The
rental car pulled to the curb and four people climbed out - a man and woman from the front
seat, a toddler and her nanny from the back. There was a map lying unfolded on top of the
dashboard. It was apparent they were traveling.
The first thought was that they had come to dine. Geyserville restaurants get good notices
from the food critics.
But that was not their mission. The quartet stood at the edge of the road, stretched, pointed,
looked both ways and walked across to Bosworth's store.
That would be Bosworth and Son General Merchandise, established 93 years ago in a 1902 building, which; once housed a
painterof horse buggies (there are still paint streaks on the floor) and a tinsmith. George
Bosworth, son of farmer Calvin who arrived in the 1870s, bought it in 1908 for a general store and undertaking
parlor. His son, Obed, took over in 1918, sold the undertaking business to
Healdsburg mortician Fred Young, and started the collection of merchandise and memorabilia
that is now presided over by his son, Harry.Bosworth's has always been something of a wonder
to its Sonoma County neighbors. Now, it's obvious the word has spread.
If I was surprised that a tourist family would drive off the freeway and follow their maps to
Bosworth's, Harry Bosworth was not.
He maintained his station behind the counter at the back while the family wandered through the
store, the toddler exchanging pleasantries and kisses with Buster, Harry's black lab, as the
adults leafed through the books on the table, shopped the racks of western wear, exclaimed
over bandanas and tractor caps, breathed in the old-timey, small-town atmosphere, returned to
their rental car and drove on south. They hadn't come to buy, but to visit, to say they had
been there, the way one visits a landmark, a historical site.
Visitors have long been welcome at Bosworth's, but they've been more frequent since fall, when
the October issue of Travel & Leisure magazine did a cover story on Sonoma and Napa,
focusing its cameras on Geyserville, Healdsburg, Yountville and St. Helena.
The weekend after the magazine was published, Bosworth's did more credit card business than
ever in its history. People from all over the country stopped in to take a piece of clothing
or just a souvenir from California's Wine Country back to Wisconsin or Indiana or Florida.
They've been dropping in ever since.
In the magazine photos, the old store and its annex, which was once a blacksmith shop, offered
the same patina of authenticity and charm a traveler would find in a little village in
Tuscany, just off the A-1. Throw in the grapevines that crowd in on the town, put the smell of
the crush in the air, the pickers in the vineyards, a tractor chugging along the edge of the
road through town and, presto! You've got a Wine Country "destination." |
If Harry, at age
63 a storyteller like his late father, is not surprised by the changes in his hometown, he is
a little bemused by the new clientele. "When I was a kid," he said, "I swear I
could tell the customers by smell. The Indians (who camped out to pick prunes in the harvest
season) smelled of wood smoke, the Italians of those little Toscanelli cigars."
The change in traffic patterns is also worth a comment. People can now stroll across the road
that was once busy Highway 101.
For Geyserville, teetering on the brink of "discovery," Bosworth's provides not only
overalls and fancy riding duds, hardware, plumbing supplies, livestock feed and saddles, but
also a firm link with the town that once was.
Jeff Mall, owner of the new Smokehouse restaurant across the street, says that Bosworth's is
"a museum where we go for plumbing advice and nuts and bolts." Since Harry Bosworth
also owns the cemetery and runs the water company, it may be the closest thing that
Geyserville has to a city hall.
ONLY A YEAR or two ago, a visitor might have said that Geyserville, which had its
tourist beginnings in the 1850s with
a hotel accommodating visitors en route to the Big Geysers, had seen its better days. Now
residents and business owners will tell you that it's redefining itself.
"It's on the cusp," said Cosette Scheiber, who, with her husband, Ron, owns the
town's two wellestablished bed and breakfast inns, HopeMerrill House, an Eastlake stick-style
Victorian built in 1885, and
Hope-Bosworth House, a 1904 Queen Anne craftsman-style beauty.
In addition to these popular B&Bs, there is the Geyserville Inn at the north end of town,
which has attracted a clientele that "does" the wineries, brings bicycles to ride
the country lanes or simply walks out into the vineyard behind to soak up the ambience. The
adjacent Hoffman House enjoys a reputation as one of the best delis in the county.
It was the promise of things to come that brought Mall, owner of Healdsburg's popular Zin
restaurant, to open his ribs and brisket bistro on Geyserville's main drag several months ago.
"We kind of figured it was going to be the next outpost," he said.
When you consider Geyserville's geographical position -- on the banks of the Russian River,
squished between the Dry Creek and Alexander valleys, surrounded by some of the world's best
wineries, just north of Healdsburg, just south of Asti, where Beringer plans to reopen the
famous tasting room - it seems, like the prunes that once grew all around it, just ripe for
the plucking.
IN THE LATE 1870s, when
J. P. Munro-Fraser descended on Sonoma County to compile his 1880 volume of history, he gave
Geyserville short shrift - nothing more than a paragraph, really. |
While he conceded
that the soil and the climate was suited to "the production of the best varieties of
grapes, stone and seed fruits," he was generally dismissive of the settlement. It was, he
said, a "hamlet" comprising one store, one post and express office, one saloon, one
hotel and one blacksmith shop. "Geyserville," he wrote, "is not so much a place
as it is these establishments."
Louise Davis, who is Harry Bosworth's sister and a member of the staff at Geyserville High
School, does much better by Geyserville's history. She has collected it, preserved it and
written it through the years and, even now, takes school bus loads of teen-agers on a
historical tour of the town, pointing to a past that sometimes seems hard for the kids to
believe.
Certainly it has enjoyed its time as a full-fledged town, replete with a bank, two hotels (one
at the intersection, another at the railroad depot), two grocery stores, a dry goods store and
its own newspaper, a doctor, an undertaker, a butcher, two bakeries and, in the words of the
Geyserville Gazette (1899-1920) "two
popular medicinal springs in close proximity, one fraternal order . . . one constable, one
painter, two paper-hangers" and "at least two poets."
Now, there seems to be little doubt that Geyserville is at a crossroads. Of course, it has
always been at a crossroads -well, maybe a T-intersection, where Highway 128 wound its way from Alexander Valley,
across the river and the railroad tracks to meet 101, before the freeway took it up the hill.
But once Healdsburg tumbled into the heady pool of Wine Country resort towns, becoming a
cozier, more compact version of Sonoma, which was the first of the county's towns to go
upscale. (Don't you hate that word?) Geyserville's fate seemed sealed.
"Healdsburg is pretty much maxed out as far as restaurants are concerned," said
Mall, who has been pleased with the reception his Smokehouse has received. His landlord is the
Odd Fellows Lodge, which is down to half a dozen members who meet upstairs in a lodge room
designed for several hundred. The restaurant has drawn the winery crowd and families, which is
just what he was looking for, he said.
The town already benefits from the wineries close by, like Geyser Peak, which has one of the
busiest tasting rooms in the north county. "Silver Oak had a release party in town last
week, Mall said,
"And you should have seen it. The streets were full of Porsches and Mercedes."
That's a sight guaranteed to gladden the heart of a restaurant owner, just as Cosette
Scheiber's report that both her inns are filled this coming weekend with travel writers from
all over the United States is the happiest kind of news. |
Tom Oden is one
of the owners of Santi, the fanciest place in town, a Northern California/ Italy style
restaurant on the site where the bar at the Rex, owned by Santi and Virginia Catelli and then
their son, Richard, served as the gathering place for neighbors, and the restaurant, with
Virginia's famous ravioli and minestrone, brought businessmen for lunch and families for
dinner from 100 miles around.
Oden likes the suggestion that Geyserville is the next in line to be a Wine Country village.
"We hope so, don't we?" he said, adding that such a . transition "looked like a
pipe dream" when he and Franco Dunn opened 18 months ago. "Things were
closing," he said. "We like to think our presence helped turn things around, like a
foundation stone, you know. Somebody did something good."
Now there's a new rumor nearly every day of what's coming. "Locals" is the name of a
second tasting room, joining Meeker Cellars' facility down the street. Locals is due to open
soon as a cooperative venture of five Dry Creek wineries, although no one will say just which
ones as yet.
And the Charlie Trotter rumor has become almost legend. Everybody has heard "at least
four times," said one businessman, that the famed Chicago restaurateur was about to open
a resort in Geyserville. The rumor is fading, as time passes, but all agree that just one
sizeable resort is all it would take to make dreams come true.
Mark Carter, owner of Eureka's Carter House, may provide some help in that area. Carter says
he has reached an agreement with Lora Vigne, owner of Isis Oasis, the 10 acres at the south
end of town that was a Ba'hai summer school for nearly 50 years, until the freeway took the
largest part of the property.
Carter, an innkeeper for 20 years,
has plans that call for a resort and restaurant there to be called, after Lora, Auberge
d'Vigne. He had hoped, he said, to start with 24 units and expand to 50, but the
tourism slump since 9/11 has
changed plans. Now, he said, he's thinking that phase one will be four units on the hillside.
"I want an Italian feeling," he said, `'since this is the heart of the wine
country."
If you check the Web site (Geyservillecc.com - Ron Scheiber is the Web master) you'll find
that the current talk of the town is the possibility of a visitors' center, right next to
Bosworth's. There's a meeting coming up soon with Supervisor Paul Kelley. Geyserville is
looking for its share of the TOT (transient occupancy tax, or "bed tax") that the
county collects to promote tourism.
"We'll never be as big as Healdsburg," said Cosette, "which is a good thing.
And we'll never be anything like Napa, which is a better thing."
But there's no question, when you see them coming, maps in hand, that Geyserville is, as Mall
suggests, "the next outpost." |