A Visit to EldrBill

There’s alot for an environmentalist to feel hopeless about these days, from calls for the militarization of the Arctic Ocean as a response to the melting polar icecap to the prospect of our local chapter of the Sierra Club running out of money. So I decided to take a little trip to Nipomo to express a treasurer’s appreciation to a donor whose generosity has allowed us to keep going for one more year, and also to get my spirits raised.

“Bill’s Farm” looked no worse for the wear since the last time I stopped by three years ago. I noticed an ancient carriage almost hidden by the gaggle of bicycles kept here for the use of his hostel visitors from all over the world and the array of solar panels on the roof setting off the “No Diablo” sign by the corner of the house.

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I was welcomed by a high ringing voice, and once inside surrounded by walls and tables completely covered with pictures and clippings. On the counter was a half-empty quart bottle of beer next to another one full of milk.

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“Just did the goats,” giggled the man with flowing white hair, cascading beard, cabled arms and frighteningly tough legs revealed by his short-shorts.

“I love goat’s milk,” I said, “reminds me of my days on an old homestead in British Columbia.”

“Take it,” he answered, “and that dozen eggs from my chickens.”

“Bill, I came to say thanks,” I replied, “and here you keep giving me more.”

The phone rang and he spoke briefly to someone about the Santa Maria Times article on the table that reported his $500 environmental award to the graduating High School Senior who’d volunteered in the Nipomo Native Garden and was now heading for UCSB.

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“These young people inspire me,” he said. They’re our only hope. I’m 86 and starting to lose it, but they carry the torch. Here’s another one of my heros,” he declared, pointing to a picture of Jordan Hasay: “While I was doing a triathlon a couple of years ago and just ready to throw in the towel, she came up behind me. ‘You can make it,’ she said, ‘just keep going.’ And she was right.

Then here’s Virginia Souza, she’s the President of the Natural History Museum in Santa Maria. It’s tiny, but she just hosted an event there for the Chamber of Commerce which brought out forty people. In Santa Maria! She was a biology student of mine way back when. I introduced her to the idea of ecology. Here’s an award for the 40th anniversary of Earth Day she gave me last year.”

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“And this is my woman’s wall. Next to the fridge, pictures and articles about Barbara Boxer, Lois Capps, Hilda Zacarias, Lisa Jackson, Dixie Chicks, Sonia Sotomayor, Ruth Coleman, Marion Jones, Steph Brown, Kathy Goddard Jones. “I remember your Dad, Henry,” Bill chuckled. “He used to tell me how the dunes were ‘so sensual.’”

That must have been 20 years ago, when my father was just about Bill’s age now. “How old are you?” he asked.

“Sixty nine,” I answered, “just retired.”

“My sixties were my best decade,” said Bill. “Learning how to appreciate things because the end was in sight, but still capable.”

He brought over a stack of postcards and said, “here, take a few.” The top one was a photo of a sand dune gracefully curved against the sky. Running up it was a black lab next to a perfectly formed naked young woman. “I’ve worked to save those Dunes and Point Sal for 50 years–from a Nuclear Power Plant, from a Coal Fired power plant, from a housing development, from developers. And now they’re safe in perpetuity, since the SLO Land Conservancy just purchased the last developable property. Lets go out back.”

We passed his desktop computer surrounded by magazines and books, where Bill composes his “Nipomo Free Press,” an email newsletter that includes commentaries on the latest news and on long term issues as well as responses from his readers—precursor of the blog. We talked of another hero, writer and 350.org organizer Bill McKibben, who was sitting in a Washington jail after leading a protest against Obama’s approval of the XL Pipeline. We passed the chickens scratching in the sand, the empty pigpen—the pig was in the freezer—and the goat corral. He climbed nimbly over a high gate into an overgrown orchard of apple and tangello trees heavy with fruit that I sampled and picked. “I just cant keep these up any more,” he said with a twinkle. Don’t get old.”

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On my way back to the car weighted down with eggs, milk and fruit, I felt lightened. Instead of dreading yet another meeting to discuss grant applications, budgets, and liability insurance, I was eager to share Eldr Bill’s harvest with the volunteers at the potluck that night.

8 Responses to “A Visit to EldrBill”

  1. Rev. Charlie Archibald, MSW Says:

    For thirty years Elder Bill has eaten his noon meal at the Nipomo Senior Center, his main well balanced meal of the day. In addition he had been permitted to take the left overs to his animals,not an easy task on a bicycle. But the long time cook died, and a new Site Manager ( who warms up the pre-cooked food),was a Vegetarian, who claimed to be appalled to realize that his fifty chickens, seven goats, and a pig were not just PETS, but that he actually ate them . As a matter of fact, he treats them like pets, many with names, but there comes a time for them to enter the food chain. He quit coming for a few weeks, but then had the humility to come back in order to get proper nutrition. We fought his case, and he even had the support of the Director of the program for the county, but HE didn’t feel he could fire the cook over it, so things have calmed down. But as the old comedian Shelly Berman once said, “O.K., you’ll forget it and I’ll forget it; but I won’t forget it, and don’t you forget it ! ” So we hope that some day all that wasted nutrition that is being thrown away can be Bill’s again to share with his animal friends, as the cost of commercial animal food is sky high, and so unnecessary after no problems for thirty years !

  2. Abe Perlstein Says:

    Thanks for this wonderful tribute. You captured the true essence of Elder Bill.

  3. John Edward Reid Says:

    Thank you for the article! I so love Elder Bill! When/if I get to be his age (in 31 years), I hope to remain as healthy, active, and involved in Environmental causes as he is!

  4. David Georgi Says:

    Well done, Steve! I have a three part YouTube video on Bill’s Farm at thegardendude.com site and on thegardendude YouTube account. The Bill Denneen Environmental Award website is http://www.bdea.org

  5. Linda Seeley Says:

    Beautiful article, Steven. Elder Bill is an inspiration to all of us in these parts. I’m so glad that he’s still milking the goats. Thanks.

  6. Rosemary Wilvert Says:

    Steven, this article says everything I feel about EldrBill.

    His grandson at age eight said it all too, when he was helping lead us on one of Bill’s hikes: “When I grow up, I’m going to be just like my grandpa.”

    Rosemary Wilvert

  7. nancy mann Says:

    Am I understanding this correctly? The new site mananger can deny Bill taking leftovers home because Bill is not a vegetarian? Bill, want help fighting this–let me know.
    Nancy

  8. Mo Says:

    Thanks for the article.

    I stayed at Bill’s hostel in 1987, I have good memories of the place, and of Bill.

    Mo

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