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News

County Water Resources staff updating lakebed structure database

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Water Resources Department reported that its staff will be on the lake over the next several months as part of working on updating the lakebed structure database.

Clear Lake shoreline residents should be aware that, as part of that work, agency staff will be verifying the size of piers and docks and their lakeward projection beyond a depth of zero Rumsey.

To accomplish this, county staff may take measurements on or around docks or piers.

The agency said it appreciates community members’ cooperation with this effort.

If you have any questions or desire more information, please call the Lake County Department of Water Resources at 707-263-2344.

Hikes, lectures and a naturalist course on Tuleyome’s roster of upcoming events

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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Although its two-day Wilderness First Aid course at Ecocamp Berryessa in Napa County is sold out, there are still a lot of opportunities for members of the public to get outdoors and learn about nature through Tuleyome’s upcoming events.

Sign-ups for Tuleyome’s first session of Certified California Naturalist classes will start on May 1. The course, which will make its debut in February 2018, will teach members of the public to become certified naturalists in the region. The registration portal has been opened early because of the interest and demand for the classes.

May 6 and 7 are the dates for the “Stars and S’mores” stargazing and camping event with Dr. Dan Phillips at EcoCamp Berryessa. Guests can bring their own tents or sleep in canvas houses at the camp. The cost for this event is $10 per person.

May 20 and 21 are the dates for the “Snow Mountain Camping Trip” event. Past trips have lead hikers to the summit of Snow Mountain, but time Tuleyome is offering the opportunity to explore the area north of Snow Mountain, an excursion that includes winding one’s way through pine forests, crossing mountain streams and witnessing beautiful meadows.

May 25 marks the date of the “Nature and You” lecture series presentation on “Prairies” with Dr. Glen Holstein who is currently the Chapter Botanist for the Sacramento Valley Chapter of the California Native Plant Society.

June 22 will be a lecture by representatives from the Folsom City Zoo Sanctuary. This zoo differs from traditional zoos and is more like a sanctuary in the way the animals are acquired and the care they receive. Live animals will be presented at this lecture, so Tuleyome asks that participants not wear anything with fur or feathers on it.

July 27 will be a lecture by the Yolo Wool Mill, “Local Yarns.” The Yolo Wool Mill is an outgrowth of the Wool Scouring Co-op and The New Franklin Society, and operates scouring, carding and spinning equipment on a small scale in Yolo County.

Tuleyome is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit conservation organization based in Woodland. For more information about these upcoming events and more, see their Web site at: http://tuleyome.org/events/ .

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Aguiar-Curry bill to promote renewable energy jobs passes in the face of utility opposition

SACRAMENTO – Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) passed AB 920 out of the Assembly Utilities and Energy Committee last week despite intense utility opposition.

AB 920 will maintain a place in the energy market for renewable resources such as geothermal, biomass, and biogas.

These resources provide high-paying jobs across California – particularly in Colusa, Lake, Yolo and Sonoma counties in her Fourth Assembly District – improve air quality, and help ensure our electricity supply is reliable.

Statewide goals to increase California’s reliance on renewable energy have been very successful in reducing overall greenhouse gas emissions, but have not successfully ensured that all renewable resources are properly valued for their economic, climate change, and air quality benefits.

“Geothermal and biomass energy facilities provide hundreds of vital jobs in the communities I represent where devastating levels of unemployment continue in the wake of the Great Recession,” said Aguiar-Curry. “Geothermal resources must be used or the facilities die. And, biomass facilities are critical to ensuring our forestry and agricultural waste is used for energy rather than emitting poisonous methane or fueling wildfires.”

Biomass and geothermal facilities contribute property taxes and royalties to local economies, in addition to being job creators.

Tax credits and tax exemptions for renewables like wind and solar, coupled with low labor costs, undercut the market.

As a result, over 75 percent of the renewable energy in California comes from wind and solar. AB 920 will help level the playing field so renewable resources that are economic drivers have a fair chance to complete for contracts.

“Wind and solar are important renewable resources, but they can’t be the only resources we rely on,” said Assemblymember Aguiar-Curry. “Energy coming from wind and solar varies with the weather and needs to be balanced reliable energy. We can do that with geothermal and biomass, or let utilities move to a permanent reliance on fossil fuels like coal and natural gas..”

AB 920 passed 11-0 in the Assembly Utilities and Energy Committee with Democrat coauthor Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) and Republican coauthor Brian Dahle (R-Bieber) voting Yes. AB 920 will move to the Assembly Natural Resources Committee where it will be heard next week.

Aguiar-Curry represents California’s Fourth Assembly District, which includes all of Lake and Napa counties, and parts of Yolo, Colusa, Solano, and Sonoma counties.

Visit her Web site at www.asm.ca.gov/aguiar-curry .

VIDEO: Acclaimed voice over artist shares anti-bullying message with students

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Students of the Lakeport Unified School District on Friday heard from a nationally acclaimed voice over artist and motivational speaker about the dangers of bullying.

Michael Pritchard gave talks to elementary, middle and high schoolers – as well as parents and faculty – during the Friday presentations at the Marge Alakszay Center.

Pritchard has done voice work for episodes of Star Wars and Sesame Street, and worked alongside Robin Williams, Jerry Seinfeld, Dana Carvey and Whoopi Goldberg, according to his Web site.

The Sheriff’s Activity League brought Pritchard and his message about being “brain wise and heart smart” and the importance of making wise decisions to the community’s young people.

During the presentation, students also had the chance to share their challenges – from bullying, on the Internet and in person, to the stresses and pressures they face in fulfilling their school obligations and getting into a college, and dealing with depression.

See Pritchard’s full presentation to the Clear Lake High School students in the video above.

This Week in History: The colorful stories of place names

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – This week in history features the story of the naming of American towns and how Thomas Jefferson, great statesman and imminent writer, was a horrible at it.

April 23, 1784

If you have spent any length of time driving through our beautiful country you will be amazed by the creative flair American pioneers used to name the dusty towns they settled.

Sometimes a name would embody the spirit in which the town was founded: New Era, Michigan; Inspiration, Arizona; Excel, Alabama.

Other times a famous man would lend his name to a town: Tolstoy, South Dakota; Napoleonville, Louisiana; Ringling, Oklahoma.

A favorite was to evoke the virtues of a past (or present) President, in a fit of patriotic zeal. President James Polk gave his name to towns and/or counties in Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas and Wisconsin.

At yet other times, since America has always been a country of immigrants we’ve peppered our nation’s atlas with the names of foreign towns: Paris, Texas; New Madrid, Missouri; Holland, Michigan.

Then there are those names that could only have been conceived in the spur of the moment. Ong’s Hat, New Jersey was supposedly so named for a dancer and ladies’ man, Jacob Ong, who regularly attended Saturday night dances with a shiny hat perfectly perched atop his head.

One evening he neglected to pay attention to a certain young woman who, frustrated at being spurned, grabbed Mr. Ong’s hat, threw it on the ground and stomped it out of shape.

Eighty Eight, Kentucky got its name because it is located 8.8 miles away from the county seat of Glasgow (another foreign town name, in case you’re keeping count).

Before you laugh, you should remember that our very own Middletown was so named, supposedly, because it was midway along the stage line between Calistoga and Lower Lake!

Perhaps the most desultory name in America goes to Why, Arizona. When asked why they chose that name for their town, the town elders exclaimed “because we couldn’t figure out why people would want to live here!”

There are names that came about because something was lost in translation. Embarrass, Wisconsin was named first by the French trappers who noticed that the stretch of river alongside which a town would later be built consistently trapped the logs that were floated down to sawmills.

Riviére Embarrassé, or “Tangled River,” the French called it and American settlers mangled it to “Embarrass,” for which we ought to be.

Worse than Embarrass, Wisconsin is Smackover, Arkansas. Seeing that the area around was covered in sumac shrubs, the French trappers and hunters from nearby Louisiana called the area Sumac-couvert, or “Sumac Covered.” If you say it quickly and often enough, it does start to sound like “Smackover” I suppose. Apparently we Americans don’t do well with French.

Perhaps the king of quirky naming goes to our third president, Thomas Jefferson.

Before most of these aforementioned towns were settled, indeed before most of these states were even founded, Thomas Jefferson had a chance to leave his mark on the country’s map. Thankfully for those people who now call the Midwest their home, Jefferson failed.

Behind this somewhat comical story lies a deeper and more important episode in American history. On this day in 1784, Congress enacted the Land Ordinance of 1784, a proposal drafted by Jefferson to divide the new land west of the Appalachian Mountains into 10 states.

Having just won their independence from Great Britain, the Americans found themselves with a mess of land that stretched deep into the continent (how deep, they did not yet know since Lewis and Clark’s expedition across this vast expanse was still two decades off).

Jefferson was a delegate of the state of Virginia and had fought for the past four years over the question of what to do with the land west of the original colonies. This was a major issue, with seven of the 13 colonies already claiming ownership of land west of the Appalachians (sometimes with overlapping borders).

In 1781 Virginia ceded its claim to the vast territory northwest of the Ohio River to the federal government, a move that ultimately made Maryland agree to sign the “Articles of Confederation” that year.

Now, after peace with Britain had finally been achieved, Jefferson was once more called on to take his pen and write up a document that people could stand behind.

This time, rather than a declaration of independence, he was to create an ordinance that would pave the way for new states to be created.

Jefferson and his proponents laid out a plan that, among other things, stated that none of the former 13 colonies should themselves create colonies of this land now or in the future but, rather, allow new areas to be divided for the creation of potential states.

This ordinance, and the ones that succeeded it, laid the foundation for the creation of additional states, each one distinct from the others.

As part of the ordinance, Jefferson also lent his considerable creativity to how the land ought to be divided and named.

Being as he was educated in the myths and history of ancient Greece and Rome, Jefferson proposed the new states of Metropotamia, Polypotamia, Sylvania, Chersonesus and six more besides.

Before you scoff, we should remember that the founding fathers were deeply affected by the ancient world, looking to the Roman Republic and the democracy of Athens as exemplars for their own budding state.

George Washington himself fashioned his public persona from the Roman figure of Cincinnatus (later the inspiration for the city of Cincinnati).

Cincinnatus was a man who rose to the highest level of power in the Roman Republic, saved the city of Rome from invading armies and spurned the position of dictator-for-life that he feasibly could have taken in favor of a quiet life back on his farm.

Sound familiar? It should, because there was as yet no term limits for a president and Washington could have feasibly continued in that high office to the rest of his days, but instead took his cue from that Roman hero and after two terms left office.

So, when Jefferson, in all seriousness, looked to the ancient past as inspiration for the new states, not everyone immediately shouted him down.

In the end Congress thanked Jefferson for the ordinance, and the idea of dividing the states, but turned down most of the proposed names. Eventually, however, some of the names did end up on America’s maps, but none of them were classically inspired.

I suppose we were not destined to have the great state of Metropotamia. The people of Wisconsin can let out a collective sigh of relief!
   
Antone Pierucci is the former curator of the Lake County Museum and a freelance writer whose work has been featured in such magazines as Archaeology and Wild West as well as regional California newspapers.

The Living Landscape: Knoxville Wildlife Area

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Knoxville Wildlife Area is another one of Lake County's marvelous wilderness lands that is worthy of investigation.

This 21,000 acre “park” is accessed via Lower Lake's Morgan Valley Road, and is just past the old Homestake Gold Mine.

Knoxville is actually a part of the 300,000 acre Blue Ridge/Berryessa Natural Area located in the counties of Lake, Napa, Colusa and Yolo. The rugged lands vary in elevation from 1,000 to around 2,200 feet.

The roads have taken a beating with the bounteous rains we've been experiencing, so be forewarned. Plans for parking lots are in the works.

Here is a place you can deeply claim epic views of expansive wilderness lands and wildflowers. If you are craving a getaway from the pinging sounds of electronic devices, here is where you can soak in some of nature's soundscapes – the running water in the subtle silver of the creek, and bird call melodies from the abundant avian species that are found here.

If you listen, and “turn on” your imagination you can garner the “daily news” from out-of-doors, fresh as sunburst from the winds.

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Here at Knoxville oak grasslands, oak woodlands, chaparral brush and more can be found. These lands are special in that they hold some of the few serpentine-soils habitats that are found in California, and are protected.

Serpentine is our state rock. The out-of-the ordinary serpentine soils are home to a great variety of songbirds and raptors, reptiles and amphibians, along with many mammals like black-tailed deer, bobcats, black bears, and more.

What's interesting is that due to serpentine's chemical make up, it is not conducive to hosting most plant species, but instead, rare and endemic plants are found here that are home to the area's own plants and insects.

Serpentine is a mineral, and can be made up of many hues. It may be yellow to black, but is usually green here in Lake County.

According to local geologist, Dean Enderlin, “The formation of serpentinite is a very complex process. Much has been (and is being) written about it in geology journals. Serpentine minerals form when unstable ultramafic minerals in the deeper parts of an ophiolite complex chemically react with sea water (they hydrate). To put this in layman's terms, millions of years ago Lake County was under the ocean- up to about the Sierra Nevada foothills. The land below this ocean underwent a great collision of earth's tectonic plates. This particular under-ocean movement, called subduction, caused the floor which was west of us to move toward us, and under us. This complex process created our unique serpentine-rich geology.”

Lake County's serpentine is so special that the University of California has been undertaking studies at our county's own McLaughlin Natural Reserve, which is next door to the Knoxville Wildlife Area.

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NASA scientist Dr. Jen Blank, PhD, Space Sciences and Astrobiology Division at NASA Ames Research Center, and Dr. Dawn Cardace, also with the NASA Ames team think that Lake County's serpentine formations are an analog to formations of serpentine on Mars.

With their Coast Range Ophiolite Microbial Observatory, or CROMO program, they have drilled wells on McLaughlin Reserve's lands to study microbial life which thrives in the high pH waters deep within the serpentine soil areas.

“Bi-products of the serpentinization reaction include reduced gases such as methane and hydrogen – these can be used as energy/food by chemotrophic bacteria,” said Dr. Blank. “Methanogens and sulfur reducing bacteria able to thrive on these gases can support other microbes in a subsurface environment – which may be a place to look for life on Mars.”

Our special serpentine soils hold a place in time and an extraordinary dimension in geologic terms.

Kathleen Scavone, M.A., is a retired educator, potter, writer and author of “Anderson Marsh State Historic Park: A Walking History, Prehistory, Flora, and Fauna Tour of a California State Park” and “Native Americans of Lake County.” She also writes for NASA and JPL as one of their “Solar System Ambassadors.” She was selected “Lake County Teacher of the Year, 1998-99” by the Lake County Office of Education, and chosen as one of 10 state finalists the same year by the California Department of Education.

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Community

  • Lake County Wine Alliance offers sponsor update; beneficiary applications open 

  • Mendocino National Forest announces seasonal hiring for upcoming field season

Public Safety

  • Lakeport Police logs: Thursday, Jan. 15

  • Lakeport Police logs: Wednesday, Jan. 14

Education

  • Woodland Community College receives maximum eight-year reaffirmation of accreditation from ACCJC

  • SNHU announces Fall 2025 President's List

Health

  • California ranks 24th in America’s Health Rankings Annual Report from United Health Foundation

  • Healthy blood donors especially vital during active flu season

Business

  • Two Lake County Mediacom employees earn company’s top service awards

  • Redwood Credit Union launches holiday gift and porch-to-pantry food drives

Obituaries

  • Rufino ‘Ray’ Pato

  • Patty Lee Smith

Opinion & Letters

  • The benefits of music for students

  • How to ease the burden of high electric bills

Veterans

  • CalVet and CSU Long Beach team up to improve data collection related to veteran suicides

  • A ‘Big Step Forward’ for Gulf War Veterans

Recreation

  • Wet weather trail closure in effect on Upper Lake Ranger District

  • Mendocino National Forest seeking public input on OHV grant applications

  • State Parks announces 2026 Anderson Marsh nature walk schedule 

  • BLM lifts seasonal fire restrictions in central California

Religion

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian to host Ash Wednesday service and Lenten dinner Feb. 18

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian Church to hold ‘Longest Night’ service Dec. 21

Arts & Life

  • Auditions announced for original musical ‘Even In Shadow’ set for March 21 and 28

  • ‘The Rip’ action heist; ‘Steal’ grounded in a crime thriller

Government & Politics

  • Lake County Democrats issue endorsements in local races for the June California Primary

  • County negotiates money-saving power purchase agreement

Legals

  • March 3 hearing on ordinance amending code for commercial cannabis uses

  • Feb. 12 public hearing on resolution to establish standards for agricultural roads

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