The annual Northern California Renaissance Faire held at Casa De Fruta near Hollister is well under way. The faire brings visitors and actors—some professional and some volunteers—to celebrate the Renaissance era. The event includes crafts, concerts, food, games, artists and other performances. Tickets are $28 and are available online at norcalrenfaire.com or at the gates. A weekend pass is $40 and a pass for the entire Renaissance Faire is $190. The faire runs weekends through Oct. 16. There are also several themed weekends including the Royal Masquerade, including a contest for the best mask on Saturday and Sunday Oct. 1 and 2.
When Paramvir Dhillon and his wife, Dolores came across a vacant ice cream shop in a shopping center off Dunne and Monterey in Morgan Hill last summer, they knew they had found the perfect location for their ice cream and treat shop.
Recently featured in Vanity Fair’s hallowed fashion pages for his stunning braids on OG celebutant, Paris Hilton, who sported the heat-resistant hairdo for two weeks at Burning Man this summer, Dylan is living his dream, jetting from red carpets to photo shoots in exotic locations, and, he says, it all started in Gilroy.
Measure B, the proposed half-cent sales tax for Santa Clara County transportation, will generate $6.3 billion, plus an estimated $3.5 billion in possible matching funds over a 30-year period.
The bizarre events of December 2015 will be long etched in Gilroy’s political history. Mayor Don Gage stunned the city by resigning without warning a year before his term ended, effectively handing the reins to his political ally, Perry Woodward. The handoff allowed Woodward to run as an incumbent—but not before the duo pushed through approval of a massive farmland annexation that would have, along with other planned developments, made Gilroy one of the Bay Area’s biggest cities—a sprawling urban mass of 120,000 residents, more than double the city’s population today.