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News

67th annual Redbud Parade and Festival takes place July 5

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 29 June 2025

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — The Lakeshore Lion’s Club of Clearlake is sponsoring its 67th annual Redbud Parade and Festival. 

The parade will start at Redbud Park at 11 a.m. on Saturday, July 5, and will proceed down Lakeshore Drive to Austin Park. 

The theme of this year’s parade is “Cruising the 50s.” 

This year’s Grand Marshall is Darrell Jarett who has served 45 years with Lakeshore and Lake County Fire. 

The event will feature local marchers, marching bands, decorated floats, vintage cars, parade and show horses, fire and police vehicles, and much more. 

The Lakeshore Lion’s Club also will sponsor the firework display at dark, so please stay and enjoy the day. 

The city of Clearlake will host a free concert showcasing Dylan Schneider at 7 p.m.

The Midway of Fun Carnival will be at Austin Park, pre-sale tickets are available at Clearlake Automotive, Bob’s Vacuum, Griffin’s Furniture, Kevin Ness Jewelers, Elegant Touch and A+B Collision. For ticket information call 707-350-7100.

At Austin Park, the Lakeshore Lions and Lakeshore Lioness will feature cold drinks and beer. Also, for your pleasure there will be food, arts and craft vendors, games and entertainment for all. The Clearlake Chamber of Commerce will sponsor the International Worm Races.

This is the largest fundraiser for the Lakeshore Lions Club, and attendees can show community spirit and support by helping them raise money for all the many causes Lakeshore Lions Club aids in the community. 

The club supports vision care for the needy, high school sports, sober graduation, scholarships and many other school activities, as well as fire and police departments, the Clearlake Senior Center, Meals on Wheels, South Shore Little League, and many very notable causes.

Anyone who wishes to enter the parade can pick up an entry form at the Clearlake Chamber of Commerce office, Bob’s Vacuum, Clearlake Automotive, and Kevin Ness Jewelers. All Arts and Craft vendors interested in booths, please call Nan Shields at Bob’s Vacuum at 707-994-9752. 

To gather all the information you need for the parade, please call Alvaro Valencia at 707-350-7100.

Helping Paws: Many new puppies and dogs

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 29 June 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control has a big group of new puppies and adult dogs needing homes.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Chihuahua, German shepherd, husky, Labrador Retriever, pit bull terrier, Pomeranian, terrier and shepherd.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those animals shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 

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Space News: How do scientists calculate the probability that an asteroid could hit Earth?

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Written by: Toshi Hirabayashi, Georgia Institute of Technology
Published: 29 June 2025

NASA’s Webb telescope captured a photo of the asteroid 2024 YR4 from afar. European Space Agency via AP

I was preparing for my early morning class back in January 2025 when I received a notice regarding an asteroid called 2024 YR4. It said the probability it could hit Earth was unusually high.

As defending Earth from unexpected intruders such as asteroids is part of my expertise, I immediately started receiving questions from my students and colleagues about what was happening.

When scientists spot an asteroid whose trajectory might take it close to Earth, they monitor it frequently and calculate the probability that it might collide with our planet. As they receive more observational data, they get a better picture of what could happen.

Just having more data points early doesn’t make scientists’ predictions better. They need to keep following the asteroid as it moves through space to better understand its trajectory.

Reflecting on the incident a few months later, I wondered whether there might have been a better way for scientists to communicate about the risk with the public. We got accurate information, but as the questions I heard indicated, it wasn’t always enough to understand what it actually means.

Numbers change every day

The 2024 YR24 asteroid has a diameter of about 196 feet (60 meters) – equivalent to approximately a 15-story building in length.

At the time of the announcement in January, the asteroid’s impact probability was reported to exceed 1%. The impact probability describes how likely a hazardous asteroid is to hit Earth. For example, if the impact probability is 1%, it means that in 1 of 100 cases, it hits Earth. One in 100 is kind of rare, but still too close for comfort if you’re talking about the odds of a collision that could devastate Earth.

Over time, though, further observations and analyses revealed an almost-zero chance of this asteroid colliding with Earth.

After the initial notice in January, the impact probability continuously increased up to 3.1% on Feb. 18, but dropped to 1.5% on Feb. 19. Then, the impact probability continuously went down, until it hit 0.004% on Feb. 24. As of June 15, it now has an impact probability of less than 0.0000081%.

A diagram showing the orbit paths of Earth, 2024 YR4 and some other planets in the solar system. 2024 YR4's orbit intersects with Earth's.
The orbit of 2024 YR4 will take it close to Earth, but scientists have found the chance of a collision to be exceedingly low. NASA/JPL

But while the probability of hitting Earth went down, the probability of the asteroid hitting the Moon started increasing. It went up to 1.7% on Feb. 24. As of April 2, it is 3.8%.

If it hits the Moon, some ejected materials from this collision could reach the Earth. However, these materials would burn away when they enter the Earth’s thick atmosphere.

Impact probability

To see whether an approaching object could hit Earth, researchers find out what an asteroid’s orbit looks like using a technique called astrometry. This technique can accurately determine an object’s orbit, down to only a few kilometers of uncertainty. But astrometry needs accurate observational data taken for a long time.

If an asteroid might get close to Earth, astronomers take observational data to better track the object’s path and eliminate uncertainty.

Any uncertainty in the calculation of the object’s orbit causes variations in the predicted solution. Instead of one precise orbit, the calculation usually gives scientists a cloud of its possible orbits. The ellipse enclosing these locations is called an error ellipse.

The impact probability describes how many orbital predictions in this ellipse hit the Earth.

Without enough observational data, the orbital uncertainty is high, so the ellipse tends to be large. In a large ellipse, there’s a higher chance that the ellipse “accidentally” includes Earth – even if the center is off the planet. So, even if an asteroid ultimately won’t hit Earth, its error ellipse might still include the planet before scientists collect enough data to narrow down the uncertainty.

As the level of uncertainty goes down, the ellipse shrinks. So, when Earth is inside a small error ellipse, the impact probability may become higher than when it’s inside a large error ellipse. Once the error ellipse shrinks enough that it no longer includes Earth, the impact probability goes down significantly. That’s what happened to 2024 YR4.

A diagram showing impact probability on the y axis and time on the x axis, with three drawings of the Earth and an error ellipse. As time goes on, the ellipse shrinks and in the third drawing it isn't overlapping with the Earth.
As the error ellipse shrinks, the chance of the asteroid hitting Earth either goes down or goes way up, if it ends up overlapping with the Earth. Toshi Hirabayashi

The impact probability is a single, practical value offering meaningful insight into an impact threat. However, just using the impact probability without any context may not provide meaningful guidelines to the public, as we saw with 2024 YR4.

Holding on and waiting for more data to refine a collision prediction, or introducing new metrics for assessing impacts on Earth, are alternative courses of action to provide people with better guidelines for future threats before adding confusion and fear.The Conversation

Toshi Hirabayashi, Associate Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Redbud Audubon Society celebrates grebes, drones and student education at Clear Lake 

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 28 June 2025
Grebes swimming in the wetlands area near the Reclamation area in Upper Lake. Photo courtesy of Redbud Audubon Society.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Redbud Audubon Society is using the proceeds of a grant to continue its study of grebes on Clear Lake.

Redbud Audubon received an Audubon in Action Grant from the National Audubon Society in 2024. 

The grant was used to purchase drones, batteries and four pairs of binoculars to begin the process of a Western and Clark’s Grebe monitoring project, which includes a collaboration between high school students, teachers, Pacific Union College, administrators from Upper Lake High School and Lower Lake High Schools, and tribal environmental groups.

Pacific Union College adjunct professor Dr. Scott Butterfield, Pacific Union’s Dr. Floyd Hayes and associate professor, Aime Wyrick-Brownsworth and project coordinator Donna Mackiewicz, president of Redbud Audubon Society are spear-heading the monitoring project.

The plan is for the next five years to develop and test drone and AI-based methods to monitor grebes and the health of Clear Lake with the goal to develop a sustainable monitoring and research program that lives within Lake County's high schools and tribal environmental group curriculums.

The field trip to the Reclamation area near Upper Lake. Photo courtesy of Redbud Audubon Society.

High school and tribal students will work with Dr. Butterfield and Pacific Union students from project design to data collection and analysis to publication, exploring all parts of the scientific process as part of this project.

Recently Dr. Butterfield and Mackiewicz engaged more than 250 students in classroom presentations culminating in a field trip with Robert Keen's Upper Lake High School science students to the reclamation ponds and Rodman Slough, one of the 37 colony sites and a stronghold for grebes at Clear Lake. 

Students learned about the differences between Western and Clark's grebes, about their mating behaviors — including rushing, when grebes run on top of the water to impress potential mates — and the efforts of PUC and Audubon scientists to protect and grow the grebe populations at Clear Lake. 

The project plans to launch into classrooms and on to the lake next year if funding is available.

“The students are excited, and we are looking at many avenues: before and after clubs, in-school clubs, Civic volunteer hours and classroom curriculum meeting standards,” said Mackiewicz.

Students from Robert Keen's Upper Lake High School science class. Photo courtesy of Redbud Audubon Society.
  1. Officials offer boat ramp safety tips for summer on the lake
  2. Thompson, California Members of Congress urge House appropriators to reject funding cuts for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  3. Space News: Astronomy has a major data problem – simulating realistic images of the sky can help train algorithms
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