This is a work in progress and some of the information
may be inaccurate.  Please send us any corrections
or additions by clicking on the e-mail links at the
end of each section/ period of history.

Bear Wallow Resort
In the 1960's and early 1970's, a man named Dino
Carpenter owned 900 acres along Mountain View Road,
which included the 40 acres that is now Frogwood and
additional huge tracts of the surrounding mountainside
and canyon land. In 1965, Dino built and started Bear
Wallow Resort, catering mostly to gay men from San
Francisco. He constructed the spectacular three-story
Lodge building, the swimming pool, and seven cabins,
where mostly weekend visitors would come up from the
Bay Area, rent a cabin, and party or relax at Bear Wallow.


"The Bear Wallow" (above) fills up each winter and is home to a variety of aquatic organisms. Bear Wallow Resort and Bear Wallow Creek at the bottom of the canyon were both named after this small pond and wetland at the top of the property.

Local journalist, Bruce Anderson wrote the following in his
paper, The Anderson Valley Advertiser: "If memory serves,
and it serves less and less well, when I landed in Boonville
in 1970 I remember hearing that Bear Wallow was a gay resort."
Dino apparently liked to play bridge in the main lodge, and
at least one wedding was held there (probably many).

Bobby recalled Bear Wallow’s very early days:
I knew Dino....his real name was Joseph Carpenter, he had an aunt living in Ukiah over the mountain from Boonville.... Originally Bear Wallow Lodge was to be a Rod and Gun Club....

.... Dino's mom and dad and brother lived in Poughkeepsie or in the area.... while his aunt lived in Ukiah and my understanding at the time is that she had quite a bit of money and I believe she helped Dino finance the original property and buildings at Bear Wallow.....She (his aunt) also had an  apartment in San Francisco....

Dino was kind... [Once] I got in the car with 4 lesbians and drove from Poughkeepsie to Bear Wallow to surprise Dino at Bear Wallow.... Dino welcomed me and my friends with open arms... I stayed about a month I believe....that was the last time I had seen him.... however in an around 1979 or 1980 ish I called Bear Wallow and spoke for the last time to Dino.
 
AT the time I travelled to Bear Wallow there were seven cabins and the main lodge was built, everything was brand new......  When I got there the electricity was not on as there were no funds to turn it on... but the wiring was in place.... the cabins were beautiful they were like small houses..... the swimming pool was not built when I was there.... at least I don't recall ....

I have to tell you... your website is now bookmarked by me.... You have brought so many memories back to me...  If you should hear from any people who respond to your request for memories of Bear Wallow who know if Dino is still alive I would love to know if you would be so kind..... He would be around 75 years old perhaps.... I am not positive though, the man was a looker.... :-) thanks for the memories....
 
(Thank YOU, Bobby, for those memories!)

**What do YOU remember about Bear Wallow's
Early Days?
  We are trying to expand and correct
this history!  Please contribute if you have any
tidbits for our files...  Click below to send an
e-mail to us about your Bear Wallow Resort
memories:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project

Compost College
In September of 1971, Dino invited the (roughly 30)
members of a small counter-culture commune called
Compost College to move onto his land. They occupied
the land just to the east of Frogwood for almost one year
(September 1971- Fall 1972). Richard B. Seymour was a
founder and resident of the commune, and he tells about
its history in his book: Compost College: Life on a Counter-
Culture Commune (Walnut Creek, CA: Devil Mountain Books,
1997. 167 pp. $15.95)

Bonard Wilson was the founder of Compost College, and
his vision was gathering together a group of educators and
students into what he called an experimental, coeducational,
student-centered college. Life at Compost College is perhaps
better described on the back of Seymourís book, which says
the members, a motley bunch of college students, teachers,
administrators, and drifters, dreamed about a better way of
life.Their experience on the road to community, living through
hazardous times under primitive conditions, was painful but
filled with moments of joy and beauty.

A man named Rainbow, who still lives in the Anderson
Valley, was a member of a band that played for the Compost
College folks in their earliest days, and he was the one who came
up with the name Compost College. He recounted that residents
lived in tepees and "plastic wickiups" (see historical storytelling
Voices of the Valley book #4). Seymour describes one of the
shelters as ìbuilt of cardboard, sticks, and polyethelene plastic,
with a home made wood stove.

In the fall of 1972 Compost College basically dissolved when
most members moved on. Some composters remained and
began renting from Dino, living on various parts of the land,
including Rainbow, who apparently built a cabin along
Honey Creek, which runs into Bear Wallow Creek at Mountain View
Road, just down the road from Frogwood.

By 1976, for some reason, Dino decided to get out of the Resort
business and sell Bear Wallow.

**What do YOU remember about Bear Wallow and
Compost College?
  We are trying to expand and
correct this history!  Please contribute if you have
any tidbits for our files...  Click below to send an
e-mail to us about your Bear Wallow or Compost
College memories:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project


This old sign from Frogwood's earlier days was
recovered from a trash pile in 2003 by
Frogwood archaeologists.


Bear Wallow Bar & Grill / Resort
Bear Wallow was sold to Bob and Roxanne Hedges
in 1976.  They ran the place as sort of road house
bar and grill with cottage rentals.  Serving up steak
was their specialty, and many locals who were around
in the late seventies and eighties remember going
to Bear Wallow on a Friday or Saturday night
specifically for steak dinners.  Jim Snyder, a
Boonville resident remembers dining with his family up
at Bear Wallow when he was a child, and he
recalled that it was "like a steak house..."

This picture of the Bear Bar was taken in the 1970s or 1980s.

Here is an entry from a travel guide:
"Bear Wallow Resort (707-895-3335) is four
miles west of town on Mountain View Road with
one and two-bedroom cabins set in the redwoods.
Prices are moderate, including the cost of meals
served in the Dinner House restaurant ($ to $$).
The restaurant is closed during winter months."

Bob Hedges preparing to cook up some steak in the Lodge kitchen.

Bob and Rox wrote about their experience
at Bear Wallow:
    
"As sole proprietors, we were responsible for
all of the food and beverage service, maintenance
on the lodge and all of the cottages, and their utilities.
This was the mountains again, so all of the skills that
we had learned before were needed even more as we
fixed everything that broke, from plumbing, electrical,
appliances, roofing, flooring, septic and water delivery
systems, to deflated soufflés in the kitchen and sob
stories at the bar.  We did it all...  We sold our Resort
in 1990 and discovered Oregon. The Grants Pass area
is much like Mendocino County, so we felt right
at home."

Bob and Rox Hedges ran Bear Wallow from 1976-1991.


In the late 1970's and early 1980's, the lodge (the "Bear Bar") had lounge areas and a pool table. A bear tapestry hangs above the fire.

Bruce Anderson wrote: "...Bob and Roxanne
Hedges turned it into a getaway destination for urbs
and a night spot complete with a bar upstairs in the
main building over the restaurant for the rest of us. 
I remember a famous fight in the bar one night where
the two guys had each other in mutual choke holds so
intense poor old Bob couldn't separate them until they
both decided to break it off before they died of
asphyxiation and leaped off the balcony into the
swimming pool.  Lots of exciting things happened
on the premises, most of them unprintable."

The Lodge swimming pool in the 1970s or 1980s.


Bob Hedges behind the lodge Bear Bar in early 1980s.


One former visitor to Bear Wallow recalled her experience fondly:
 ”We visited the resort at least four to five times a year from 1980-1987. A lot of wonderful times were spent in the cabins, and exploring the forty acres surrounding them. We could get away from telephones, TV's and spend time with the ones you loved without interruption. There was a very nice couple who owned and ran the resort, but I can't remember their names.

The food they served at the lodge was incredible! The menu constantly changed but guests were always offered a choice of beef, poultry, fish, or a pasta dish. I explicitly remember the chicken breast entrée, for one thing it was absolutely divine! The chicken breast was stuffed with a combination of Monterey Jack and spinach, smothered with more Monterey Jack and Mushrooms. I have eaten a lot of food in my life, so the memory should wane with time, but never does.

 All the cabins had names the Mountain Air, Eagles Nest... The pool was sparkling! There was nothing better than spending the day by the pool in the mid of summer reading a book, surrounded by all those beautiful redwoods. We always hated to leave and longingly looked forward to returning.

  I remember the bar upstairs, there was also a pool table. The bar had about four - five bar stools and there were 7 cabins ranging in size. It didn't matter what cabin you stayed in they were all great, my personal favorite was called "Eagle's Nest" because of it's location. They always had bottle of chardonnay chilled in ice and a bottle of cabernet sitting on the table as you first entered the cabin for your enjoyment. Each cabin had it's own refrigerator and they included a basket full of snacks and goodies in case someone got the late night munchies.

All guests paid in advance by check, the owners boasted once during a conversation at the bar that they had never had a cancellation. I remember that I always had to make reservations way in advance because to my dismay, if I forgot, they would be booked.  I lived in Marin at the time, and it was such a lovely drive to Booneville plus a great escape. I've obviously never forgotten the wonderful times spent there.”
 
(Thanks to J.J. for these memories!)

**What do YOU remember about Bear Wallow?
 
We are trying to expand and correct this history! 
Please contribute if you have any tidbits for our files... 
Click below to send an e-mail to us about your Bear
Wallow or Compost College memories:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project

Quest School

In 1991, when Bob and Rox signed a lease
agreement (with an option to buy) with the founders
of the Quest School, they probably didn't know what
they were in for.  After the school finally closed in
1996 or '97 (and the lessors were never able to
exercise their option to buy), Bob reported a huge
amount of trash and clutter had been left.  It took
him many months and many dumpsters full of trash
and salvaged junk to clean the place up. 


This wooden sign, apparently made by a Quest student,
was found in 2003 under an old burn pile by Frogwood
archaeologists.


But the Quest School did operate on the land for
about 6-7 years (1991-97).  One announcement
from late 1991: "Quest in Boonville Moving to
New Facilities... Robin Harris, Co-Director of Quest
in Boonville, California reports they are moving to
new facilities eight miles away and the new facilities
are an improvement over what the school has been
using. The mailing address and phone number will
stay the same. The School is limiting its enrollment
to 16 boys, ages 6 to 18, and as of late July, still
had a few open spaces."

The tiny private first through twelfth grade school
was reportedly co-ed for 2 years then was boys-only
for three years, and then it went back to co-ed one
year before closing.  Local journalist, Bruce Anderson,
remembered Quest as "a boarding school for wacky
rich kids that eventually fell apart..." 

One long-time student at the school remembered that there were about 23 kids attending at a time (possibly an exaggeration).  He said they lived unsupervised in their own cottages.  "That's why the cabins got so trashed," he recalled. The Quest school was owned and operated by a couple named Robin & Donna Harris (who apparently lived in the double-wide trailer formerly called "Venus"- torn down in 2006), and their daughter and son-in law were teachers, administrators, and maintenance custodians, etc., who lived in the
cottage now called Spiral).

The Harris family tried to make some improvements to
the buildings, but may have done more harm than good.
They hauled some trailers up to the land, and made
some patch-work repairs on the cabins. They kept horses,
goats, pigs as part of the Quest School program. 
It was like a "new age ranch," a former student
recalled.  They slaughtered pigs for food, and
had a "meditation closet" (upstairs in the studio
apartment of the Lodge, which was a study at
the time).  This included a device made from
copper wire in a pyramid shape with a dangling
quartz crystal in the center.  An electric current
was sent through the copper wires when a switch
was turned on.  (The switch is still there today ,
but is not connected to anything.) The Quest
School students occasionally sat under the
pyramid and the school staff member would
hit the switch to align the students' chakras. 
The same former Quest School student also
described the time a native American healer came
and built a traditional sweat lodge on the flat
ground by what we now call Monk Spring (on the
East side of the property above the driveway) had
traditional native sweat lodge ceremonies there.

Another studant “J” recalled the following:
“...Donna and Robin Harris were good people and its true they leaned more to the wacky healing thing. One of the classes was called “Mastership,” and was optional, where we would meditate and do things like that... and I do recall my friend Tyler who was allergic to MSG, one time while we made a visit to the mall and Tyler got sick  and his throat closed up. So Donna gave him some homeopathic sugar pills and it actually helped him. In hind sight he should have been taken to a doctor, but what ever they gave him it worked... I did use the closet thing with the triangle and to be honest, I did not feel any different, and I admit the whole thing was kinda strange.

The school hosted a lot of messed up kids- there is no doubt about that. I can recall a lot of stuff that went down... However I know a lot about Quest and was very close to Donna and Robin and can say that they are good people, and I enjoyed the school and value the memories and privilege of being able to attend it.

To sum it all up Quest was a fun school with very little actual learning on standard subjects, It was run by caring people with big hearts, the problem lies in the fact that freedom was a little excessive (especially when given to kids with issues they are dealing with), and that resulted in a lot of problems. But on a positive note, I feel that my time there helped me be who I am today a successful independent member of society.
[Also: ] ...There are Indian artifacts on your property...
 
(THANKS- J, for those memories!)

The website "struggling teens.com" reviewed the
school in 1993 and posted the following: "QUEST  
707-895-2613   Boonville, California 95415  
Co-Director: Mr. Robin C. Harris.
Quest is a nonsectarian school for 16 boys,
ages 6 to 18, focusing on those students whose
needs "fall between the extremes of the College
Preparatory school and the Residential Treatment
program." They prefer to work with "families in
which the student is willing to make a commitment
to growth and change." They are a 9-month program
following the traditional school year with a one month
summer program. They are most comfortable with
12-15 students. The following comes from the
school's philosophy statement:

"Many of our children are failing to live up to the
hopes and expectations of the adults they once
tried so desperately to please -especially in the
classroom. Some no longer try. For whatever reason
-because they are no longer motivated to achieve
or because their learning style and pace is different
from that of their classmates -they do not measure
up. Some demonstrate behavior difficulties as well,
and many are now in a vicious circle. Did their learning
and behavior difficulties have their genesis in a poor
sense of worth, or is their low self-esteem a result of
their feelings of frustration, helplessness and failure?
Who can say where it all began. At Quest, we know
that whatever the source of the problem, our job is
to help them break out of the circle -to help them
realize that they have worth, talent and the potential
for success. There is no panacea for this, no magic
formula that works with every boy or girl. Each of our
students is unique, and each requires a slightly
different kind of intervention. Sometimes the
breakthrough will happen in the academic program;
usually not.

In 1995, the following news was released:
Principal Named At Quest...
Anne Simon has been named Principal at Quest,
A Country School in Boonville, California. Quest
is a junior boarding school for children from 6 to 16
and was founded and operated by Robin &
Donna Harris. For information, they can be
contacted at 707-895-2613.

According to the former student, when the
weather gets really nasty in winter, roads can get
washed out.  He remembered the terrifying time
a school bus with over a dozen kids went off the
driveway at the turn above Isis cottage and slid
part way down the hill.   The driver hit brakes and
didn't turn the wheels correctly, so they started
sliding off the road towards the steep drop-off. 
There was no gravel on the road back then and
it was a slick mud surface.  Everyone could have
died but they were saved when a giant Madrone
tree stopped the bus from rolling over the edge
of the steep cliff-like hillside.  It took five trucks
to tow the school bus out.

Another former student recalled his days at Quest:
I attended Quest in 1987-88. We did in fact live 2 to a cabin mostly unsupervised. When I attended the school was in it's infancy but we were told that Robin & Donna Harris had been teachers elswhere,they were so new-age (always carefuly using the term homiopathic) that they must have collided with the curriculum of wherever they came from. I recall getting a case of poison oak that was so severe that I definitely should have been taken to a doctor; instead Donna gave me some natural cure pills which turned out to be in fact more poison oak. My best friend Jason and I wrecked our cabin and were basically destructive whenever possible, keep in mind we were a couple of 16 year old punk rockers loose in a dysfunctional summer camp. When Quest was finally uprooted, the property must have been in a sad state. I would like to say sorry to the owners for all of the stuff we, shot burned or smashed in our nihilistic angst."
    -E.M.

By 1997, the Harris family closed the Quest School
and moved on, returning the abused land and
buildings to Bob and Rox Hedges.

**What do YOU remember about Quest School?
 
We are trying to update and correct this history! 
Please contribute if you have any tidbits for our files... 
Click below to send an e-mail to us about your
Quest School or Bear Wallow memories:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project

Pete and Jen
Pete and Jen are a San Francisco duo that tried to
buy Bear Wallow from Bob and Rox in about 1998,
after the Quest School closed.  The couple wanted
to start a retreat center on the property, and tried
to round up a group of friends to co-invest in the
project.  Jen was working to facilitate retreats for
non-profit organizations, so she knew first hand
that there was a strong need for retreat centers in
Northern California, and especially for places at
the more affordable end of the rate scale.  Pete
and Jen worked out a deal with Bob and got the
property in escrow.  Next they began to come up
on weekends and work hard to fix up the buildings
as much as possible in order to show possible investors
the potential of the place.  They removed the trashed
linoleum from the dining room floor, and did some interior
painting.  In the end, Pete and Jen could not find
enough investor dollars and Bob put the property back
on the market.

The Amanae Foundation        
Bob and Rox's third potential buyers were a
couple of women who started the Amanae Foundation. 
They wanted to run a center to teach their special
bodywork techniques and other trainings.  Founded
by Australian native, Christine Day, and carried-on
by Pat Burdy, Amanae™ is hands-on, emotional
release, bodywork which opens "doorways" that
have been closed by deeply held fear, anger and
trauma. Amanae is a journey that takes us back
to remembrance and direct experience of the self. 
According to one description, "Amanae Foundation
is a Metaphysical foundation offering training in
Transformative Bodywork, and specializes in
lectures, events relating to any area of personal
growth, expanding consciousness, offers classes."
The techniques were said to have been channelled
by Christine.

Pat apparently met Christine Day in Mount
Shasta where Pat experienced her first Amanae
session. Within the first 30 seconds of being
on the table and feeling the power of this
extraordinary work, Pat knew her life was forever
changed.  Pat and Christine worked together doing
workshops. As the work developed they formed a
partnership and together founded a school to teach
others the Amanae system.

"Amanae is about removing barriers from our
cellular body and receiving our light and remembering
who we really are. We are already enlightened, it's only
about remembering and embodying this into our cells.
There are doorways throughout the body that when
opened allow us to access our own light. Once we can
access our own light, healing takes place within. Amanae
works very much with the heart. There are many barriers
in our hearts and while there are barriers here one
cannot receive one's own light or give out in a true form.
"This work returns us to our natural state as free will
beings."

Here is Christine's remarkable story of how she
received the Amanae technique: "I was meditating
one morning and within a 2-3 second time period I
was given this work... Amanae. It was just all of a
sudden one minute I didn't know anything and the
next minute I knew a concept of healing that would
help people move more completely into who they
were. And I didn't really understand everything I
was shown at the time. I had had no metaphysical
background and no desire ever to put my hands on
anyone or to touch people or to be a healer. A lot of
people use that word. But here I was...I was given a
technique...something that was given to me and
shown to me...and it was so complete in itself...
it was like I knew every part of it...like I'd been
studying it for years."

Christine and Pat lived on the Frogwood Lodge
land from mid to late 1998 until 2001.  When they
took over the property, they faced the daunting task
of saving the wreckage left by over 30 years of wear
and tear and at least seven years of maintenance
neglect.  To rebuild the place, they would need plenty
of money and dedication.  They managed to raise
enough money to remodel the lodge (where they then
held Amanae trainings and meetings).  Thanks to
Amanae, the lodge was transformed from a completely
run-down and trashed out relic (with a leaking roof and
dangerous decks) to a simple but beautiful repaired
state.  During the remodel, the lodge received a new roof
with six large skylights, a centralized forced-air heating
system with ceiling fans, and an upgraded commercial
kitchen.  The decks were removed and windows replaced.

Amanae's Departure
After the completion of the lodge remodel
however, Christine and Pat were not able to replace
any of the other eight leaking or near-leaking roofs
or do very much of the other huge mountain of
restorative work needed.  They were apparently
expecting to receive some donations from supporters
to help repair and maintain the buildings, but the
anticipated contributions fell through.  The Amanae
Foundation was not able to afford all of the expenses
and their mortgage payments, so the property went
through foreclosure in 2001 and went back to
Bob and Rox Hedges. 

Some time during the foreclosure proceedings,
Christine and Pat moved out and the place was
empty with a foreclosure sign at the bottom of the
driveway.  This condition and the rumors around the
Valley about the closure of Amanae, prompted two
unscrupulous Philo residents to drive up to the empty
buildings and steal as much property as they could
possibly take.  These thieves apparently stole seven
room heaters (worth about $1000 each), many light
fixtures, fire extinguishers, five new doors, and probably
much more.   Amanae filed an insurance claim for
the stolen goods, but the outcome is apparently
still unresolved.

**What do YOU remember about Amanae Foundation?
  We are trying to update and correct this history! 
Please contribute if you have any tidbits for our files...
  Click below to send an e-mail to us about your Bear
Wallow or Compost College memories:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project

Frogwood Lodge Retreat Center

When the Hedges put the property back on the
market (for the fourth time) in the spring of 2002,
Bob lowered the price again, hoping to finally unload
the deteriorating resort for good this time. 

Bob Hedges put a for sale sign up over the old "Amanae Foundation" sign left by Christine Day et. al. after foreclosure in 2001.

By then, retreat centers were in high demand in California, and
several interested parties looked at the property with
hopes of finding the right place to build their dream
retreat, educational center, or healing center, etc.  
The run-down condition of the buildings and the water
system surely discouraged many would-be buyers, until
the current family of owners came along and discovered
the dusty jewel.
   
On March 16, 2002 the stage was set for what is now
Frogwood Lodge Retreat Center, when we paid our first
visit to the ailing Bear Wallow (and noticed several
beautiful frogs during our walk around the property).



Clearly the site was very run down, but the unique (grandfathered) commercial use permit, ten-building infrastructure, excellent privacy, gushing spring water, and healthy redwood/fir/madrone forest made the place a prized jewel, despite its condition. 

      
We continue to improve the buildings and grounds to make
Frogwood more usable and more comfortable. The current
focus is on renting the facility to groups of up to 60 people,
and we also rent single cabins to individuals, couples,
families, small groups, etc.

We are developing our focus on stewardship of the land, facilities rental, healing work, creative work, and activism. A strong
community of stewards and visionaries is evolving
around the project, as we try to build a successful
business and contribute to the Anderson Valley and to
the world with high-powered galactivism.


**What do YOU remember about Bear Wallow,
Quest, Amanae, or Frogwood? 

We are trying to update and correct this history! 
Please contribute if you have any stories for our files... 
Click below to send an e-mail to us about your memories
or testimonials:

Send Email to the Frogwood Historical Project

 

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Frogwood Lodge Retreat Center
The legacy of Anderson Valley history continues...
22201 Mountian View Rd
P.O. Box 12 Boonville, CA 95415