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July 2, 2026

Soaking the ST

Sobrato boys (4-0) and girls (3-1) rout MP

Mary Jane Dedini Gonzales

Mary Jane Dedini Gonzales died May 2, 2005, at her daughter

Home tour circuit

“This year we focused on the east hills of Gilroy. I think it’s not a very well-known part of town,” says Kelly Barbazette, member of Gilroy Assistance League (GALs), a nonprofit organization with 35 active members. This is Kelly’s fifth year working with GALs for their annual “Impressions” Home and Garden Tour.GALs raises money and awards grants each April to youth groups that apply. “A lot of these little groups couldn’t make it unless they get grants from different organizations,” says member Sherri Kennedy. “With this house tour, it’s supplemented the funds that we can bring in tremendously. So, it’s been fantastic. The members give up their time to get everything organized and we let the homeowners know a year in advance, so they can get  ready and prepare and do their thing.”The annual Home and Garden Tour is GALs largest fundraiser. Last month GALs grants totalling $21,000 were awarded to 13 organizations benefiting local youth.“GALs has actually transformed,” says Kennedy. “It used to be groups sponsoring the Children's Home Society, it was adoption services and everything. Then, years ago there were members of the group that said ‘look we’re not doing this much anymore, so let’s turn it just toward Gilroy and Gilroy youth’ and so all of that happened about the late ’80s and then I’ve been a member since early ’90s.”Three homes were shown in this year’s tour. One was the home of Dolores DeFrancesco. Built by Dolores and her late husband Al, the DeFrancesco’s 7,200-square-foot Mediterranean style home offers panoramic views atop 120 acres in East Gilroy. The home shows beautifully with granite and oak inlaid floors in the foyer, a substantial kitchen, limited edition hand-painted wash basins and toilets by Kohler and a whimsical rooster collection. The home also includes a 1,200-square-foot party room that Vicki Card says is “used for family, entertaining friends, she has a bible study group. She plays bridge—you’ll see her chairs are all covered with cards. Which is really cute.”“We've had many celebrations here,” says Mia Eaton, Delores DeFrancesco’s daughter and GALs volunteer. “We’ve had bridal showers, birthday parties. We love cooking and eating and feeding people.”Asked how long it took the DeFrancescos to build, Eaton says “we built it from the ground up. [Dolores] did all the floor plans and all the finishes, she didn’t have an interior designer, she did it.”The DeFrancesco home also features oak and cherry fixtures throughout and includes wood-wrapped beveled windows by Kolbe, which are especially flattering to the outside views, making each window appear like a painting.One might expect nothing less in the home of an artist, whose in-home studio is on the second floor. The 74-year-old Dolores DeFrancesco is an avid painter and much of her own art is featured throughout the home. On the property, she personally tends to a small vineyard and vegetable garden.Taking the tour through the home, Barbazette, the GALs member responsible for this year’s home descriptions, says that no home is featured twice. “What’s really unique about this tour is that all of the homes are really different, and what’s different this year is that we are ending at a winery. That’s where we have our home and garden boutique with all local artists.”The home of Dr. John and Rachel Perez was also featured in this year’s tour. Influenced by Southwest and Mediterranean architectural styles, this three-level home of 7,000 square feet is set on a stunning 10.5-acre property overlooking the South Valley. Decorated with works of Native American communities of the Hopi and Navajo as well as Mexican artisans, the Perez home shows like a museum with eye-catching, well-organized collections throughout. Each collection is as unique and colorful as the indigenous people it represents.Descending to the first floor of the home, one passes a grouping of Mexican mask folk art. Each mask is collected from a different state in Mexico. Their style and detail reflect the region the mask came from. For instance, masks from northwest Mexico tend toward primitive, plain designs, compared to the more colorful and detailed masks from central or southern parts of Mexico. Each mask is unique and signifies the ancient spiritual beliefs and traditions from where it came. Masks are traditionally used for religious ceremony and ritual dances. When worn, dancers are spiritually and psychologically transformed into deities or supernatural forces.“I think it's just lovely to see people’s homes and how they really just put their hearts into them. You could just see so much effort and thought. You could just imagine sitting out on the patios having your morning coffee,” says first-time home tour guest and Gilroy resident Jen Hagen.The Perezes put their own sweat into the home, says home tour volunteer Mia DeLorenzo “She stained all of the doors herself, and these beams here—she went ahead and routed them and the doctor installed them.”The Perezes continue to add new features, including a first-floor sauna now under construction, not far from their theater room, where the cornerstone of the property was first laid.“Everything is very personal and meaningful,” DeLorenzo adds, pointing to the collection of Mexican blue pottery and several lithographs of plains Indians trading with fur trappers. “The things mean so much to her and show their ethnic backgrounds, it just blows me away. She’s a very talented woman.”The pottery, El Palomar Blue Bird Butterfly, in the Perez collection is by El Palomar in Tonala, Jalisco. The Perezes visited the factory and purchased the set on a trip to Mexico in 1980. It’s the same pattern, but in green, that was gifted to President and Lady Bird Johnson by Mexico’s president in the 1960s.The tour has a team for each homesite, made up of current GALs members and honorary members—usually former GALs volunteers who return to help during the home tour.Tiffany Oetinger, chair for this year’s home tour has been with GALs for about five years. She explains how the teams come together. “We typically start actually crunching down and dialing in all of the details of it about January. As far as getting all of your team in place and your home captains and your logistics and your co-chair, that all starts at the end of this tour,” she says. “My co-chair, who's Margaret Demers, will be chair next year, so she's probably already reaching out to homeowners.”Each year, GALs fundraisers, including the Home and Garden Tour, help meet the needs of underserved youth in our community. This year’s tour concluded with a home and garden boutique at Miramar Vineyards, where attendees were invited to sample the vineyard’s wines, taste recipes from GALs cookbook and check out handmade art, jewelry and food items sold by local artisans and specialty food makers.“What’s good about this event is it’s not just a girl thing, it’s not just a guy thing,” Kennedy says. “This is to get men and women, young people, to come through and you can just see it, people love to go inside other people’s homes.”

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Best of Out & About, Jan. 20, 2017

Spend and elegant afternoon with golden bubbles and rich pearls at Fortino Winery Champagne and Caviar Pairing and feel like royalty for a day. Fortino’s will be showcasing its collection of crisp clean champagnes along with Kaluga and Paddlefish and other incredible caviar. The day will also include the sounds of jazz and lite rock from Angel Zelada on Saturday, Jan. 28 from 1 p.m. – 4 p.m. at 4525 Hecker Pass Hwy in Gilroy. Tickets are $50, $40 for members. For more information go to fortinowinery.com.GILROYTrail Work DayCalling all hikers, mountain bikers and horseback riders who appreciate great trails for a Trail Work Day at Henry Coe Park. Many of the budget-stressed parks, like Coe, rely on volunteers to help build new trails and keep old trails open. Arrive early and enjoy coffee and donuts before the work begins. Receive a voucher at orientation for free parking. Bring a lunch and water, sturdy footwear, layered clothing and gloves. Trial work will be done rain or shine on Saturday, Jan. 21 from 8:30 a.m.- 3 p.m. Meet at the Hunting Hollow Entrance on Gilroy Hot Springs Rd. Find a map and more information at coepark.net or contact Chere Bargar at (408) 683-2247.Paint NightCall a few friends or venture on your own to the Gilroy Library’s Paint Night for Adults and create your own masterpiece, step-by-step. All supplies provided. Open and free to all skill levels whether you want to brush up old skills or learn something new. Sign up at the upstairs information desk. Adults 18 and older can reserve a spot at this fun and friendly arts and crafts event on Wednesday, Jan. 25 from 6:30 p.m. – 8 p.m. on 350 West Sixth St. Call (408) 842-8207 or visit sccl.org/Gilroy.MONTEREYWhale of a TimeThis year celebrate the return of the Gray Whales at Whalefest Monterey and learn how to show the sea some love. Bring the kids and give them the gift of passion, love and respect for marine wildlife through a host of activities. Enjoy live entertainment, face painting, educational exhibits, historic walking tours, chalk art and much more during this two day festival on Saturday, Jan. 28 and Sunday, Jan. 29 from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. at the Old Fisherman’s Wharf and Custom House Plaza. For more information go to montereywharf.com.MORGAN HILLCrab FeedSupport a great cause and dive into Sobrato’s Ninth Annual FFA Crab Feed Dinner and enjoy unlimited food and fun, benefitting the FFA Boosters. Enjoy an all you can eat meal of marinated to perfection crab, salad, garlic bread, beverages and desserts. Participate in the Gourmet Dessert Auction, supported by local bakeries, and annual raffle on Saturday, Jan. 28, at 5 p.m. Gather in the Sobrato High School Gymnasium at 401 Burnett Ave. in Morgan Hill. Tickets are $50 for adults and $30 for 12 and under, ticket sales end on Jan. 21. Email [email protected] or call (408) 313-3952.Youth ConferenceAttend the Morgan Hill Values Youth Conference and take advantage of this free event to gather information on needed services for your child in the community. The conference is designed to help parents, grandparents, youth workers or anyone who has a positive impact on youth in Morgan Hill. The event includes a Youth Panel where youth can interact with high school age youth who will share experiences about living in Morgan Hill. Get a unique perspective of the community on Saturday, Jan. 21 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Community and Cultural Center on 17000 Monterey Rd. Register at mhyouthconference.com Fathers and DaughtersThe City of Morgan Hill Recreation and Community Services invites all Fathers to it’s first ever Father Daughter Dinner Dance. If Dad is not available, Grandfathers, Uncles or any other Father Figure is welcome. Little girls love to dance so spend a special evening with your little one, age 4 to 11, and enjoy a delicious dinner and then dance the evening away on Saturday, Jan. 28 from 5:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.at the Community and Cultural Center on 17000 Monterey Rd. Tickets range from $27 to $37. Register today with code WSY006 at mhreconline.com or visit morgan-hill.ca.gov.WATSONVILLEFairy TalesJoin Little Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, Granny, and others as they travel Into the Woods. This humorous tale combines several well-known fairy tales with an original story of a childless baker and his wife, who begin by trying to reverse a curse on their family in order to have a child. The story sends a message that our actions have consequences and may not result in a favorable outcome. Performances are Saturday, Jan. 28, at 7:00 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 29, at 2:00 p.m. in the Hawks’ Nest Theater on 445 Summit Rd. in Watsonville. Reserved seats for $16 for adults and $11 for kids at brownpapertickets.com. Visit MountMadonnaSchool.org.THE VALLEYNew Year SymphonyWelcome in the New Year’s Something New Fancy Free, with Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Kevin Put's widely acclaimed orchestral works with Mayuko Kamio, winner of the 2007 Tchaikovsky competition, Dmitry Kabalevsky’s lyrical concerto and Lukas Foss’s tribute to musical America. End the evening Bernstein's concert suite from his 1944 ballet Fancy Free on Saturday, Jan. 21 or Sunday Jan. 22 at the California Theater on 345 South First Street in San Jose. For tickets go to symphonysiliconvalley.org.

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