Business & LaborMendocino

LETTER TO THE EDITOR- Jessaiah Zuré: Mobile sauna is great service from a local family

Dear Editor,

The new Sauna at Big River by Mendo Sauna has been an absolute DREAM COME TRUE!!!

How often I want to jump in the water, but want to be warm after.

How AMAZING to have a view of the ocean while being in a sauna, and to be able to then walk across the sands, with our stunning view and dip into the ocean.

It is a treat and delight for all the senses and our health!!!

I am absolutely stunned and so sad that even a conversation has been brought up where people would be upset by this. I actually understand some of the opposing sides I have read so far.

But this sauna is contained in a little trailer, and the exhaust from the Hwy 1 bridge seems like more of a pollutant than the wood fire smoke, and the mobs of groups that come out to the beach with their loud ball games, drinking and kids seem more disruptive than a quaint sauna trailer.

But I am not complaining about them or that, cuz THAT IS LIFE.. and life is Life’ing.

This is a local family, this is an ancient tradition, it is good for our health in all ways shapes and forms…

I do so hope you will keep them around, they are a GIFT!

Start your day with Company Juice in Fort Bragg, California

Frank Hartzell

Frank Hartzell has spent his lifetime as a curious anthropologist in a reporter's fedora. His first news job was chasing news on the streets of Houston with high school buddy and photographer James Mason, back in 1986. Then Frank graduated from Humboldt State and went to Great Gridley as a reporter, where he bonded with 1000 people and told about 3000 of their stories. In Marysville at the Appeal Democrat, the sheltered Frank got to see both the chilling depths and amazing heights of humanity. From there, he worked at the Sacramento Bee covering Yuba-Sutter and then owned the Business Journal in Yuba City, which sold 5000 subscriptions to a free newspaper. Frank then got a prestigious Kiplinger Investigative Reporting fellowship and was city editor of the Newark Ohio, Advocate and then came back to California for 4 years as managing editor of the Napa Valley Register before working as a Dominican University professor, then coming to Fort Bragg to be with his aging mom, Betty Lou Hartzell, and working for the Fort Bragg Advocate News. Frank paid the bills during that decade + with a successful book business. He has worked for over 50 publications as a freelance writer, including the Mendocino Voice and Anderson Valley Advertiser, along with construction and engineering publications. He has had the thrill of learning every day while writing. Frank is now living his dream running MendocinoCoast.News with wife, Linda Hartzell, and web developer, Marty McGee, reporting from Fort Bragg, California.

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