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www.sonomamag.com winter 2008 sonoma 1 Piloting a straw-bale house Heidi Porch flies 747s, but home is where her heart is STORY CAROLE KELLEHER PHOTOS ROBBI PENGELLY H < ABODE > eidi Porch flies Boeing 747s to Tokyo for a living, drives a wine tour tram for Benziger when she’s not in the air, and once parked a Cessna in the open Pacific a few hours shy of Hawaii. But that’s just work. Where Heidi lives is her life, in an innovative straw-bale home so comforting it’s like a warm hug when she walks through her front door. The door itself is old, wooden, and wonderful and when it opens Heidi sees a wall of windows framing a majestic view of Sugarloaf Mountain. That’s just how Heidi planned it. She walked her five- acre property, wedged between Sonoma Mountain and the Mayacamas, until she found the exact scene she wanted to welcome her home. Standing in a spot with the mountain straight ahead, she turned to her builder and said, “Put the door right here.” That’s Heidi. She is warm, kind, and almost soft-spoken. Seeing her relaxed in her living room, it’s a stretch to envision this fair, 5-foot 4-inch woman with fine, blondish hair at the controls of a massive jet, some 400 passengers’ lives in her hands. But dig just a little and you hit bedrock, the inner Heidi, a master at being in control. When she was a young woman, just starting out as a commercial pilot and delivering a Cessna plane from California to New Zealand, the engine seized and she was

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Page 1: Sonoma Magazine

www.sonomamag.com winter 2008 sonoma 1

Piloting a straw-bale

houseHeidi Porch flies 747s, but home

is where her heart is

story CAroLE KELLEHEr pHotos roBBI pENGELLy

H

< a b o d e >

eidi Porch flies Boeing 747s to Tokyo for a living, drives a wine tour tram for Benziger when she’s not in the air, and once parked a Cessna in the open Pacific a few hours shy of Hawaii.

But that’s just work. Where Heidi lives is her life, in an innovative straw-bale home so comforting it’s like a warm hug when she walks through her front door.

The door itself is old, wooden, and wonderful and when it opens Heidi sees a wall of windows framing a majestic view of Sugarloaf Mountain. That’s just how Heidi planned it. She walked her five-acre property, wedged between Sonoma Mountain and the Mayacamas, until she found the exact scene she wanted to

welcome her home. Standing in a spot with the mountain straight ahead, she turned to her builder and said, “Put the door right here.”

That’s Heidi. She is warm, kind, and almost soft-spoken. Seeing her relaxed in her living room, it’s a stretch to envision this fair, 5-foot 4-inch woman with fine, blondish hair at the controls of a massive jet, some 400 passengers’ lives in her hands. But dig just a little and you hit bedrock, the inner Heidi, a master at being in control.

When she was a young woman, just starting out as a commercial pilot and delivering a Cessna plane from California to New Zealand, the engine seized and she was

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Straw-bale walls allow numerous niches, including the traditional “truth window” that

exposes the home’s building material.

< a b o d e >

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< a b o d e >

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The living room has a Rumford fireplace, designed to throw heat into the room.

www.sonomamag.com winter 2008 sonoma 4

< a b o d e >

forced to ditch into the Pacific Ocean, 540 miles outside Honolulu. She knew to open the door before she ditched, got herself and a life raft out, stayed in the inflatable for nine hours in 30-foot seas, was scooped out of the water by a Russian freighter, then transferred to an American ship and brought to Pearl Harbor 28 hours after she crashed. She had only a bruise on her arm and a ceramic dish, a gift from the Cold War Russians, as evidence of her ordeal.

In the media blitz that followed, she answered many newscasters’ questions, even appearing on Good Morning America, and was as gracious and unflappable as a public relations professional. In every interview she got in her personal message —“I will definitely fly again. I want to be a pilot for a commercial airline.” She has now been flying for a major carrier for 24 years.

She’s a woman who knows just where she wants her doorway, even though it does not face the street, as entries most always do. And she’s not the type who frets about what faucet to choose. She has the unique, rustic-styled faucets she conjured in her imagination custom-made at Sonoma Forge to her specifications. Everything in her beautiful home is just how she destined it to be, and she loves it.

She bought the land in 1997 and wanted to eventually build a home with what she calls “an old California feeling.” She was still living in Minnesota then, and when she visited Sonoma before her home was built she often stayed at the upstairs inn at Ramekins Culinary School. She greatly admired the rammed-earth construction of that building and decided that was what she wanted for her home. It turned out building with rammed earth was pricier than she expected. A little more research taught her straw-bale construction was more economical while giving her the earthy look she longed for. Heidi says straw bale costs about 20 percent more

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Doorways and window sills reveal the 35-inch-wide walls that provide superb insulation and interior silence.

< a b o d e >

than standard construction, but it’s so environmentally efficient the expense can be made up by reduced energy bills over the long term.

It embarrasses Heidi to admit that environmental consciousness was not her motivator when she chose straw bale. She just liked how it looked. Once on board, though, she was quick to go green, using radiant floor heating and choosing recycled wooden doors from Mexico that she ordered from Sonoma Salsa. The floors are reclaimed heart pine that she was told was once the sub-floor in a Midwestern Sears, Roebuck warehouse.

It was the summer of 2001 when Heidi sold her Minnesota home, moved into a 30-foot trailer she parked on her property, and hired John Swearingen. Swearingen owns Skillful Builders and is a luminary in the straw-bale construction world. He

Page 6: Sonoma Magazine

Your community asset.As a district hospital, Sonoma Valley Hospital is solely the property

of you, our local residents, many of whom are employed here and

many more who have been patients over the 50+ years of our

existence. Together, we continue to ensure quality, close-to-home care

while making steady advances in our technology and service offerings.

Some examples:

• Our new Siemens 64-Slice CT Scanner is the most advanced

imaging technology available today, offering sharper images and

lower radiation exposure than was ever possible before. It is being

put to good use by the 70 radiology specialists of our Sonoma

Diagnostic Center.

• A new SVH Diagnostic Imaging Annex at the Carolyn J. Stone

Center for Women’s Health and Wellness will open late this

year at 246 Perkins Street. The site will house the new digital

mammography and bone density equipment that was purchased

with donated funds via the efforts of the SVH Foundation.

• Our Occupational Health program serves numerous local

workplaces with convenient, cost-effective, one-stop care.

• Our Home Care Service is Sonoma Valley’s largest and busiest,

deeply appreciated by thousands of patients who depend on its

high-quality, compassionate care.

347 Andrieux Street • Sonoma, CA 95476

707-935-5000 • www.svh.com

Your health.

Your hospital.

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Heidi’s open-walled kitchen

allows her to cook while

visiting with guests.

< a b o d e >

set up shop in an Airstream, and the neighbors began whispering about the funky settlement taking shape. Swearingen is a Buddhist, and he sponsored Tibetan workers, several of them monks, to come to Kenwood and build Heidi’s house. When the prayer flags went up, the whispering grew louder but the karma was sublime.

Heidi had three concerns about straw- bale construction—fire, strength, and bugs—but learned all were unfounded. The bales are packed very densely and then covered with plaster so they’re impervious to fire and extremely strong. “Burning the bales would be like trying to light a log with a match,” Heidi says, “The fire department loves this kind of construction.” There is also very little oxygen in the walls because they’re so densely packed and plaster-sealed, which makes a very inhospitable environment for bugs. Besides, straw has so little nutrient value bugs don’t like it much. As it was explained to Heidi, “You feed hay to the animals and you put straw on the barn floor.”

Her home is 2,300 square feet with two bedrooms, two baths, an office, and an expansive, open-walled space with kitchen, living and dining areas. Heidi loves to entertain, and this allows her to be with her guests when she’s cooking. There is plenty of room for friends to gather around the large centrally placed island between the three rooms.

The perimeter of the house contains 540 bales of rice straw that weigh 65 pounds apiece, are about 35 inches wide, and are covered with two layers of plaster. Linseed oil is added to the plaster to protect it against moisture. The interior walls are standard wooden stick framing.

“I likenaturalthings. Wood. Glass.... I like simple.”

Page 8: Sonoma Magazine

Call 707.938.2111 to order or subscribe.

Single issues are available for puchase for $6.95 each, or $50 for a set of all eight

issues (through Fall 2008). You can also order reprints of additional material, including

photos not included in the print edition.

WINTER 2006Premier issue

Sebastiani’s new generationChristmas with the Nugents

Jock McDonaldTime & Place: SVMA

WINTER 2007Of art and olives

Blending the gift of godsFamily art and gypsy magic

The genius of junkSkin art

SPRING 2007Lasseter Love

Suzanne BranghamSonoma Valley Film Festival

Feast of the OliveThe face of chocolate

SPRING 2008In search of the Springs

Bruce CohnMartini Madness

AbsintheChester Arnold

SUMMER 2007Car country

The Wilson familyGeneral Vallejo

Sonoma Valley picnicsQuarryhill Botanical Garden

SUMMER 2008The wine issue

150 years of Gun Bun funChateau St.Jean’s Margo

Wine toys9½ rules for making wine

the magazine.the true story of wine country.

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Now available for $4.95/ea at:

Easy Stop Market925 BroadwaySonoma Valley Visitors Bureau453 First Street EastSeason’s of SonomaSonoma Girlie Stuff124 West Napa StreetCharles Creek Tasting Room483 First Street WestBookends Book Store201 West Napa Streetthe fi g pantry E. Napa St. and 8th St. East

Readers Books130 East Napa StreetCarneros Deli23001 Arnold DriveBonneau’s 7623003 Arnold DriveESPACE Cafe135 w. Napa Street, Ste. 100Sonoma Market 500 W. Napa StreetGlen Ellen Village Market 13751 Arnold DrivePlaza Liquors19 West Napa Street

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Page 9: Sonoma Magazine

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A wine closet holds 30 cases in

temperature-controlled,

wood-framed style.

< a b o d e >

The straw bales create an almost silent interior space and allow for interesting niches and window depths that are not possible with standard framing. Heidi went through the inside of the house with a can of spray paint, marking where she wanted niches cut in the straw. There is one on the side of the front door where she placed a kindergarten-style clay mold of her handprint. On the other side of the door is a straw-bale tradition called a “truth window”—a small wooden shrine with doors that open to reveal the straw inside the wall.

The living room has a Rumford fireplace, specially designed to throw heat into the room and surrounded with Connecticut blue stone. In the dining room there is an exquisite glass-doored wine closet with display racks built to hold 30 cases of wine. A longtime wine enthusiast, Heidi became friendly with the folks at Imagery Estate winery when she went there to pick up her wine club shipments. They thought she would be perfect in the tasting room and offered her a part-time job. After a couple of years at Imagery they asked her to do the

tram tours at the Benziger family’s flagship winery.

“I guess they figured if I could fly a 747 I ought to be able to drive a tractor,” she laughs, and goes on to rave about the Benzigers and their commitment to biodynamics. “They are so passionate about what they do there it’s infectious.”

Their passion appeals to her because she is equally intense about everything she does. Whether the subject is flying, wine-tasting, or her home, Heidi’s words come directly from the heart, and you sense that if she doesn’t really feel it she won’t bother to say it.

“I like natural things. Wood. Glass. I don’t like clutter and I don’t like too much color because you can get tired of colors. I like simple,” Heidi says. She describes herself as a spiritual person who doesn’t practice any particular religion. Experience the peace in her home, her calm demeanor, and her strong sense of who she is, and you quickly conclude the monks really did work their magic.

The straw bales encompass her. She lives in the moment. S

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Broaden your palate.™

The cure forSauvignon Blah

Imagery Estate Winery makes 16 different

limited production wines from 19 different grape varietals.

Exceptional wines labeled with original pieces of art you won’t find anywhere else — just 12 minutes from downtown Sonoma.

Open daily 10 am – 4:30 pm . Fri & Sat 10 am – 5 pm14335 Highway 12, Glen Ellen, CA 95442707-935-4500 . www.imagerywinery.com

©20

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