Recreation
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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Local hunter education courses are planned this month and early in 2014.
The first course, in Clearlake, will take place at the American Legion, 14770 Austin Road, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 7-9 and 9 a.m. to noon Oct. 12.
A course will take place in Lakeport 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 6-8, and 9 a.m. to noon Jan. 11, 2014. The classes will be held at Lakeport Fire, 445 N. Main St.
Online courses also are available at www.Hunter-Ed.com , www.HUNTERcourse.com and http://homestudy.ihea.com/ .
The online course in itself will not get you a valid hunter education certificate. Once you have completed one of the above online courses, you will still need to attend a four hour followup home study/online class with a certified hunter education instructor.
Access is permitted to the home study and online four hour followup class only after a student has completed the written home study or online component of the class.
The followup class for the online course will take place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jan. 18, 2014, at the Clearlake American Legion Hall.
Call Mike at 707-263-1044 to sign up for the classes listed above.
For more information, visit the California Department of Fish and Wildlife Web site's hunter ed course page, http://www.dfg.ca.gov/huntered/classes.aspx .
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MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The next contra dance will be held this Saturday, Oct. 5, at Armstrong Hall (home of Lake County Jazzercise) in Middletown.
This dance will be led by Michael Fynan. The live, old-time fiddle music will be provided by The Cobb Stompers.
Contra dancing is a great low pressure and fun way to socialize. If you are unfamiliar with contra dancing, it is somewhat similar to square dancing, but less formal. There is no fancy footwork that you have to learn or memorize; you are led through each dance by the caller.
Because it’s a social dance, you don’t need to arrive with a partner; in fact, most people don’t. When you dance, you dance with a partner, but you also have many neighbors that you dance with too. At the end of a dance, you say goodbye to your partner and get another one.
Armstrong Hall is located at 15642 Armstrong St. in Middletown, two blocks behind the post office.
The event begins with easier dances at 7 p.m. and gently progresses to more challenging figures until 9:30 p.m.
Admission is $5 at the door.
Please wear shoes that won’t harm the hardwood floor and bring your own water bottle.
For more information, contact Beth Rudiger, 707-260-2900 or
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HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – The HVL Men’s Niners Golf Club held a stroke-play tournament on Sept. 26.
The results were:
- First flight – Joe Vallee took first with a net score of 32. Don Herndon was second at 33. Dave Mann and Bill Kyle tied for third at 34.
- Second flight – Randy Brown and Mike Casolo tied for the top spot with the lowest scores of the day, 30. Ron Clark, Al Burrows and Jim Brown tied for third with 33.
- Third flight – Sam DeBone was first with 31. Doug Carter, Jerry Tamura, Ed Carver, and Dick Kistner tied for second with 32.
Closest to the par 3 pins were Tom Marshall and Sam DeBone.
Ned Munger scored the only chip-in of the round.
Thirty-nine men participated in the day’s events.
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LOWER LAKE, Calif. – Monthly guided nature walks continue to be held at Anderson Marsh State Historic Park, followed by a tour of the Historic Ranch House Museum, on the second Saturday of each month.
The first walk of the fall season is scheduled for Saturday morning, Oct. 12.
Bring your binoculars and meet in front of the ranch house at 8:15 a.m. for time to experience the early morning wildlife to be found in the ranch house and barn complex yard. The walk begins at 8:30 a.m.
The ranch house tour will begin immediately after the walk. If rain cancels the walk, the ranch tour will begin at 8:30 a.m.
This month, the nature walk and tour will be led by park docents and AMIA Board Members Gae Henry and Henry Bornstein, who will share their passion and knowledge about the natural, cultural and historic resources found in the park.
The walk will start at the parking lot, go up into the blue oaks via the Ridge Trail, and then branch off and take the Marsh Trail, which goes around the Ridge and down to the marsh (mostly dry this time of year).
They will then cross the flats to the Cache Creek Trail, stopping at the deck on Cache Creek.
The walk returns to the ranch house via the boardwalk over the “oxbows” (again mostly dry this time of year). At a leisurely pace, the walk should take between two and two and a half hours.
The park at this time of year is beautiful. The colors of autumn at the park are wonderful shades of cream, yellow, brown and green – interspersed with the startling color of small yellow sunflowers, periwinkle chicory, white ground “morning glories” or the fluffy white airiness of California Milkweed seeds and many California Wild Rose “hips” – most are still a lovely red and a very attractive food for many birds and mammals.
Most of the blackberries are drying and shriveling up but they are still interesting to birds and wildlife. The wild grapes that grow are ripening, and bunches are hanging from vines in trees. Mistletoe berries are ripening too.
The fall bird migration is under way. Birds that walkers may see include a belted kingfisher looking for breakfast in the creek, acorn woodpeckers getting ready to store acorns in their “granary” trees, the first cedar waxwings arriving to dine on berries and grapes and perhaps a pair or two of phainopepla, birds of arid-mesquite land that are found in this park because of the abundance of mistletoe berries.
Also on hand may be red-shouldered hawk, red-tailed hawk and white-tailed kite. Often seen in Cache Creek are great egret, great blue heron and black-crowned night heron.
Anderson Marsh State Historic Park is located on Highway 53, between Lower Lake and Clearlake.
For more information about the walks, email
For information about how you can help support AMIA’s campaign to keep the park open to the public and available for events such as our monthly nature walks and ranch tours, visit www.andersonmarsh.org .
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