Tuesday, December 22, 2015

The Carmel River Notch

The Carmel River Notch was first put in after the 1995 flood.  The notch is at a section of the river where the bed narrows. It allows for water to spill through the levy and into a flood plain.

From KSBW

Carmel River Flood 1998



The lower Carmel River has overflowed its banks numerous times throughout history causing extensive flooding of businesses and homes. For example, storms in 1995, 1997 and 1998 caused millions of dollars in flood damage to the mouth of Carmel Valley, and in 1995 destroyed the State Highway One Bridge at the Carmel River, causing a closure of the highway at that location for six months and cutting off access to and from Big Sur.

From: Big Sur Land Trust

Monday, November 23, 2015

The Carmel River ran its new course as the San Clemente dam finally came down

"The engineering involved rerouting and reconstructing the Carmel River and creating dozens of pools for Steelhead to spawn and mature. Natural barriers have also been constructed to stem the flow of water during flooding and native vegetation has been planted to restore the area to its natural setting."

From KSBW

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Ponciano's Cabin

"This is Ponciano Manjares' Cabin during the 1960's on the ridge that bears his name."
From: San Clemente Rancho

Friday, November 13, 2015

Fermín de Francisco Lasuén de Arasqueta

Fermín de Francisco Lasuén de Arasqueta continued the work begun by Saint Junipero Serra, establishing 9 more missions, bringing the total to 18. He died at Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo on July 26, 1803.

“Here are aborigines whom we are teaching to be men, people of vicious and ferocious habits who know no law but force, no superior but their own free will, and no reason but their own caprice. A people without education, without government, religion or respect for authority, and they shamelessly pursue without restraint whatever their brutal appetites suggest to them. Their inclination to lewdness and theft is on par with their love for the mountains. Such is the character of the men we are to correct and whose crimes we must punish" 
Picture From: Pandisoo

Thursday, November 12, 2015

The Carmel and the San Clemente Converge Sooner


The Carmel River and San Clemente Creek confluence used to be at the dam, but a new channel has been carved, so the Carmel and the San Clemente converge sooner.
"Without the natural habitat being restored, and all of the step pools being restored, we're not going to be able to have a natural functioning river."
From KSBW

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Mission Santa Cruz was founded by Serra's successor, Father Fermín Francisco de Lasuén


Vandals splashed red paint across the front door of the Mission Santa Cruz, one of 21 Spanish Franciscan missions stretching from Sonoma to San Diego. The mission wasn’t founded by Serra but by his successor, Father Fermín Francisco de Lasuén.The attack is the fourth incident of vandalism on Serra-related buildings and statues along the Central Coast.

From LA Times 
Picture from: breibart

Monday, November 2, 2015

Rain Along the Carmel River on Monday

Fueling this storm system is "polar air" coming from the Gulf of Alaska and a narrow atmospheric river, resulting in snow and "heavy showers."
Picture by: David Royal

Mission Grapes


Friday, October 30, 2015

The current order requires Cal Am to cut pumping from the river by about two-thirds



Monterey Peninsula water officials expect to publicly release a final proposal for extending the deadline for pumping cutbacks on the Carmel River by four years.
The proposal calls for Cal Am to secure a desal project permit from the state Public Utilities Commission by September 2017, start construction on the desal plant or the groundwater replenishment project by September 2018, and begin providing a new water source by the end of 2020.
The current order requires Cal Am to cut pumping from the river by about two-thirds by the end of next year

From: Monterey Herald 
Photo from: Yelp

Friday, October 16, 2015

The statue of Saint Serra at Lower Presidio Park in Monterey has been decapitated



Just more than two weeks after the Junipero Serra statue at the Carmel Mission was toppled and defaced, the Serra statue at Lower Presidio Park in Monterey has been decapitated. 
Picture by @davidmschmalz

From MC Weekly

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Rancho Cañada

Rancho Cañada Golf Club is comprised of two 18-hole courses that weaves back and forth across the Carmel River.
This estate was once a prized portion of the 4,366 acre California Rancho named, "Cañada de la Segunda."
The proposed Carmel Valley Rancho Cañada development  is heavily scaled back from the original vision: Instead of 281 housing units there will only be 130.

From: MPGolf
From: MCWeekly

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Western Houndstongue: Cynoglossum Grande


Houndstongue is a perennial herb that is native to California.

Picture from: Mama Quail

Friday, October 2, 2015

Mass graves dot the California missionary system


Today, mass graves filled with Native peoples dot the California missionary system. Tens of thousands died while the missions were in operation. Within 100 years of Serra's arrival, the indigenous population had been decimated from over 300,000 to 16,000. And the man at the helm was made a Saint
From: Huffington Post

Carmel Valley Hills Restoration Project


In 1984, restoration of eight miles of river was scheduled to be completed by MPWMD within ten years. In 1992 and 1993, the restoration of the Valley Hills reach was completed and has since been irrigated.
After re-contouring of the site and the planting of cottonwoods, willows, alders, and dogwoods, a total of 4.10 acres of riparian vegetation exist, showing a 185% increase in riparian vegetation in this reach.

From: http://www.mpwmd.dst.ca.us/MapGallery/Valley%20Hills%20copy.jpg 
Picture from: robin purcell

Thursday, October 1, 2015

The Pope conducted the canonisation in front of 25,000 people


Pope Francis has made a controversial Spanish missionary a saint in an elaborate ceremony that inspired mass devotion as well as protests branding the new saint a persecutor of Native Americans.

The Pope conducted the canonisation in front of 25,000 people in the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.

Junípero sought to defend the dignity of the native community, to protect it from those who had mistreated and abused it,” he said.“Having given mature deliberation and having begged the help of divine grace, and the opinion of many of our brothers, blessed Junípero Serra, we discern and define to be a saint, and we inscribe him in the catalogue of saints, establishing him in the universal church among the saints who should be appealed to with devotion.”

Serra oversaw the whipping, beating, flogging and extermination of Native Americans in what is now California.

From: The Guardian

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Ambystoma Californiense: California Tiger Salamander

The California tiger salamander (Ambystoma californiense) is a large, stocky, terrestrial salamander with a broad, rounded snout and gorgeous black-and-yellow body.
These amphibians are restricted to vernal pools and seasonal ponds in grassland and oak savannah communities in central California. The primary cause of their decline is the loss and fragmentation of habitat through human activities and encroachment of nonnative predators. 

From: Center for Biological Diversity
Picture from: Kueda

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

"Saint of Genocide"


The Carmel Mission was vandalized days after Junipero Serra's canonization by Pope Francis.  The vandals splashed paint throughout the cemetery and basilica and scrawled "Saint of Genocide" on a headstone.
The Spanish missionary arrived in what would become California in 1769 and established nine missions between San Diego and San Francisco. He viewed the indigenous tribes as heathens who desperately needed the Gospel, and baptized thousands of Native Americans.

From: LA Times
Picture from KSBW

Friday, September 25, 2015

Malacothamnus palmeri: Carmel Valley Bush Mallow


Malacothamnus palmeri: Carmel Valley Bush Mallow is a native shrub that is included in the CNPS Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants.

From: CalFlora
 

Relic of Saint Junipero Serra


First Class Relic that contains a piece of bone from Saint Junipero Serra at Carmel Mission

Photo by Vern Fisher

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Anniella pulchra nigra: Black Legless Lizard


This form of Anniella from the coast of Monterey Bay in Monterey County was formerly recognized as the subspecies Anniella pulchra nigra - Black Legless Lizard, but it is actually just a melanistic form of Anniella pulchra.

From: CA Herps

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

An astoundingly diverse array of indigenous cultures

 When Spanish soldiers and missionaries arrived in the land they called Alta California in the 1700s, they were entering an astoundingly diverse array of indigenous cultures' homelands. Then deadly waves of epidemic diseases swept over the terrified indigenous populations — an outcome the Spanish had anticipated.

Military and religious officials subsequently used a combination of bribes and physical force to incarcerate the survivors in filthy, disease-ridden, and crowded labor camps. By 1836, at least 100,000 aboriginal people had died as a result of the Spanish mission system.
From: East Bay Express

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Tassajara Fire off Cachagua Road


"North section of the Tassajara Fire off Cachagua Road. The fire was holding at 1086 acres."
By Vern Fisher - Monterey Herald

The Highest Honor in the Catholic Church — Sainthood


"The Carmel Mission will be the site of celebration and silent protest tomorrow as the revered and reviled Father Junipero Serra, the man who built the California Mission system, will be bestowed the highest honor in the Catholic Church — sainthood — by Pope Francis. He will be the first Hispanic-American saint."
From Monterey Herald

Artemisia douglasiana: California Mugwort


  Artemisia douglasiana was named after a Scottish botanist.  The Scottish botanist was named David Douglas (1798-1834) who made many trips to the Americas.  He identified many California species of plants.
From: SFSU

Monday, September 21, 2015

Laureles Fire Contained

"The Laureles Fire was reported about 3:30pm on Saturday and within hours about 160 firefighters were battling 100 acres. The garages of two homes in the Corral de Tierra neighborhood were nearly destroyed, but the houses were not burned. By Sunday evening the blaze was 100 percent contained and the fire was no longer active."

From Monterey County Weekly

Father Serra thought he was ministering to people of equal dignity


Father Serra advocated continuously, closely, and at great risk for himself, for the Indians against the Spanish military,” says Gregory Orfalea, an instructor at Santa Barbara’s Westmont College "Unlike the Pilgrims in New England," who considered Native Americans subhuman, Serra “thought he was ministering to people of equal dignity"
From Washington Post

Laureles & Tassajara Fires 2015


Picture from: Melendez Salinas

Friday, September 18, 2015

Mountain Lion attacks on humans are rare


According to California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (CDFW) website, “Mountain Lion attacks on humans are rare. There have been only 16 verified attacks in California since 1890, six of them fatal."

Picture from: San Clemente Rancho

Read more here: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/2015/06/10/3673568/mountain-lions-can-pose-a-danger.html#storylink=cpy

Lupinus Nanus: Sky Lupine in the hills above the Carmel Valley


Sky Lupine is an annual, growing as a fire-retardant ground cover in grasslands, from about January to June. The plant dies after seeding. Seeds germinate the following spring to once again cover the area in flowering plants.

From: http://www.moremesa.org/wordpress/sky-lupine/
Photo From: Rod M. Yeager, MD

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Carmel Valley Ranch


Billionaire John Pritzker of San Francisco acquired 500-acre Carmel Valley Ranch in 2009, a former pear orchard that had opened as a private golf club in 1981. Drawing on fond memories of summer camp that punctuated his childhood in Chicago as son of the founder of Hyatt Hotels, Pritzker quickly began sowing the seeds for a multimillion-dollar, largely nature-based transformation.
From: SFGate

Friday, August 28, 2015

The Renowned Jester of the Lord - Brother Juniper



Junípero Serra was born Miquel Josep Serra i Ferrer in Petra, Majorca an island in the kingdom of Spain in 1713. As a sixteen year old young man he entered the service of the Catholic Church and shortly thereafter the Order of St. Francis de Assisi where he acquired the name Junipero in honor of St. Juniper, beloved original companion friar of St. Francis.

The Servant of God, best known as Brother Juniper (Italian: Fra Ginepro) (died 1258), called "the renowned jester of the Lord," was one of the original followers of St. Francis of Assisi. Not much is known about Juniper before he joined the friars. In 1210, he was received into the Order of Friars Minor by St. Francis himself.

Finished With The San Clemente Dam


"Within California, 42 percent of the state's dams are privately owned, and more than half of the dams in the total registry (685 dams out of the 1,248 listed) are considered "high-hazard potential," meaning their failure could cause loss of human life."

From: CNBC
Picture from San Clemente Rancho

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Many historians regard the Spanish era as less calamitous for Indians than the openly genocidal American era



"Junípero Serra’s pious hope to convert pagan Indians into Catholic Spaniards resulted not only in the physical punishment of countless Indians, but in the death of tens of thousands of them—and, ultimately, in the eradication of their culture."

"But California Indians were doomed anyway. “If it were not the Spaniards who did this in conjunction with the church, it would have been the Russians or the British, and the same thing or worse would have happened,” he says. While this might be true—many historians regard the Spanish era as less calamitous for Indians than the Mexican era or, certainly, the openly genocidal American era—being the least awful of an awful lot is hardly a ringing endorsement for anything, let alone Sainthood."
From: San Francisco 
Picture from: http://www.sandiegohistory.org/journal/67july/serraimages.htm 
California Indians were doomed anyway. “If it were not the Spaniards who did this in conjunction with the church, it would have been the Russians or the British, and the same thing or worse would have happened,” he says. While this might be true—many historians regard the Spanish era as less calamitous for Indians than the Mexican era or, certainly, the openly genocidal American era—being the least awful of an awful lot is hardly a ringing endorsement for anything, let alone sainthood. - See more at: http://www.modernluxury.com/san-francisco/story/junipero-serras-missions-destroyed-entire-native-cultures-and-now-hes-going-be-s#sthash.6A5sl3WE.dpuf
California Indians were doomed anyway. “If it were not the Spaniards who did this in conjunction with the church, it would have been the Russians or the British, and the same thing or worse would have happened,” he says. While this might be true—many historians regard the Spanish era as less calamitous for Indians than the Mexican era or, certainly, the openly genocidal American era—being the least awful of an awful lot is hardly a ringing endorsement for anything, let alone sainthood. - See more at: http://www.modernluxury.com/san-francisco/story/junipero-serras-missions-destroyed-entire-native-cultures-and-now-hes-going-be-s#sthash.6A5sl3WE.dpuf
California Indians were doomed anyway. “If it were not the Spaniards who did this in conjunction with the church, it would have been the Russians or the British, and the same thing or worse would have happened,” he says. While this might be true—many historians regard the Spanish era as less calamitous for Indians than the Mexican era or, certainly, the openly genocidal American era—being the least awful of an awful lot is hardly a ringing endorsement for anything, let alone sainthood. - See more at: http://www.modernluxury.com/san-francisco/story/junipero-serras-missions-destroyed-entire-native-cultures-and-now-hes-going-be-s#sthash.6A5sl3WE.dpuf"