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The odd couple. |
You may remember seeing the three tikis in today's post at
Hobby City on the
Anaheim/Stanton border on Beach Blvd. Carved by
Milan Guanko, they graced the seashell store (later
Radical Reptiles) from about 1959 until sometime around 2007. Even renowned tiki hunter
Sven Kirsten hasn't been able to discover where they've gone. If you know, or have a possible clue to share, please leave a note in the comments section or send me an
email.
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He shouldn't have tried the chili. |
In 1955,
Jay DeArmond and his wife,
Bea, began turning an old chicken
ranch on Highway 39 into the colorful roadside curiosity they would
later name Hobby City. They chose the moniker "City" because
Orange
County already had a Farm (
Knott's) and a Land (
Disney). (Someday, I'll
finish a lengthy piece about Hobby City, but I'd like to chat with the
DeArmond's family first.)
In an Oct. 1, 1989 article,
Register
reporter
Dean Takahashi described the DeArmond family enterprise as
"perhaps Orange County's oldest living example of cluster retailing:
putting retailers of the same or similar goods together to multiply
their marketing power and attract customers who know what kind of item
they want to buy or want to compare prices. ...On their own, Hobby
City's stores -- such as Ansdell Piano, The Aquarium, The Bear Tree,
Rocks & Gems, Stamp and Coin, Century Models, and Me and JJ's
Miniatures -- would be outside the shopping limelight. But clustered
together, they have become a destination for tourists and hard-core
hobbyists."
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All three tikis were lightly painted at some point -- Clearly not an original feature. |
A number of the businesses were owned and operated by the DeArmonds
themselves, including a doll museum built to resemble the White House,
and the
“Treasure Cove” Seashell & Driftwood Shop, which opened in
1959. Treasure Cove catered not just to seashell collectors, but also to
the then-popular trend of decorating homes, patios and restaurants in nautical or
faux-Polynesian motifs.
In 1999, a young man named
Kevin
Dunn opened
Radical Reptiles in the old Treasure Cove building. He was
only 19 when Bea DeArmond first talked to him about opening a reptile
store and nature museum for children at Hobby City. The shop moved out
in the mid-2000s, when it seemed Hobby City was destined to be bulldozed
to make way for yet another damned condo complex. But the housing market
tanked, so while Radical Reptiles (and other shops) are now missing,
there are still no condos and Hobby City carries on. (See my earlier
posts:
1 and
2)
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The Radical Reptiles facade in 2006, with tikis barely visible on the left. |
A word about tiki carver
Milan Flores Guanko (1906-1994): He had a
carving shop at
Gray's Nursery further down Beach Blvd. in
Westminster. Guanko
learned to carve from his father in the Philippines before immigrating
to the U.S. in 1928. During WWII, he began carving full-time. His tikis
appeared at
Disneyland, the Western Hills Hotel, the
Royal Hawaiian Restaurant in
Laguna Beach, The Islands Restaurant in Phoenix, Ren
Clark’s Polynesian Village in Fort Worth, Texas, and many more
restaurants, hotels and apartments throughout the world. He died at age
87 in Glendale, where he’d moved his shop in later years.
Again, if
you know where these tikis ended up, or if you have other interesting
information or contacts re Hobby City's history, please send me
a note.
Greetings ! I drove by Hobby City last month only to discover they took down the giant tree and replaced it with just a regular building. I thought to myself "Somebody doesn't have a sense of humor or inner child" What has become of Hobby City ? Does anyone know ?
ReplyDeleteWhat was the 80s store called? It had star wars toys/gijoes and other 80s stuff.
ReplyDelete