument to oil workers stands in a square in Cabimas, a once-thriving oil town in Venezuela.

    (Marcelo Pérez del Carpio/For The Times)

    Since the U.S. attack last month and arrest of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, President Trump has vowed to rebuild the country’s moribund oil sector — while also providing resources and cash for the United States. East of Maracaibo lies the Orinoco Belt, home to the world’s largest proven deposits, estimated at more than 300 billion barrels.

    But a recent swing through the Maracaibo region in northwestern Venezuela dramatized the many obstacles. Greeting visitors is a dire panorama of nonfunctioning wells, battered pipelines and empty storage tanks, among other markers of decline.

    The U.S. plans have generated considerable skepticism in a place not accustomed to good news. But some oil-field veterans envision a return to the glory days.

    “I see myself flourishing again,” said José Celestino García Petro, 66 and a father of eight, who said he never found steady work after his well-servicing firm was expropriated by the government years ago. “Rising from the ashes!”

    deteriorated oil rigs with towers, oil pumpjacks and gas flow stations

    Deteriorated oil rigs and gas flow stations are seen on Lake Maracaibo, near the city of Cabimas.

    At its peak in the 1970s, Venezuela was daily pumping some 3.5 million barrels. A charter member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, the nation exuded affluence and excess — though the wealth was mostly channeled to domestic elites and foreign oil companies, not the impoverished majority.

    But slumping crude prices, government mismanagement and U.S. sanctions have left Venezuela’s industry a hollowed-out shell of its former, grandiose self.

    Last year, Venezuela managed to pump about 1 million barrels a day, less than 1% of global production. Even so, petroleum was still a lifeline for a nation mired in more than a decade of economic, political and social tumult marked by mass emigration, hyperinflation and a near-ubiquitous sense of despair.

    Venezuelan interim president Delcy Rodriguez (R) and US Secretary of Energy Chris Wright (L) hold a joint press conference

    U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, left, and Venezuelan interim President Delcy Rodriguez hold a news conference after their meeting at the Miraflores Presidential Palace in Caracas on Feb. 11.

    (Julio Urribarri / Anadolu via Getty Images)

    U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright visited Venezuela last week, met with the country’s interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, and even toured some oil fields. He boasted of “enormous progress” in reviving a business that is now effectively under U.S. management.

    Dimming the upbeat declarations is a harsh reality: It will likely take at least a decade — and perhaps $200 billion or more — to restore the country’s decrepit hydrocarbon infrastructure, experts say.

    A lot depends on Big Oil, but some executives are wary. At a White House meeting last month, ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods labeled Venezuela “uninvestable.”

    Along the oil-streaked shores of Lake Maracaibo — actually a massive coastal lagoon, fed by both freshwater rivers and the Caribbean — the vestiges of a once-thriving enterprise stand out like totems from a past civilization.

    Dotting the shoreline is a bleak expanse of detritus: timeworn pumps, tottering derricks, wayward cranes and aging pipelines. Gobs of oil mar the coast. Pollution has ravaged once-abundant stocks of fish and crab.

    “I pray to God every day that things will change for the better,” said Joel José León Santo, 53, who on a recent morning was preparing his fishing boat with three colleagues. “But so far we haven’t seen any improvements. Food is more expensive. Tomorrow’s meal depends on today’s catch.”

    1

    A broken oil pipeline stands over Lake Maracaibo

    2

    A module of the Rafael Urdaneta Bridge

    1. Much of Venezuela’s oil industry is in disrepair, like this broken oil pipeline over Lake Maracaibo. 2. The General Rafael Urdaneta Bridge spans an outlet of Lake Maracaibo and links the region with the rest of Venezuela.

    There is no official number, but industry observers estimate that fewer than 2,000 wells are functioning in a region that is home to some 12,000.

    “Everything here is bad, at a standstill,” said Mari Camacho, 45, who, with her family, is among those squatting in a series of abandoned homes in the town of El Güere, flanked by mangroves along the eastern shores of Lake Maracaibo.

    A brick factory that once served oil producers shuttered long ago. Her four sons left for Colombia, part of the country’s historic exodus.

    Her home sits atop a sea of oil, but Camacho says there has been no electricity for six years, since a transformer blew out. No one fixed it. Alarming her and neighbors are rumors that the legal owners of their homes plan to claim their property.

    “I don’t know where I would go,” she said.

    About 10 miles south is the sweltering city of Cabimas, an iconic venue in Venezuela’s petroleum narrative. It is now a ramshackle, seemingly lost-in-time metropolis where residents sit on porches observing the unsteady progress of cars navigating pothole-ridden streets.

    Lake Maracaibo

    People stand near a sign reading “Maracaibo” at a park on the shore of Lake Maracaibo.

    “All the great companies that used to exist were connected to the petroleum industry,” said Hollister Quintero, 32, a Cabimas native whose grandparents worked for foreign oil firms during the industry’s heady days. “Now, there is just desolation.”

    Quintero, who lacked the funds to finish college, struggles as a freelance audiovisual producer. He also cares for his aging parents, whose public pensions amount to the equivalent of $2 a month.

    Most young people leave town, Quintero said, while those who stay find jobs in the informal sector. A common, albeit not very lucrative, option: delivering food orders on bicycles or motorcycles.

    “There just aren’t many opportunities,” he said.

    a man on a motorcycle passes a mural on Venezuelan oil topics

    A mural in Maracaibo celebrates Venezuela’s oil industry.

    For centuries, Lake Maracaibo’s environs were known for natural seepage of oil rising to the surface from sedimentary rock, a phenomenon also seen in sites like Los Angeles’ La Brea Tar Pits. Indigenous people and Spanish settlers utilized the viscous goo for medicinal purposes and waterproofing boats.

    But the dawn of the oil age in the mid-19th and early 20th centuries and the allure of black gold attracted a new crowd: wildcatters and fortune-hunters from the United States and Europe, drawn to a backwater heretofore known for coffee, cacao and cattle.

    It was here in Cabimas where, more than a century ago, a well-named Barroso II jump-started a boom.

    On Dec. 14, 1922, the ground shook in Cabimas, but it wasn’t an earthquake. Barroso II, managed by Royal Dutch Shell, began spitting skyward some 100,000 barrels daily.

    “Suddenly, with a roar, oil erupted from the well in a spout that towered 200 feet above the derrick and fanned out in the air like a titan’s umbrella,” Orlando Méndez, a Venezuelan oil historian, wrote in a 2022 article for the American Assn. of Petroleum Geologists, marking the blowout’s centennial.

    “The villagers poured out of their houses,” Méndez wrote. “Oil sprayed them in a torrent of black raindrops. … Only the bravest walked hesitantly toward the well. They held out their hands and the dark, sticky fluid splattered [on] their palms. ‘¡Petróleo!’ they all shouted.”

    The gusher didn’t relent for nine days.

    The runaway well ushered in a bonanza. Little attention was paid to the environmental catastrophe for Lake Maracaibo, destination of much of the escaping crude.

    a refinery on the shore of a lake

    The Petróleos de Venezuela Bajo Grande Refinery on the shore of Lake Maracaibo.

    Explorers scouring the lakeside soon discovered other, even more productive fields. By the end of the 1920s, Venezuela had become the world’s largest oil exporter.

    “Maracaibo was alive with eager strangers as every boat that landed there disgorged an army of oil workers,” Méndez wrote.

    In subsequent decades, Venezuela rode a boom-and-bust cycle, but by the late-1990s returned to producing near-record levels of 3 million barrels a day.

    With revenues soaring, the late President Hugo Chávez, a left-wing populist, lavished cash on Venezuelan masses long excluded from the petroleum windfall. An opposition-backed general strike in 2002-03 prompted Chávez to fire almost 20,000 employees of the state oil firm.

    Years later, Chávez nationalized dozens of oil companies, including some U.S. firms. The expropriations, along with the firings, consolidated state control of the oil sector and, experts say, drained the country of expertise and investment, inflicting lasting damage.

    Chávez died in 2013. International oil prices soon cratered — bad news for his chosen successor, Maduro. U.S. sanctions enacted during Trump’s first term exacerbated the crisis. Most fired oil workers never got their jobs back.

    “We were stigmatized, our benefits were taken away, and we were denied the opportunity to work in Venezuela,” said Polanco, the petroleum engineer.

    an Anti-United States mural in Spanish

    An anti-U.S. mural in Maracaibo declares, “Venezuela is not a menace, Venezuela is hope.”

    After his dismissal, Polanco said he found employment in Colombia, Ecuador and Mexico, but later returned to Cabimas. He has one son in the United States, another in Mexico.

    He and other former oil workers expressed guarded optimism for Trump’s ambitious revival blueprint.

    “I would love to return to the oil industry and have it be the same as it was 22 years ago,” said Michelle Bello, 51, a father of five who said he and four siblings were forced out from the state oil company during the purge. “Take politics out of it.”

    Quintero, the young entrepreneur, also welcomes the notion that his hometown may return to its renowned era of affluence. But he is skeptical.

    “Of course I hope that Cabimas could be reborn anew as a petroleum center,” said Quintero. “This is a place with a lot of history and culture. But the sad fact is this: We are now a ghost town.”

    Special correspondent Mogollón reported from Cabimas and Times staff writer McDonnell from Mexico City.

    Mery Mogollón, Patrick J. McDonnell

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  • Arizona draws a line on groundwater use after letting Saudi-owned company pump freely for years

    For years, the water table has been dropping beneath thousands of acres of desert farmland in western Arizona, where a Saudi-owned dairy company has been allowed to pump unlimited amounts of groundwater to grow hay for its cows.

    But the company and other landowners in the area will now face limits under a decision by state officials to impose regulation.

    Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs said Monday that her administration is acting to “crack down on the out-of-state special interests that are pumping our state dry while Arizona families and farmers suffer.”

    Fondomonte, part of the Saudi dairy giant Almarai, is by far the largest water user in the area, using dozens of wells to to irrigate alfalfa that it ships overseas to the Middle East.

    After conducting a review, the state Department of Water Resources designated the Ranegras Plain area, located 100 miles west of Phoenix, as a new “active management area” to preserve the groundwater.

    This isn’t the first time the Democratic governor and her administration have used this approach to curb excessive pumping in a rural areas. In January 2025, her administration similarly established a new regulated area to limit agricultural pumping around the city of Willcox in southeastern Arizona.

    Hobbs pointed out that some residents’ wells have gone dry as water levels have plummeted in the Ranegras Plain, and that the land has been sinking as the aquifer is depleted.

    “Unlike politicians of the past, I refuse to bury my head in the sand. I refuse to ignore the problems we face,” Hobbs said Monday in her state of the state address. “We can no longer sit idly by while our rural communities go without help. They deserve solutions and security, not another decade of inaction and uncertainty.”

    The state’s action will prohibit landowners from irrigating any additional farmland in this part of La Paz County and require those with high-capacity wells to start reporting how much water they use. It also will bring other changes, forming a local advisory council and requiring a plan to reduce water use.

    State officials reached the decision after receiving more than 400 comments from the public on the proposal, the vast majority in support. Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, issued the decision, saying the future of residents and local businesses “depends upon protecting the finite groundwater resources.”

    According to state data, water levels in wells in parts of the area have dropped more than 200 feet over the last 40 years, and pumping has increased over the last decade.

    Some residents who spoke at a hearing last month said it’s wrong that Fondomonte gets to use the water to grow hay and export it across the world. Others said they don’t see any problem with having a foreign company as their neighbor but believe farms must switch to less water-intensive crops.

    Following the state’s announcement, Fondomonte said in a written statement that it is “committed to progressive, efficient agricultural practices,” supports the farming community, and “has invested significantly to bring the latest technology to conserve water” on its farms. The company also said it would comply with state and local regulations.

    The company currently faces a lawsuit filed by Arizona Atty. Gen. Kris Mayes alleging that its excessive pumping violates the law by causing declines in groundwater, land subsidence and worsening water quality. That lawsuit is set to continue while the state also imposes its new regulatory limits.

    Holly Irwin, a La Paz County supervisor who for years has pushed to protect the area’s water, said she’s pleased the state finally acted “to stop the bleeding that threatens the vitality of our community.”

    “It’s a big win,” said Irwin, a Republican. “It’s going to prevent other megafarms from being able to move into the area and set up the same type of operation that Fondamonte has going on right now. And it’ll prevent them from expanding.”

    Fondomonte started its Arizona farming operation in 2014. Saudi Arabia has banned the domestic farming of alfalfa and other forage crops because the country’s groundwater has been depleted. As a result, Saudi companies have been buying farmland overseas.

    A lawyer for the company has said it owns 3,600 acres in this part of Arizona. The company also rents 3,088 acres of farmland and 3,163 acres of grazing land in the state.

    In addition, it owns 3,375 acres of California farmland near Blythe, where it uses Colorado River water to irrigate alfalfa fields.

    Efforts to address the depletion of groundwater present complex challenges for communities and government agencies in Arizona, California and other Western states, where climate change is exacerbating strains on water supplies.

    Arizona’s current groundwater law, adopted in 1980, limits pumping in Phoenix, Tucson and other urban areas. But those rules do not apply to about 80% of the state, which has allowed large farming companies and investors to drill wells and pump as much as they want.

    Since Hobbs took office in 2023, she has supported efforts to address overpumping. In one step intended to rein in water use, she terminated Fondomonte’s leases of 3,520 acres of state-owned farmland in Butler Valley in western Arizona. That decision followed an Arizona Republic investigation that revealed the state had given Fondomonte discounted, below-market lease rates.

    When she ended those leases, Hobbs said Fondomonte “was recklessly pumping our groundwater to boost their corporate profits.”

    Ian James

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  • Where a Saudi company pumps desert groundwater, Arizona considers imposing limits

    Lush green fields of alfalfa spread across thousands of acres in a desert valley in western Arizona, where a dairy company from Saudi Arabia grows the thirsty crop by pulling up groundwater from dozens of wells.

    The company, Fondomonte, is the largest water user in the Ranegras Plain groundwater basin, shipping hay overseas to feed its cows in the Middle East. Like other landowners in the area, it has been allowed to pump unlimited amounts from the aquifer, even as water levels have declined.

    That soon could change, as Arizona officials are considering a plan to start regulating groundwater pumping in the rural area 100 miles west of Phoenix.

    Misha Melehes, who lives near the rural town of Bouse, Ariz., speaks during a hearing held by the Arizona Department of Water Resources at an RV park in the community of Brenda.

    At a meeting in mid-December, more than 150 residents of La Paz County sat listening in folding chairs as state officials underlined the severity of the declines in groundwater levels by showing graphs with lines sloping steeply downward.

    “This is where the heaviest pumping is. This is where we’re seeing the most decline,” said Ryan Mitchell, chief hydrologist for the Arizona Department of Water Resources, as he showed charts of the plummeting aquifer levels.

    The data from wells told the story: In one, water levels dropped a staggering 242 feet since the early 1980s. Another declined 136 feet.

    Structures storing alfalfa at Fondomonte's farm in Vicksburg, Ariz.

    Structures storing alfalfa at Fondomonte’s farm in Vicksburg, Ariz.

    Mitchell said current pumping in the Ranegras basin isn’t sustainable, and that in places it’s causing the land surface to sink as much as 2 inches per year.

    “That is a trend that is alarming,” he said. “The water budget for the basin is out of balance, significantly out of balance.”

    As he read the numbers, murmurs arose in the crowded hall.

    In recent years some residents’ household wells have gone dry, forcing them to scramble for solutions.

    The problem of declining groundwater is widespread in many rural areas of Arizona. Gov. Katie Hobbs has said Arizona needs to address unrestricted overpumping by “out-of-state corporations. ” She also said the declines in the Ranegras basin are especially severe, with water being depleted nearly 10 times faster than it is naturally replenished in the desert.

    The Arizona Department of Water Resources proposed a new “active management area” to preserve groundwater in this part of La Paz County, which would prohibit the irrigation of additional farmland in the area and require landowners with high-capacity wells to start measuring and reporting how much water they use. It also would bring other measures, including forming a local advisory council and developing a plan to reduce water use.

    Some residents say this kind of regulation is overdue.

    “What it is now is a free-for-all,” said Denise Beasley, a resident of the town of Bouse. “It’s just the Wild West of water.”

    Denise Beasley outside of her home in Bouse, Arizona.

    Denise Beasley stands outside her home in Bouse, Ariz.

    She believes the change will bring much-needed controls and help ensure that her well, and those of others in her community of about 1,100, will be protected.

    Fondomonte, part of the Saudi dairy giant Almarai, started its Arizona farming operation in 2014. It is part of a trend: Saudi companies have been buying farmland overseas because groundwater is being exhausted in Saudi Arabia, and as a result the country banned domestic growing of alfalfa and other forage crops.

    A lawyer for the company said it owns 3,600 acres in Vicksburg. The company also rents 3,088 acres of state farmland and 3,163 acres of state grazing land in the Ranegras basin under leases that expire in 2031.

    Grant Greatorex, who lives just outside Bouse, fills jugs at a water filling station at Bouse RV Park.

    Grant Greatorex fills jugs with purified drinking water at a water filling station at Bouse RV Park in Bouse, Ariz. He says this water tastes better than the water from his well at home.

    The State Land Department is charging the company about $83,000 annually under those leases, said Lynn Cordova, a spokesperson for the agency.

    Some residents who spoke at the hearing think it’s wrong that Fondomonte gets to use the water to grow hay and export it across the world. Others don’t see any problem with having a foreign company as their neighbor but believe the area must switch to less water-intensive crops.

    “This is a desert, and our water is drying up,” said Misha Melehes, who lives near Bouse. “We’re bleeding out. We need a tourniquet while we wait in the emergency room.”

    Others fear that state-imposed rules could lead to downsizing farms and even shipping water away to Arizona’s fast-growing cities.

    Farm vehicles work an alfalfa field owned by the company Fondomonte, in Vicksburg, Ariz.

    An alfalfa field owned by the company Fondomonte, in Vicksburg, Ariz.

    (Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)

    Kelly James, a resident who lives nearby, called the proposal a “water grab.” He urged the state to delay the decision and let locals develop their own plan.

    He and others pointed out that Arizona has a history of cities finding ways to buy water that farms previously depended on, and that under state law three groundwater basins adjacent to Ranegras already are set aside as reserves to support urban growth.

    The state proposal says nothing about transporting water out of the Ranegras basin. In fact doing so would be illegal under the existing law. But that doesn’t quell the misgivings of some people in the area.

    “I have a lot of suspicion,” said Robert Favela, who uses his well to water a stand of bamboo on his 5-acre property in Vicksburg. “Trust me, they’re going to take our water.”

    Larry Housley pumping water into buckets for horses at his farm near Bouse, Ariz.

    Larry Housley pumping water into buckets for horses at his farm near Bouse, Ariz.

    (Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)

    Jennie Housley, who owns a 40-acre horse ranch near Bouse with her husband, Larry, fears the area could lose its agriculture industry and eventually lose its water to growing subdivisions and swimming pools.

    “I believe that to sustain our country, we have to have agriculture in places like La Paz County,” she said.

    Larry Hancock, a farmer who grows crops in neighboring McMullen Valley, wrote a letter to the state making a similar argument. He said growers already are “conserving water because it’s in our best interest,” and imposing regulation would bring economic harm.

    Arizona Department of Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke is scheduled to announce his decision on whether to start regulating groundwater in the area by Jan. 17.

    No representative of Fondomonte spoke at the meeting. The company did not respond to requests for comment.

    Efforts to curb the depletion of groundwater present complex challenges for communities and state agencies throughout much of Arizona, California and other Western states.

    Large farming operations expanded in Arizona in recent years, while global warming has put growing strains on the region’s scarce water. Scientists using satellite data estimated that since 2003 the amount of groundwater depleted in the Colorado River Basin is comparable to the total capacity of Lake Mead, the nation’s largest reservoir.

    Arizona has limited pumping in Phoenix, Tucson and other urban areas since the state adopted a groundwater law in 1980.

    But the law left groundwater entirely unregulated in about 80% of the state, allowing large farming companies and investors to drill wells and pump as much water as they want.

    Since Hobbs took office in 2023, she has supported efforts to curb overpumping where aquifers are in severe decline. In January her administration established a new regulated area in the Willcox groundwater basin in southeastern Arizona, and Hobbs this month appointed five local leaders to serve on an advisory council that will help develop a plan for reducing water use.

    “We feel like it has given us hope for a sustainable future,” said Ed Curry, a farmer who is a member of the Willcox council. “It gave us power.”

    Worker Luis Machado dismantles a pipe after testing a water well in Butler Valley, Arizona.

    Luis Machado dismantles a pipe after testing a water well in Butler Valley, Ariz. Workers recently removed pumps from wells in the area after Arizona ended leases of state-owned farmland to the Saudi company Fondomonte.

    Several months ago Hobbs toured La Paz County and spoke with residents about ways to protect the area’s water. The Democratic governor has taken other steps to rein in water use, terminating Fondomonte’s leases of 3,520 acres of state-owned farmland in Butler Valley in western Arizona. The decision followed an Arizona Republic investigation that revealed the state was charging discounted, below-market rates.

    Now those former hay fields sit dry, with weeds poking through the parched soil. Workers have been removing pumps from the leased land, and power lines that once supplied the wells stand unused in the desert.

    Dried remnants of hay spread across the Butler Valley alfalfa farm, where the company Fondomonte previously leased land.

    An alfalfa farm in Butler Valley sits parched after Arizona ended leases of state-owned farmland that had been granted to the company Fondomonte.

    While Fondomonte continues farming nearby, the company also faces a lawsuit by Arizona Atty. Gen. Kris Mayes alleging that its excessive pumping violates the law by causing declines in groundwater, land subsidence and worsening water quality.

    The lawsuit says the company uses at least 36 wells and accounts for more than 80% of all pumping in the Ranegras basin.

    Fondomonte’s lawyers argued in court documents that the attorney general doesn’t have the authority to regulate groundwater pumping and that the suit is an attempt to have the court “wade into a political question.”

    The Department of Water Resources’ proposal is a way to finally protect water for the area’s residents, said Holly Irwin, a La Paz County supervisor who for years has pushed to address the problem.

    “You’re starting to see more and more wells get depleted. If we don’t try to slow this thing down, where are we going to be in 20 years?” Irwin said.

    Nancy Blevins, who lives near the Fondomonte farm, agrees.

    In 2019 she and her family watched their well run dry. She spent months driving back and forth to a friend’s house, filling up plastic bottles and bringing the water home.

    Nancy Blevins stands next to cracked dirt outside her home in Vicksburg, Arizona.

    Nancy Blevins outside her home in Arizona’s La Paz County.

    Eventually, they bought a new pump and installed it at a lower level in their well, restoring their tap water. She still stores bottled water in a shed next to her mobile home in case the well dries up again.

    “They should start regulating,” Blevins said. “People’s water levels are dropping around here.”

    If something doesn’t change, the water eventually will run out, she said, and “future generations are going to be in trouble.”

    Ian James

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  • Pregnant goat rescued from deep well in Alabama

    Pregnant goat rescued from deep well in Alabama

    It was something firefighters do not see often.A pregnant goat fell down a 20-foot well in Alabama and crews from the Brierfield Volunteer Fire and Rescue responded.According to a social media post from the fire department, rescue crews were able to lower one of their own via a ladder to reach the nanny goat at the bottom of the deep well.The firefighter was able to get the goat secured and hoisted up to safety.Brierfield Fire said all rescue crews and the goat are doing well.”I can’t really express just how proud I am of the guys and gals that are so dedicated to serve our community,” said Fire Chief Spruce McRee.No word whether momma goat has a new herd of kids.

    It was something firefighters do not see often.

    A pregnant goat fell down a 20-foot well in Alabama and crews from the Brierfield Volunteer Fire and Rescue responded.

    According to a social media post from the fire department, rescue crews were able to lower one of their own via a ladder to reach the nanny goat at the bottom of the deep well.

    The firefighter was able to get the goat secured and hoisted up to safety.

    Brierfield Volunteer Fire & Rescue

    Brierfield Fire said all rescue crews and the goat are doing well.

    “I can’t really express just how proud I am of the guys and gals that are so dedicated to serve our community,” said Fire Chief Spruce McRee.

    No word whether momma goat has a new herd of kids.

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  • Just ranting

    Just ranting

    Me just ranting.
    Well my day has been a complete **** show.
    A ******* tourists rat bastard dog just killed 7 of my lambs and tore off the faces of three ewes.
    And now I have to get more ******* paperwork and legal **** to get compensation from the owner for the cost of the dead lambs.
    **** MY LIFE.

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  • Ross Gay Stays Connected With Internet Reprieves and Foraged Apples to Share

    Ross Gay Stays Connected With Internet Reprieves and Foraged Apples to Share

    Partway through Ross Gay’s The Book of (More) Delights—a year’s worth of short essays on quotidian pleasures, reprising a project from 2019—the author finds himself on a coffee shop porch, the first to arrive for a meeting. The latecomer sends an apology text, and Gay taps out a five-word reply. 

    No sweat take your time, though what I really meant was No sweat take your sweet time. Bump into a friend. Take a call. Get down on your hands and knees and smell the hyacinths. I’m grateful you’re late.”

    The anecdote is from the book’s 48th entry, bracketed by the first (“My Birthday, Again”) and 81st (“My Birthday, Again”), and that morning’s delight is the gift of time. Gay, who lives and teaches in Bloomington, Indiana, proves himself to be an ever-buoyant observer, floating from one appreciation to another: a pair of students discussing the slang term Gucci, or lunch at a “not quite but almost disheveled place that had the feeling of someone’s house.” But in this particular essay, he admits that everybody has limits. In a parenthetical aside—as if careful not to dampen the book’s joy—he recounts an interminable spell in a doctor’s waiting room. A Jerry Springer type was on TV; fluorescent lighting cast a sickly pall. “I walked my early ass out of there,” he writes. “Nothing’s always anything, I guess I’m trying to say.”

    ‘The Book of (More) Delights’ by Ross Gay

    Gay is in the car, headed to the airport for the South Dakota Festival of Books, when he picks up my call. His voice sounds much like his writing: bright and warm, not exactly confessional but certainly unguarded. Our conversation, bridging a distance of some 780 miles, summons a line in his three-day wellness diary, below, about a gas station clerk’s “alienation device.” How does Gay, with so apt a description of a smartphone, navigate this technological age for himself? “My alienation device only does phone calls and texts,” he says. That means, in lieu of a palm-size screen, he likely has one of his notebooks in hand. Days begin not with a mindless scroll but with a download of sunshine. I bring up how these routines sound like prescriptions from modern-day wellness experts: morning pages à la Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way, sunlight upon waking as the Huberman Lab would recommend. Gay more or less sidesteps any association with the broader wellness set, as suggested by his diary. A one-word entry—”Nap.”—marks a rest for both his head and his pen. A workout after tagine-making gets no further elaboration. “Exercise, it’s part of my regular life,” he says. “But the fabric and the depth, the deep care, is in the community.”

    That much is clear as the author’s days unfold. Surplus vegetables circulate among neighbors; he cooks welcome-home black beans for his partner, Stephanie; a friend even supplies loaner shorts. (That’s what happens when two men share a similar build—Gay is a lanky 6’4”—and one of them is so prepared with just-in-case clothes that he’s able to lend a pal some essentials.) Wellness in this way is about these “matrices of care,” says Gay, who, in sharing this worldview, brings readers into this larger network. There’s care in the noticing—the book’s near-daily writing practice is a timed 30 minutes in longhand—and in the refining. By the time of publication, the essays are “really, really, really revised,” he says, to “get to the kernel of the question.”

    Where are we going and how do we get there? Such reflections bubble up with a book that touches on gratitude and aging, but in practical terms Gay often finds himself turned around. “My phone doesn’t do that,” he says of his Google Maps–less existence, “so I have this blessed opportunity all the time to be asking for directions.” Recently it was an older lady’s turn to get him sorted. “I was just noticing how beautifully this woman did this,” the author says, recalling how she periodically closed her eyes in concentration. “She was very thoughtful, and then she went over three times to make sure I had it right.”

    Friday, September 8

    5:30 a.m.: I drive home early, in silence, as I have become fond of doing these past few years, from one of the loveliest readings I’ve given in a long time, in the restored Alhambra theater in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, where bell hooks is from. That makes me a lucky person. It is also, for me, lucky to be driving as the sun comes up. Along the way I pull into a gas station, where I make it into the bathroom, just, and needing a little bit of help with directions, I ask the clerk if they sell maps, who at first kind of brusquely says no, but then maybe realizing she was brusque, and probably that I needed help, I don’t know if I made a face or something, but she changes course and pulls up where I am going on her alienation device and, bless her, does her damndest to make sure I can get where I am trying to go, which I do. I share a very nice smile and wave with a crew who, from the stiff looks of it, has been driving a little while. When I get back to Bloomington, though I should probably just take a nap because I’m a bit underslept, I decide to get a coffee, and the barista tells me about her new dog. She beams to me, I should say, and refers to the doggie as my snugglebuddy.

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • D.S. & Durga’s Kavi and David Moltz Tune in With Black Tea and Venice Beach Nature Walks

    D.S. & Durga’s Kavi and David Moltz Tune in With Black Tea and Venice Beach Nature Walks

    “The Pacific itself is so looming and crazy,” says David Moltz, D.S. & Durga’s self-taught perfumer, who grew up in the seaside town of Swampscott, Massachusetts. He first caught a glimpse of that “massive” expanse of water during a band tour through Northern California; years later, a lingering feeling of awe continues southward to Los Angeles. “These long beaches with palm trees and people lifting weights and rollerblading and shit, it’s so different than an East Coast thing,” he adds, speaking for a lot of kids raised on an exported vision of California culture. Pacific Mythic—the latest candle from D.S. & Durga, available only at its new Venice Beach storefront—evokes that outsider’s perspective. Kavi Moltz, the design brain to her husband’s nose, gave the label a jagged cliff and setting sun. As for the fragrance itself, David hewed to nature: “The air is balmy. Flowering plants and palms invite you.”

    The Pacific Mythic candle ($70) is available at the D.S. & Durga shop in LA.

    Courtesy of D.S. & Durga.

    Such was the mood on opening night last month, as party guests spilled onto the sidewalk along Abbot Kinney Boulevard, old friends meeting new. Part of what makes D.S. & Durga so singular in the burgeoning fragrance world is the combination of mom-and-pop charm (the founders indeed have two kids) and an audacious sense of possibility. When scouting locations for their first boutique in 2019, they went straight to Manhattan’s Nolita—a sign of them “wanting to play with the big boys,” says Kavi. A spot in Williamsburg followed, with its fittingly high concentration of shopping bags and tattoos. Venturing all the way west to Abbot Kinney made sense for a third location. “A real LA person loves Venice Beach for what it truly is, in the same way that we all think of the East Village,” says David, alluding to the eccentric characters and young artists that historically have populated both neighborhoods. Jonathan Richman’s 1992 song, “Rooming House on Venice Beach,” comes to mind—something that hasn’t slipped past the music-obsessed founders. “That’s on the playlist for Pacific Mythic!” says David.

    Braided-together references are a through line for D.S. & Durga. If The Doors, 2Pac, and Suicidal Tendencies paint the West Coast soundscape, there’s a similar mix on the visual front, informed by Kavi’s graduate studies at the Southern California Institute of Architecture. (She collaborated with the firm Woods Bagot on the Venice store design.) The ceiling, with its radiating spokes, is an homage to John Lautner’s Elrod House in Palm Springs. Touches of Douglas fir nod to a hillside home by SCI-Arc founding director Ray Kappe, which imprinted in her memory after a visit years back. “Even Gehry’s original house with raw plywood was really inspiring to me,” says Kavi. All the while, David has his nose closer to the ground, avidly sniffing whatever plant matter presents itself. This three-day wellness diary is a testament to staying present, from a phone-free dinner to morning meditation. The perfumer jokingly tosses out a quote from “F. Bueller,” the noted bon vivant who surely would have dangled an ’85 Diesel scent tag from the rearview mirror of a borrowed Ferrari. “‘Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around…,’” David begins, and the rest is filled in by Matthew Broderick’s imagined voice: “…once in a while you could miss it.”

    Thursday, June 8

    4:45 a.m. David: We took the 7:30 p.m.-er out of the apocalyptic orange skies of New York last night. I failed to sleep on the plane but crushed 30 minutes in the taxi and hit the hay at midnight. Now at 4:45 a.m. the demons of jet lag sing out. 

    I begin the day with my mediation practice. I follow Paramahansa Yogananda’s kriya yoga routine, usually for about 45 minutes. Meditation is a rock-solid reminder of our true nature and the nature of our mind. As K. Scarr once said, “Let’s get connected.”

    5 a.m. Kavi: I do some push-ups in the room as we watch the sun rise along the Hollywood Hills. The Sunset Tower is nowhere near the new store we are in town to open, but I insist on staying here because it strikes the perfect chord of iconic and personal, and because I am loyal. My allegiance has paid off, as last night we arrived to a miniature replica of the hotel rendered in chocolate, and an inexplicable note that says, “Welcome back, Dr. Ahuja.” (The room was booked under my married name, Moltz, and, last I checked, I am not a doctor.) I realize in the clarity of the morning that they must be referring to my mother, the real Dr. Ahuja, since I am still under her phone plan, and in the modern equivalent of the White Pages, my maiden name still follows me. 

    6 a.m. David: Outside I hear local birds chirping. I used to have trouble traveling, and one thing that I always found comforting: Wherever you go, there are always birds that call the place home and sing you sweet songs as a balm.

    I search for a couple cups of black tea with milk. Downstairs I find them. Double bagged. Lil milk. We done. 

    7:15 a.m. David: Outside I putter around the shrubbery of the hotel on Sunset. The flora out here is incredible. I find a bush redolent of thuja cedar that is wonderfully fruity. The ambery underbrush of California pine is very special to me. These are the kinds of observations that find their way into our perfumes. 

    8 a.m. Kavi: Press meetings start at our new storefront in Venice. In the car ride there, we talk about playlists for the opening weekend’s events. I suggest that we christen the space that day by playing only music from New York and California, to represent our travel from east to west. We walk into the store—my first time since it has been completed—and I’m truly floored! We worked with our friends at Woods Bagot, and I’m psyched about the blend of styles and references we achieved here in LA. It’s always nerve-wracking seeing something in person for the first time, so I am relieved. I go to buy some juice to power us through the meetings and ask a few people on our team what they want—I’ll choose for them based on their green tolerance if they give me a number from 1 to 10. My tolerance is a 10: all greens, no fruit, dangerous amount of ginger.

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • Well Then I’m Screwed

    Well Then I’m Screwed

    Is there anything more simultaneously terrifying and hot than being balls deep in your woman and she wraps her legs around your back and begs for you to be the father of her children?
    Thank God for birth control because I have not got the strength to pull out of a vixen.

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  • Clint Smith Recalibrates With Head-Clearing Runs and Naptime R&B

    Clint Smith Recalibrates With Head-Clearing Runs and Naptime R&B

    “It Is Halloween Night and You Are Dressed as a Hot Dog” is one of those poems in Above Ground, Clint Smith’s luminous new collection, that plays like a home movie. We know the scene, or some equally winsome version of it, so we are primed for this glimpse into one father’s experience. The first lines pick up where the title leaves off: 

    Why we have chosen to bundle you into a costume
    of cured meat I do not know. But your mother 
    is dressed as a pickle and I am dressed as a bottle
    of ketchup and together we make a family of ballpark
    delicacies.

    The twisted humor of parenthood is on display, as when a stuffed bear momentarily appears to eat the “human-hot-dog-baby / (which sounds unsettling but is actually adorable),” Smith writes. But what gives this spread in the book its disquieting shimmer is the ballpark poem on the opposite page: about New Orleans’ Superdome in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, a designated refuge soon to become its own disaster zone.

    Above Ground, by Clint Smith

    “My home was destroyed like so many other people’s, and I finished my senior year of high school in Houston, Texas,” says Smith, speaking from his parked car shortly after school drop-off in Maryland. (He has two children, ages five and four.) “I’m 34 now and it was 17 years ago, so it very cleanly sort of bifurcated my life in ways that are pretty wild.” Some of the book’s poems have been published previously (the Superdome one ran in the New York Times Magazine), but such juxtapositions heighten the emotional charge. “I wanted poems like that to sit alongside one another because that is how we experience the world. It’s not neatly compartmentalized,” Smith explains. There is no joy today, sadness tomorrow—especially with kids, whose questions about animal arcana (there’s a poem about giraffe horns called “Ossicones”) might coincide with a devastating news alert. In a way, he says, human existence is “just a series of attempts to hold the complexities of life within our bodies, all at the same time.”

    The same goes for Smith’s three-day wellness diary, which glides through distraction and elation and nostalgia. Still, it’s hard not to feel the weight of “It’s All in Your Head,” a poem (written with his wife’s consent) about a grave pregnancy complication dismissively overlooked by a doctor; her self-advocacy proved vital. Can a poem be a call to action, an impetus for keen observation, a time capsule for the next generation? Smith, who often writes during in-between moments (at the barbershop, during naps), is now raising a first-time reader. “It’s just so remarkable to watch the world become legible to him in a different way,” he says of his kindergartener. “It’s almost like somebody who didn’t have the right prescription of glasses, and now, suddenly, everything that was blurry they can see.”

    Thursday, March 9

    5 a.m.: My alarm rings and my hand fumbles on the bedside table in search of the snooze button, which I press, and wonder how close I can cut it before I risk missing my flight this morning. I’m at a hotel near the Newark airport, and I have a 6:30 a.m. flight to Toronto and then Windsor, Ontario, for a story I’m reporting for the Atlantic. I hate early morning flights. I mean truly, I’d rather walk across a bed of hot coals then wake up this early, but it’s the only flight that will get me to my destination with enough time to still make use of the day. I only have 24 hours in Ontario before I have to turn back around and leave. I live in Maryland, but am flying out of Newark because I had a speaking event and book signing at The College of New Jersey last night. I loved spending time with the students and faculty there, they were incredibly thoughtful and asked great questions.

    Onstage with Michael Mitchell at The College of New Jersey.

    Courtesy of Clint Smith. 

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • Tamar Adler Powers Through Tennis Class and a Mountain of Homemade Breadcrumbs

    Tamar Adler Powers Through Tennis Class and a Mountain of Homemade Breadcrumbs

    A martini dirtied with the last of the caper juice. Egg salad sizzled into fried rice. Sauce for noodles born inside a scraped-out nut-butter jar. Sad greens sorted with a “bullish, unwavering practicality.” The encyclopedic array that Tamar Adler presents in The Everlasting Meal Cookbook: Leftovers A–Z, a follow-up to her poetically instructive 2012 book, spells an off-roading adventure in the kitchen. (“Or, or, or” is a common sentence-ender, signaling untold paths forward.) “Listen to your inner voice and follow its lead,” she writes, a mystical voice on a rather prosaic matter: what to do about moldy jam. 

    “I do feel like, to some degree, how you cook and serve people is a little bit how you live,” Adler says by phone, taking the proverbial saying—You are what you eat—a step further. There is bottomless creativity in her thrift; obvious deliciousness too. (The author and Vogue contributor, now based in Hudson, New York, previously ran a restaurant in Georgia, alongside stints with the literary-minded chefs Alice Waters and Gabrielle Hamilton.) Adler, whose husband works in the climate sector around carbon sequestration, acknowledges that rescuing forlorn produce from the trash heap could seem to be a thimble-size effort. But as the New York Times recently pointed out, food waste—more than a third of it coming from households—contributes twice as many greenhouse gas emissions as commercial air travel. In other words, the odds and ends add up. Adler, who is loath to toss out a perfectly mendable sweater and saves vegetable scraps for broth, paraphrases Wendell Berry: “His statement was something like, ‘God is a materialist, God made things.’ It’s not that I am a particularly religious person, but the idea that to love things and treasure things, like material things—it’s not bad. It’s just that you have to actually love and treasure them.” 

    An Everlasting Meal Cookbook: Leftovers A–Z, by Tamar Adler

    Adler isn’t dogmatic, though. She appreciates the wave of self-forgiveness that accompanied the COVID quarantine era. “So many people were publicly saying, ‘Wow, this is hard. I’m not great at this. I thought I was going to run a school out of my house and now we’re just watching movies.’ Or, ‘My family has been living on peanut butter for three days straight and that’s just going to be okay,’” she says. That spirit weaves into The Everlasting Meal Cookbook, as with her instructions for frying: “You’re not doing anything wrong even if it’s a little painful and a little messy. The way you’re doing it is the one you’ll learn from.” Straightforward directives double as gentle counsel. “I’ve had a lot of people tell me that I was writing culinary self-help,” says Adler, who logs a Zoom session with her own therapist in this three-day wellness diary. “I’m practicing what I preach. I’m being as kind to myself as I’m counseling other people to be themselves, which is nice to know.” 

    The contents of Adler’s double-decker freezer reflect her commitment to the cause. Waffles made with leftover sourdough starter sit next to bagels (gifts from city visitors), croutons, and eight different kinds of sliced bread. Mashed potatoes and sofrito and cheese-less pesto fill a series of ice cube–style trays by Anyday, a brand she learned about while recipe-testing. A blend of chopped ginger, scallion, and Chinese celery—prepped on a particularly industrious afternoon—is earmarked for dumplings. “That’s a reassuring drawer,” she says. “In the past I was looking out for me now, and I think that’s a very self-respectful thing.” Such grace for one’s future self is, in a way, another exercise in sustainability. A line from the book comes to mind: “When leeks look old and tired,” Adler writes, “they remain lively within.” 

    Wednesday, March 1

    6:50 a.m.: My son wakes me up every morning. This is the only way I’ll get up. I’m against alarms unless I have a train or plane to catch. (My husband sets his alarm for 6 then spends like 30 minutes in the shower, but he’s quiet and I usually doze through. He’s away for work this week, though.) Our son is officially allowed in at 7. But he comes in at 6:50 every day, tells me it’s 10 to 7, then spends 10 minutes taking my covers, taking my pillows, and talking loudly about Pokemon cards. 

    At 7 I get up. 

    Sometimes I feel like my life is a series of tricks I play with myself. The first of the day is waking up and getting dressed in exercise clothes because it’s actually harder to remove exercise clothes than it is to just exercise at some point before the school bus returns at the end of the day. It usually works. I put on exercise clothes.

    I make my son breakfast and lunch—these tasks are usually handed off between me and Pete, but this week it’s me. I sit down with Louis but don’t eat breakfast with him because it’s too early. I drink a mason jar full of half coffee, half whole milk, and maple syrup. I don’t think it’s particularly healthy. But I also don’t think it’s particularly unhealthy. It has what I need for the first few hours of the day—caffeine, fat, and maple syrup.

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • Kate Berlant Stays in Tune With Begged-For Facials and Fleetwood Mac

    Kate Berlant Stays in Tune With Begged-For Facials and Fleetwood Mac

    A microsuede voice pipes in with a familiar prompt: Take this time to settle into your seat. Chatter in the room has quieted, lights dimmed, sitz bones rooted into cushioned chairs. A meditation of a sort has begun, only the collective attention is not directed inward (oceanic breathing, relaxed jaws) but rather onstage. There, the object of the evening’s 90-minute study is the irrepressible Kate Berlant, whose one-woman show Kate gleefully unravels the form, overlaying self-confessional tropes, performance anxiety, and a clown academy’s worth of facial gymnastics. A lip quivers, then slides into an elastic frown; her gaze toggles between hazy seduction and an antic cross-eyed flicker, which summons the usual silent-film-star associations. It’s especially fitting, given that there’s a camera positioned stage right, throwing a real-time, black-and-white projection onto the back wall of New York’s Connelly Theater. This face, looming and pliant and poreless, has not been yoked into submission.

    “There are nights where there are certain expressions I hold for such a long time that my cheeks burn,” Berlant, a Santa Monica native, says from a friend’s loaner apartment on the Lower East Side. (Kate, in an extended run under director Bo Burnham, is up through February 10.) “I just really never want to inject my face as long as I live. The white-knuckle grip on youth—I think I just can’t commit to a life of that.” The 35-year-old makes a good point, with a face that has been put to colorful use in Don’t Worry Darling, the recent A League of Their Own reboot, and, why not, Madonna’s tour announcement video; Berlant’s comedy special, Cinnamon in the Wind, also landed last fall. “I swear to God, I gua sha’d a line off my face,” she says reverently, pledging allegiance to the low-tech Chinese beauty ritual. But for her, lasting interventions would be a kind of “spiritual robbery.” The marks of the past make good material—even if filtered through her brand of self-aware artifice. 

    “I think it’s going to be very exotic to have wrinkles, to age.” It’s a forecast you might expect from someone whose stand-up sets include dubious displays of psychic powers, and who co-hosts the podcast Poog—a wink at Goop—with Jacqueline Novak (she also has a don’t-miss one-woman show). The wellness beat has its perks, as the two make clear at the top of each episode: This is our naked desire for free products. Berlant, notably without an understudy, has leaned in. She talks about the IV vitamin drips that have perked her up (“Maybe it’s placebo, who the hell knows”) and a particularly transcendent massage, gifted by one of her producers. “The massage therapist was just like, ‘You’re holding onto something for dear life in your hips.’ I think she’s right!” Berlant pauses, as if doing a mid-meditation body scan. “Guess what? I didn’t realize this until saying it out loud, but the pain stopped. She actually made it go away.” But the truest gift has been the permission to be herself. “I mean, I’m a hedonist. Last night I had a really fun dinner with a friend at Corner Bar—champagne and truffle pasta—and then today I’m going to try to just not speak and have broth,” she says. “The great thing about this show is that it allows me to feel like I’ve earned the decadence of doing almost nothing all day.”

    Monday, January 16

    9:15 a.m.: Wake up after nine hours’ sleep. When doing the show, sleep is my priority. Nine hours is what I try to hit; eight is like five for me. This week I’m staying at the Ludlow, which is a short walk to the theater. It’s perfect: The rooms are super tiny, but they’re very well appointed, I like to say. When checking into a hotel, I’m always like, “Can I have a high floor, away from the elevator, with a bathtub, please?” But let’s just say, at my tier there are no bathtubs.

    Today I have the day off. I’ve decided to commit to no social media for three days, after a couple months of not looking at all, basically. It’s hard to resist. Probably the best thing I can do for myself, more than anything, is just not be on my phone.

    9:30 a.m.: The first thing I do upon waking is spray my face with any essence. Jacqueline Novak turned me onto this and now I can’t live without an essence. My current one is this Josh Rosebrook Hydrating Accelerator. I also want to shout out Fend because I do that every day. It’s a mist inhalation thing that’s, in theory, supposed to minimize the chance of breathing in viruses.

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • Susan Korn Stays Balanced With 13,000-Step Schleps and Phone-Free Mornings

    Susan Korn Stays Balanced With 13,000-Step Schleps and Phone-Free Mornings

    What qualifies as arm candy in Susan Korn’s book? One day it might be a beaded Susan Alexandra bag decorated with a sunny-side-up egg. Or a tiny, wearable nod to the dirty martini—its size seemingly suited to packing extra olives for the road. There’s a Milton Glaser tribute by way of her I 🖤 NY carryalls. (A taxicab-yellow version hit the stage during the brand’s Comedy Cellar variety show this past September, an off-piste Fashion Week event featuring Cat Cohen and Chloe Fineman, among other local luminaries.) A bag with piano keys reminds me of the FAO Schwarz scene in Big, a movie about a kid who suddenly finds himself in a grownup’s body. Such a forever-young spirit runs through the Susan Alexandra universe, where nostalgia is not Depop-direct but rather filtered through Korn’s subversively sunny aesthetic. The sunflower-yellow shop on Manhattan’s Orchard Street even has a wishing well up front—as much a twist on suburban mall decor as a heartfelt bid for good fortune. 

    “My journey back to these childhood roots, it’s something I explore a lot,” says Korn, an Ohio native who has spent the past dozen-plus years in New York. (Her rescue chihuahua, Pigeon, got his name at an event for the city’s Wild Bird Fund.) The latest Susan Alexandra collection—a debut run of Judaica, including “vegan cheeseburger” yarmulkes, menorahs styled after nail polish bottles, jewelry, and tableware—circles back to Jewish tradition, which manifested in her family as low-key rituals. “I think from the ages of 18 to 25, you’re really trying to carve out a new life for yourself,” she says, explaining how synagogue and holiday dinners fell away for a time. “Now that I’m older, I’m realizing I really crave that grounding part of my life.”

    It’s fitting that Korn’s three-day wellness diary, below, incorporates not one but two Shabbat dinners—an alternate means of recalibration. “I’ve been through every community of wellness since I’ve lived in New York,” the designer says, detailing a winding odyssey through acupuncture, sound baths, astrology, infrared schvitzing. (Therapy too: “I’m currently on a break, which is so naughty!”) For her, there’s a practical comfort in embracing a “sense of well-being [that] is a lot more accessible and at hand”—maybe in hand, via a trompe l’oeil strawberry dreidel at the Hanukkah table. It’s part of Korn’s charm to marry old world and new, as seen in the whimsical glossary of Yiddish terms at the Judaica launch event. Beshert, the handwritten notecard explained, “means ‘meant to be’ and fated. It’s giving ‘trust the universe’ vibes.”

    Thursday, November 10

    7:23 a.m.: For the past two weeks I have been re-watching Game of Thrones like it’s my job. I watch it in the morning, I watch it at night, I watch it on my lunch breaks. This is my second time watching it, and it’s really a game changer to semi-understand what’s happening. I think my escape from reality is to be sucked into a different universe. I really need that kind of thing where my brain turns off. 

    I’m starting my day with coffee, pistachio milk, and GOT when I get a text from my dad. He’s coming in from Ohio to surprise me! His flight lands at 1:36 p.m! I call him, and he tells me that he wants to be there to support me for tonight’s Shabbat dinner (more on that later). He made the decision to book the flight at 3 a.m. It’s so, so sweet that I feel guilty. I don’t want him to make such a fuss over me!

    11:32 a.m.: It’s a really perfect day: 70 degrees in November. I’m wearing one of my beloved Suzie Kondi track suits (pink) with sneakers and a trench coat, along with one of our Go Bags in black because I will be schlepping today and need my hands free. I stop at Roasting Plant on Orchard for an Americano with oat and, because I don’t know when I’ll be able to eat next, a piece of their pumpkin loaf. This is because it appears to be the healthiest option, which it most certainly is not. I run into my friend Michelle Salem, who is visiting from LA. “This is such a NYC moment,” she says, and she’s correct.

    Setting the scene for Shabbat dinner.

    11:50 a.m.: I schmooze and chat with Michelle and then power walk over to Haven’s Kitchen. I have been WAY off my workout routine lately. This always happens when I’m busy. I am very stoked to be trekking from the East Side, where I live, to SoHo—I’m thinking of it as a mini workout. 

    We (as in Susan Alexandra, the company) are hosting a Shabbat dinner to launch my Judaica collection. Even though Shabbat is actually Friday-Saturday, we’re doing it tonight because it’s important to me to have an actual, real-life rabbi present for prayers—and he’s busy on Fridays, being a rabbi and all. I’ve arrived at the venue to finish setting up. In my next lifetime, I would LOVE to come back as a florist. I love creating with flowers, and it’s important to me that the flowers be seasonally appropriate. Since it’s November, we’re doing marigolds and dahlias and adding in kale, cabbage, cauliflower, and other hearty autumn produce. Mary and Megan from my team are tying bows and draping bead garlands.

    12:38 p.m.: I put the finishing touches on my inspo board, which is how we’re displaying the jewelry. All the things that inspired this collection—photos of ancestors I’ve never met, doodles, magazine cutouts, recipes, etc., etc.—are pinned up, alongside necklaces, bracelets, earrings, and mezuzahs from our Judaica collection. While pinning these pieces, I feel like I’m channeling my grandmother. Seriously. My hands are moving, but my mind is completely somewhere else. 

    Laura Regensdorf

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