story
Riding with Ed Culver: When the Mailman Was the Coast
Mabel wrote him up in 1961: the mailman who filled grocery orders and played bass viol in the symphony. Her grandson rode in his van to Monterey — back when the coast ran on trust.
More than a century on the Big Sur coast
True stories of the Plasketts and their neighbors — bears and gold, shipwrecks and weddings — drawn from letters, newspapers, and family memory.
story
Mabel wrote him up in 1961: the mailman who filled grocery orders and played bass viol in the symphony. Her grandson rode in his van to Monterey — back when the coast ran on trust.
story
A rattlesnake struck Ed Plaskett's horse on the mountain mail trail. The horse left the county. The story has a happy ending — eventually.
story
Ed Plaskett and his brothers built a way to the top of Plaskett Rock — where centuries of seagulls had left a crown of first-rate fertilizer, free for the scraping.
story
Phil McGuire of Gorda could look at your face and hand you your portrait minutes later.
story
At Carson Sink in 1848, the Plaskett wagon company fell in with John C. Frémont's party.
story
No physician within a hundred miles — so the William & Mary man nursed the cholera camps of Sacramento, and set the coast's bones ever after.
story
His father fought the Revolution; his uncle crossed the Delaware. William Lucas came from fighting stock.
story
In 1898 Linwood Mitchell packed Luther Burbank's cuttings down the coast and planted a legend.
story
One gnarled survivor of Marion Plaskett's orchard fed the whole coast apples of impossible size.
story
Sarah's brother Albert Barnes proved up a quarter-section on Pepperwood Ridge and set it to fruit trees.
story
Marno Dutton remembered Cruikshank apples so big a child could eat only half of one.
story
Born in Anderson Valley in 1856, Mendocina Plaskett was the first white child born in Mendocino County.
Page 1 of 12 Older →