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Recreation

CDFW warns of continued fraudulent license sales operations

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Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Published: 22 August 2020
If you are in the market for a California fishing or hunting license (or any related products, such as hunting tags), please ensure that you are making your purchase from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife or an approved vendor.

Several unauthorized online websites are continuing to improperly charge customers extra fees for online fishing and hunting license purchases, and may be collecting sensitive personal information as part of their unauthorized transactions.

California hunting and fishing licenses may properly be purchased in only one of four ways:

– Online through CDFW’s Automated License Data System (ALDS);
– Over the telephone through CDFW’s authorized Telephone Sales agent at (800) 565-1458;
– Through a CDFW license sales office; or
– Through an independent license sales agent authorized by CDFW (such as a local sporting goods store, large discount store, or a bait and tackle shop).

Because CDFW’s license sales offices and some independent license sales agent offices have been temporarily closed to help slow the spread of COVID-19, there has been a surge in online sales over the summer months.

Unscrupulous website operators and scammers are taking advantage of increased virtual traffic, and the public should take extra precautions to ensure they do not fall victim to a scam.

Since June 2019, six websites offering unauthorized license sales have been taken down at CDFW’s behest, and an additional two websites are in the process of being disabled.

The ALDS, which is CDFW’s exclusive means of online license sales, was launched in 2011. ALDS can be accessed via CDFW’s website or by clicking the link that is frequently provided in official communications from the department.

When making an online purchase, please check the URL of the site you are visiting to ensure you are on the official CDFW website or the ALDS website.

These are the only CDFW-affiliated links for hunting and fishing license sales.

Unofficial websites may attempt to represent CDFW and/or contain information about hunting and fishing licenses, and Internet search engines may not always list the official CDFW website as the top result.

Please be cautious when providing personal information to any website. While authorized purchases made through independent license sales agents and ALDS are subject to an additional 5 percent handling fee, the fraudulent sales websites offer products for sale with “shipping and handling fees” that are much higher than 5 percent of the base purchase price.

To date, it appears that the fraudulent activity has been limited to charging customers unauthorized fees. Licenses that have been mailed to customers after unauthorized transactions may be valid; however, CDFW cannot guarantee that this is or will be true in all cases.

If you believe you may have been defrauded by an unauthorized website or would like to check the validity of a previous purchase, please provide us with information about your experience at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

California fires force closure of CDFW properties

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Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Published: 21 August 2020
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is temporarily closing some of its public lands in response to multiple active fires in Colusa, Lake, Lassen, Merced, Monterey, Napa, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Sierra, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties.

The closures will help ensure safety and accommodate the needs of fire crews.

The updated list of CDFW land closures can be found here.

The lands listed on the closures page will be closed to all public access and activities including hunting until further notice.

Due to the uncertain nature of the fires and potential damage to state lands, it is unknown when these areas will reopen to the public.

Knight, Cox, Portlock near clean sweeps at Lakeport Speedway

Details
Written by: Nadine Strauss
Published: 17 August 2020
Richard Knight (#15) leads while Robert Schmidt (#37) fades and Darrin Knight (#20) gains position in the NCRA modified main event at the Lakeport Speedway in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, August 15, 2020. Photo by Russell Bishop.


LAKEPORT, Calif. – It was a hot night at the Lakeport Speedway Saturday, not only in temperature, but in racing action for Darrin Knight of Kelseyville (NCRA Modifieds), Donovan Cox of Kelseyville (Taco Bell Bombers), and Ron Portlock of Ukiah (AAA Energy Solutions Pro-4 Modifieds) as each of these competitors had a near clean sweep in their respective classes.

Knight, who claimed his car was running badly all day, first took home the hardware in the modified trophy dash, went on to win the heat race, and led all but seven laps in the 30-lap Anderson Logging-sponsored feature event.

It was Knight’s first appearance at Lakeport this season. The only thing Knight did not lay claim to was the quickest lap in time trials. That honor went to NCRA points leader Mike Sullivan with his 12.845-second fast lap.

The modified main event saw Richard Knight and Robert Schmidt start in the first row with Darrin Knight and Ian Elliott in row two. Richard Knight forged ahead at the start. As Schmidt lost ground, Darrin Knight moved into second place followed by Jeremy Nowlin and Donovan Cox.

Darrin Knight accepts his trophy from NCRA officials Johnny Miskill and Matt Briggs at the Lakeport Speedway in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, August 15, 2020. Photo by Russell Bishop.

Darrin Knight pulled alongside Richard Knight on lap seven, and just as the cars were entering turn two, Richard Knight’s rear-end drifted high making slight contact with Darrin Knight’s car. The impact was just hard enough to send Richard Knight’s car into a spin in front of the tight pack.

All cars made it through, but before the race could get going again, Donovan Cox (doing double duty in both a modified and bomber) drove into the pits with an electrical problem. Cox’s crew worked under the hood for several minutes but could not get the car back on the track.

This put Nowlin next to Darrin Knight for the restart where they ran side-by-side for two laps before Darrin Knight pulled ahead. Nowlin dropped back on the outside allowing Sullivan and Elliott to gain position. Richard Knight pulled into the pits on lap 22, and at the checkered flag, it was Darrin Knight, Sullivan, Elliott, Nowlin and Schmidt. Cox was the recipient of the Mark and Sharon Baldwin Hoosier tire give-away.

In Taco Bell Bomber action it was Mike Collins who set a new bomber track record of 14.020 and kept Cox from having a perfect night. Cox had previously won the trophy dash and fast heat race.

Donovan Cox wins his second season victory in the Taco Bell Bomber class at the Lakeport Speedway in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, August 15, 2020. Photo by Russell Bishop.

Seth Chew stole the lead away from pole setter Amber Portlock at the drop of the green flag in the bomber 30 lapper with both Klinton Waite and Cox moving into second and third by lap four. Cox motored by Waite on lap five, but Collins was on a mission, passing both Waite and Cox on lap six and driving by Chew for the lead the following round.

Collins began to lap the back-runners on lap 16, but two circuits later his car slowed and headed to the pits with a broken rear-end. After a brief clean-up, the action was back underway with Cox pulling away from Waite, Clew, Jim Kollenborn and Trevor Abella.

Kasey Horat spun on the final lap, and as the cars scattered to get around him, Cox was first to cross the finish line. Kollenborn beat Waite by inches to claim second place, Waite was third followed by Abella and Chew. Chew was the other heat race winner.

A good field of seven Pro-4 Modifieds was reduced to only two by main event time. The heat was brutal on these four-cylinder cars, and engine problems side-lined Andy Leuzinger, Chris Straka, Mike Peterson and Wil Robertson’s cars. Then in the heat race, Anthony Gorrin lost control of the Johnny Barker’s #14 and drove the car hard into the turn three concrete wall.

Pete Graham (left) from the Graham 55 Foundation honors Ron Portlock with his Pro-4 Modified win at the Lakeport Speedway in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, August 15, 2020. Photo by Russell Bishop.

So after winning the trophy dash and heat race, Ron Portlock held off James Gard to score the main event victory. Robertson turned the quickest lap in time trials at 13.228.

Pete Graham of the Graham 55 Foundation donated $500 to the Pro-four drivers and made sure all seven went home with money in pocket. The Pro-4 Modifieds will take next week off to regroup but will return on Sept. 12.

The start of the Bandolero class saw 10-year-old Courtney Portlock of Lucerne race against 6-year-old Braydon White of Kelseyville. Courtney came in first in both the trophy dash and the main event. She gave one of her trophies to Braydon for sharing in her fun.

Racing resumes Saturday night, Aug. 22, with the NCRA Modifieds, The Taco Bell Bombers, the Legends Cars, the Late Models and the 4-Bangers.

Then on Sept. 12, the North State Modified Series will begin its four-race NSMS fall schedule beginning at Lakeport Speedway. Health regulations dictate still no spectators in the grandstands.

NCRA races at Lakeport Speedway are presented by Anderson Logging, Sullivan Const Masonry, Napa Lake Parts, Taco Bell, D&P Pools, Hillside Powersports, Clearlake Redi-Mix, Snap-On Tools, S&K Paving & Striping, O’Reilly Auto Parts, Lucerne Roofing, S & K Automotive, Under the Sun Garden Supply, Perkins Septic Tanks, Lake County Tribal Health, Don Anderson Attorney At Law, Coleman’s Custom Vinyl, Lake County Welders, Kelseyville Lions, Mike Sullivan Consulting, Lake Co. Waste Solutions, Gifford Backhoe Service and Majestic Landscaping.

Courtney Portlock climbs out of her Bandolero after her first race to celebrate her win at the Lakeport Speedway in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, August 15, 2020. Photo by Russell Bishop.

California Outdoors: Why no elk in the San Gabriel Mountains?

Details
Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Published: 16 August 2020
Why no elk in the San Gabriel Mountains?

Question:
Why aren't there any elk in the San Gabriel Mountains? Has there ever been any discussion of starting a herd there? There is plenty of land, with 970 square miles of space. The San Gabriels are home to bighorn sheep, deer, bear and mountain lions. There are also elk in Tehachapi and the Tejon Ranch, which are not too far away. (Brent)

Answer: Elk are not native to the San Gabriel Mountains, likely because the climate and resources there cannot support large-bodied ungulates. The San Gabriel range tends to be both steep and dry – conditions that are better suited for desert bighorn sheep.

Historically, tule elk (a subspecies of elk native only to California) ranged from Shasta County in the northern portion of the state down to the Tehachapi Mountains in Southern California, occupying the entire Central Valley from the Sierra Nevada foothills in the east to the coast in the west.

Tule elk are uniquely adapted to the Mediterranean climate that the Central Valley and Coastal Mountain ranges provide. The elk population in the Tejon Hills and Tehachapis are the Rocky Mountain subspecies, introduced to Tejon Ranch from Yellowstone National Park in the 1960s.

Though it is possible for the Rocky Mountain elk at Tejon to naturally expand into the San Gabriels in the future, man-made barriers like freeways, fencing and agriculture land-use have so far limited that migration.

Additionally, climate change may further decrease the suitability of the San Gabriels to support elk in the future, even if elk found their way over.

CDFW currently does not have plans to start any new elk herds. Doing so would be a huge undertaking that would require a feasibility study, extensive public outreach and buy-in, and environmental documents.

The good news about California elk is this: our elk populations are robust and we think most of them are stable or increasing in number and distribution.

What about moose – or elk – in the Sierra?

Question: I read the recent column about California's lone wolverine, which is a very interesting tale. It got me wondering, why aren't there any moose or elk in the Sierra? I know that there are elk elsewhere in the state, but at some point in history one would think that a herd of moose or elk would have migrated into the area. (Bill)

Answer: Moose evolved in much cooler climates in boreal forests and other subarctic habitats. Generally, habitats and climates in the Sierra and elsewhere in California are not well-suited for moose.

We do occasionally get reports of elk in the Sierra, primarily bull elk. You might be interested in the story of a single Rocky Mountain elk's solo journey in the northern part of the state. This trailblazing elk traveled 40 miles in six weeks, ending up farther south in the Sierra than had previously been reported. He may have been in search of a mate or new territory.

Historical records don't really tell us about much elk activity in the Sierra, so they may not have been present there historically.

The western slope of the Sierra is close to historical range of tule elk, but they're generally a valley species that use flat lands and tules. The eastern Sierra are quite rugged and elk are built more for moving quickly across plains, rather than traversing rough mountainous terrain.

However, as elk populations continue to grow, and climate change alters suitability of valley habitats for elk, it is possible we may begin to see elk distributions change. CDFW is beginning a study to assess vulnerability of our elk populations to climate change, which will help us better conserve and manage elk populations throughout California.

Beach fishing with two poles

Question: I do a lot of fishing/crabbing off the beach in the San Francisco Bay Area. I've heard from my fellow anglers that you can have as many poles on the beach as long as you can manage them. Is this true? What's the rule on how many lines/poles you can have on the beach for one person? (Leslie)

Answer: Generally, an angler can use as many lines as they'd like while fishing in the ocean. However, there are exceptions - one of which definitely applies to your question if you're fishing inside the Bay. When fishing for finfish in the San Francisco Bay, only one line with no more than three hooks may be used, per California Code of Regulations (CCR) Title 14, section 28.65(a). Also, Dungeness crab may not be taken from or possessed if taken from San Francisco Bay (CCR Title 14, section 28.85(a)(1)).

As far as the number of lines an angler can use, the following rules apply statewide: 1) When fishing on a public pier, no more than two rods and lines, two hand lines, or two nets or traps or other fishing appliances may be used to take crabs (CCR Title 14, section 28.65(b)). 2) When fishing for, or in possession of, rockfish, lingcod, greenlings, Pacific halibut, white sturgeon or cabezon, only one line may be used (CCR Title 14, sections 28.65(c), 28.20(d)(1) and 27.90(d)). 3) Only one line may be used when fishing for, or in possession of, salmon north of Point Conception (CCR Title 14, section 28.65(e)).

If you have a question for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . While they cannot answer every question, they will answer a few in each column.
  1. CDFW urges big game hunters to plan ahead to validate tags
  2. NCRA auto racing returns to Lakeport Speedway Aug. 15 and 22
  3. CDFW reminds beach visitors of tidepool collection regulations
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