Tuesday, November 4, 2014

The Mudejar Star window


Founded in 1770, Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, the headquarters of the father-presidents, was the second mission of the chain.  The old mission features the Mudejar Star window, an example of an architectural style once popular in Spain. Mudejares were Muslims who lived in Spain after the 1200’s.

From: The Missions of the Monterey Bay Area by Emily Abbink, 1996
Picture from: What I Do

Friday, October 31, 2014

The Carmel River is flowing through a pipe


'"...The Carmel River is flowing through a pipe around the construction site. When crews clear out for the winter rains, they'll set the river loose along its new path.  Next year comes the fun part: taking down the San Clemente Dam."

From: The Monterey County Weekly
Picture from: San Clemente Rancho

Thursday, October 30, 2014

California Red-Legged Frog: Rana draytonii


"The dam removal will also restore the natural movement of sediment downstream toward the sea, replenish sand on Carmel Beach, and improve habitat for the California Red-Legged frog, the largest native frog in the western United States"

From National Geographic
Picture from flickr

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Cal Am has never had a silt management plan for San Clemente Dam nor the Los Padres Dam


"Cal Am purchased both dams and all other water facility assets in 1966.  Any responsible water agency will have either a silt management plan to extend dam usefulness, or a plan for supply replacement. Cal Am has never had a silt management plan for San Clemente Dam, and does not have such a plan for Los Padres Dam."

"Based on Cal Am's own numbers, the average bill for residents will at least double in 2018. Cal Am profits will rise from a current $13.8 million per year to $40 million in 2018. All the profits are going straight to Cal Am corporate headquarters in New Jersey."

From the Great Dam Robbery

Monday, October 27, 2014

The Chinese Dam

Cal Am settlement money will allow water managers to finally remove the obsolete Chinese Dam on the Carmel River.
 From: MC Weekly

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo

Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo
Picture from: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jasonevines/

Friday, September 19, 2014

Officials submit a confidential proposal to extend the deadline for complying with the cutback in pumping from the Carmel River


Monterey Peninsula officials have already submitted a confidential proposal to extend the approaching deadline for complying with the state-ordered cutback in pumping from the Carmel River set to take full effect at the end of 2016.
The cutback order would cost the Peninsula more than two-thirds of its water supply and an estimated $1 billion in economic activity.

From: The Monterey Herald 
Picture from: SFGate 

Monday, September 15, 2014

The Great White Shark (Carcharodon carcharias)


Lifeguards, researchers and boaters have made numerous sightings of great white sharks in Carmel Bay.
From: City on a Hill Press
Picture from: SFGate

Friday, September 12, 2014

Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus)


The Monarch Butterfly population has sharply declined since the 1990s, going from an estimated 1 billion in 1997 to 35 million in 2013

From: The Monterey Hearald 
Picture from: NatHab

Monday, September 8, 2014

2014 Drought: The Carmel River is no longer flowing out of the Ventana

Tuesday, August 26, 2014: The Carmel River is no longer flowing out of the Ventana Wilderness and into the Los Padres Dam reservoir.

The state Water Resources Control Board has ordered California American Water Co. to cut back 70 percent of its river pumping by December 2016.

From: http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/blogs/news_blog/drought-watch-carmel-river-goes-dry-above-los-padres-dam/article_17bc6adc-2d90-11e4-8c51-001a4bcf6878.html
Picture from: http://www.1hope.org/watersit.htm

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

1850 Baldwin & Co. Ten Dollars


On May 1, 1850, a notice appeared in the Pacific News of San Francisco: :BALDWIN & CO.
Successors to F. D. KOHLER &- CO.
.
Assayers, refiners, and coiners
Manufacturers of jewelry, etc. George C. Baldwin and Thos. S. Holman.
All kinds of engraving. Our coins redeemable on presentations

From: Coin Facts

Abalone shell necklace, Costanoan, 1806

Abalone shell necklace, Costanoan, 1806. This is one of several ceremonial items collected and illustrated by Georg von Langsdorff while visiting San Francisco on Russia's first voyage to California. Abalone pendants, clam disc beads, and fiber. Staatliches Museum für Völkerkunde, Munich.

http://www.pinterest.com/pin/426153183462145577/

The Crown of Spain 1770: King Charles III



 Charles III (20 January 1716 – 14 December 1788) was the King of Spain and the Spanish Indies from 1759 to 1788.
As king of Spain Charles III tried to rescue his empire from decay through far-reaching reforms such as weakening the Church and its monasteries, promoting science and university research, facilitating trade and commerce, modernizing agriculture and avoiding wars.

Mission San Carlos Borroméo de Carmelo was founded in 1770.

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_III_of_Spain

The Holman Ranch


Under the Crown of Spain, what is now called the Holman Ranch was part of the lands bestowed to the Mission San Carlos Borromeo del Rio Carmelo.
When the Mexican government secularized the mission lands, one of the first ranchers in Carmel Valley, Don Jose Manuel Boronda, was granted the Los Laureles Rancho—6,625 acres that included what is now .
Their ranch passed through many hands until the Pacific Improvements Company acquired it in 1882.
From: http://www.holmanranch.com/our_story/our_story.html
Picture from: http://carmelvalleyhistoricalsociety.org/

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

25-acre fire in a remote area in Carmel Valley


Fire crews are battling a 25-acre fire in a remote area in Carmel Valley. The vegetation fire started at 12:52 p.m. Wednesday burning about 5 acres of dry grass near the intersection of Robinson Canyon Road and San Clemente Trail. The fire spread fast as the wind blew the flames uphill past a ridge line

Picture from: @VFisher45
From:  http://www.montereyherald.com/localnews/ci_26330752/crews-battle-5-acre-fire-carmel-valley

San Clemente Creek


San Clemente Creek provides over 25 miles of essential spawning and rearing habitat for the threatened South-Central California Coast Steelhead.

From: http://www.sanclementedamremoval.org/?page_id=43

Blasting the Reroute Channel


Blasting the reroute channel for San Clemente Creek to bypass the San Clemente Dam on August 5, 2014.
From: San Clemente Rancho

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Carmel River August 4, 2014


Carmel River rocks covered with dried algae.


Black Rock Creek Dam


The fourth dam on the Carmel River, Black Rock Creek Dam, constructed in 1925 on Black Rock Creek, a tributary to the Carmel River, is used for recreational purposes.

The Waterfall is found in upper Black Rock Creek, which joins San Clemente Creek (the largest tributary to the Carmel River).


The Basin Complex Fire of 2008

"In Big Sur the Basin Complex Fire of 2008 continued to burn for another month, scorching 162,818 acres. After firefighters directed the fire into the still-burning area of an earlier blaze, the combined Basin-Indians Fire burned 240,000 acres, making it a contender for the state’s second-largest wildfire on record. Over 90 percent of the burn was within Los Padres National Forest’s unsettled and wild Ventana Wilderness."
From: Bay Nature

Northern California Lightning Siege of 2008


"Northern California Lightning Siege: Beginning June 20, 2008 and continuing into the early hours of June 21, severe thunderstorms swept across northern and central California. More than 6000 lightning strikes sparked over 2000 wildfires in 26 counties and eventually burned 1.2 million acres."

From: http://www.mrc.com/history_project/stories/MLC.htm
Picture from: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/28/california-lightning-storm_n_5628881.html

Big Sur Fire 1916

"Frantic efforts are being made to stem the huge forest fire which is spreading raidly toward the headwaters of the Carmel River and imperiling the Carmel watershed..." Monterey Daily Cypress September 5, 1916.
From: River in Ruin by Ray March, 2012.

Friday, August 8, 2014

The Cottonwood-Sycamore stands


Garland Ranch is home to a variety of landscapes that occur at elevations from 200 to 2,000 feet. From the willow covered banks of the Carmel River through the cottonwood-sycamore stands of the old floodplain, the trails ascend steeply. Atop the northern crest of the Santa Lucia Mountains, the trails encounter open oak savannas and spectacular vistas. Along the way, you will travel through maple-filled canyons, dense oak woodlands, and thick stands of chaparral.

From Inge's Blog: http://ingetraud.wordpress.com/2014/07/01/my-country-blog-hop/

California Idiomality Areas ca. 1800

California Idiomality Areas ca. 1800

43. Ohlone (San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, San Jose) dialects.
53. Rumsen dialects.
54. Mutsun (Humontwash) dialects.
55. Esselen language.
56. Chalon dialects
57. Teopthalap (Ennesen, Slinan) dialects.

From:Native Americans of California and Nevada by Jack Forbes, 1969.

Friday, August 1, 2014

Olivella beads

  "The rancho provided another means whereby Indian labor was integrated into the Hispano economy. Beginning in the 1780's soldiers and settlers were allowed to graze stock in the countryside, using Indian labor entirely. Title to the land always was retained by the Crown, and the ranch owner almost always lived in town, leaving his stock and crops in the hands of Indians working on a share-crop basis. Gradually the Indians became serfs similar to the economy of the Deep South."
From: Native Americans of California and Nevada, by Forbes, 1969.

Olivella beads abundant during the Protohistoric and Historic Periods in central California.
From: http://cla.calpoly.edu/~tljones/CA-MNT-1748H,%20Cultural%20Chronology.htm


Thursday, July 17, 2014

Rio del Carmelo 1835


"The earliest map we know for our stretch of coast is the diseño of Rancho San José y Sur Chiquito above. A diseño is a hand-drawn descriptive map that was submitted in an application for a Mexican land grant. Rancho San José y Sur Chiquito was first granted to Teodoro Gonzales in 1835."

From: Red Egg Gallery
Map from The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Coastal phytoplankton off the Central California coast

This copepod from Monterey Bay is less than one millimeter (1/32 inch) long.
“Traditionally, we picture a dense phytoplankton [microscopic algae] bloom near the surface, full of grazing copepods. Yet we’ve detected large numbers of copepods that appear to be feeding at the interface between the bloom and plumes of upwelled water,” said MBARI molecular ecologist Julio Harvey. “The copepods are at edges of the bloom, not just inside it.”

"Near-coastal retention of larvae affects the ecology of many marine species. In coastal upwelling ecosystems having strong offshore transport, larval ecology is greatly influenced by nearshore retention in bays and in the lee of headlands. Further, frontal dynamics along the periphery of retention zones can drive larval accumulation and transport. "

From: http://www.mbari.org/news/homepage/2012/esp-zooplankton/esp-zooplankton.html
From: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098114001361

Monday, June 30, 2014

With the dam removed, steelhead will gain unimpaired access to 25 miles of spawning and rearing habitats


Carmel River  Up from Hiding Camp
"Existing dams and river diversions have wiped out vital habitat, decimating fish populations and pushing numerous aquatic species to the brink of extinction. Reservoirs are silting up."

"The San Clemente Dam on the Carmel River, is coming down. It's the biggest dam removal project in the state, and it's on schedule. The river is being rerouted for half a mile, while the sediment behind the dam gets consolidated and secured. As the dam is dismantled piece by piece, the natural flow should be restored by October or November 2015.

With the dam removed, steelhead will gain unimpaired access to 25 miles of spawning and rearing habitats. Carmel Beach sand will be replenished, and the habitat for the red-legged frogs will be restored.

We are beginning to learn, if only the hard way, that it is wiser to adjust to nature than to conquer it."

From: Gone Tubin' http://www.mercurynews.com/my-town/ci_26034863/gone-tubin-undamming-carmel-river-is-cause-excitement
Picture from:https://www.flickr.com/photos/stblaize/ 
 

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

The first-ever Carmel River Festival and Feast 2013


The first-ever Carmel River Festival and Feast in Carmel Valley was organized to celebrate the start of the 92-year-old San Clemente Dam's removal.

The $84 million project to reroute the river and destroy the 106-foot-high dam is expected to take several years but restore 25 miles of spawning and rearing habitat for the steelhead trout, as well as improve the ecosystem along the waterway.

"It's a new age of restoration," festival organizer Jack Ellwanger said.
 From Monterey Herald

Carmel River Winter 2013

 

"Some of the local roads are closed due to flooding."
From October 2013: Life With Jessica

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Pine Valley

"Pine Valley is a quiet meadow, enclosing the river flanked by tall ponderosas. In its spring bloom the valley's center is field upon field of lupine, poppy, larkspur and mugwort.  There are two waterfalls less than a mile from Pine Valley, both known as Pine Falls."

From: River in Ruin by Ray March
Picture from: VWA

Our Lord's Candle: Hesperoyucca whipplei

Hesperoyucca whipplei is native to southwestern California and adjacent Baja, with a disjunct population near the Grand Canyon. When blooming the flower stalk is up to 10 feet tall, which is tall enough to stick up above the chaparral and a plant in bloom in quite noticeable. 

Friday, November 22, 2013

Under Spanish law, the Esselen were technically free men


"On May 9, 1775, Junípero Serra baptized what appears to be the first Esselen, Pach-hepas, who was the 40-year-old chief of the Excelen. The baptism took place in at Xasáuan, 10 leagues (about 26 miles ) southeast of the mission, in an area now named Cachagua, a close approximation of the Esselen name.

Under Spanish law, the Esselen were technically free men, but they could be compelled by force to labor without pay. More correctly, upon baptism they were considered to be part of a monastic order, subject to the rules of that order."
From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esselen_people

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Rescued and relocated 35,000 endangered trout in 2013


Due to drier than normal conditions, the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District initiated its annual Steelhead Rescue Program in the Carmel River in April, several months early.

 As of July 1, 2013 the program has rescued and relocated 35,000 of the endangered trout and will continue its efforts through the season as the Carmel River has dried back from the ocean almost 6 miles.

From: http://www.thecalifornian.com/article/20130712/NEWS01/307120031/35-000-steelhead-trout-rescued-from-rapidly-drying-Carmel-River?gcheck=1

Picture from: moldy chum

an additional 1,488 acre-feet per year


California American Water has been granted additional Carmel River water rights of up to 1,488 acre-feet per year by the State Water Resources Control Board earlier this month.

The real potential benefit  is allowing the company to alleviate demand on the north Marina desalinization plant at the core of the proposed Monterey Peninsula Water Supply Project.

From: http://www.montereyherald.com/news/ci_24373057/cal-am-granted-addition-carmel-river-water-rights
Picture from Marcia's

Carmel River State Beach


Each year, Carmel River State Beach builds up sand and severs the river from Monterey Bay. With nowhere to drain, the water from the river pools at the lagoon. It eventually breaks through the sand and flows into the ocean.

Public Works drains the lagoon by bulldozing part of the stretch of sand that blocks the river and the bay. That drain, however, and the fast-running water that sometimes ensues, can prematurely sweep juvenile steelhead out to sea.  

From: http://www.montereyherald.com/ci_22958452/monterey-county-looks-at-ways-reduce-flooding-at 
Art from: “The Lagoon at Carmel River Beach by Murray Wagnon

Friday, November 1, 2013

Drought of '76





"Cal-Am countered that river vegetation died off not because of overdrafting but because of the 1976-77 drought."
-River in Ruin by Ray March, 2012


"In November 1976,when this photo was taken, Carmel Valley was in the grip of an intense drought." 
 Picture from Schulte Restoration Project

John Steinbeck, Cannery Row


1945
The Carmel is a lovely little river. It isn't very long but in its course it has everything a river should have.
--John Steinbeck, Cannery Row

1603


1603
"A river of very good water but little depth, whose banks are well peopled with black poplars, very tall and smooth, and other trees of Castile and which descends from high white mountains."

-Sebastian Vizcaino, Carmel River's discoverer

Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood; also known as California poplar) is a deciduous broadleaf tree species native to western North America.  It has a Mitochondrial genome of 803,000 base pairs, and 52 genes.
From Wikipedia
Picture from Las Pilitas

Monday, October 21, 2013

Condor deaths from lead poisoning this year is unprecedented


A California Condor flies above Big Sur.

Condors, with splayed, finger-like wing tips and wingspans of up to 10 feet, were listed as a federally endangered species in 1967.  There are now about 60 birds and seven breeding pairs in the two flocks at Pinnacles National Park and Big Sur.

The birds cannot reproduce fast enough to make up for the numbers that are dying from lead poisoning. The birds, which can live as long as 60 years, do not begin breeding until they are 7 years old and then generally lay only a single egg every other year.

From: SF Gate

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Costanoan Shell Mounds date back to 3,500 BC

Burial mounds with artifacts and middens dating back to an estimated 3,500 BC exist in the greater Bay Area. The people of these mounds may have been the ancestors of the Costanoans, as the Spanish named the coast people.

The Costanoan linguistic group, comprised of eight separate languages spoken by 50 autonomous tribes (each with its own dialect), has been traced to 500 A.D.

Image: Bancroft Library (brk00001577_24a) by
Louis Choris, 1816
From FoundSF

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Early Spanish map


Early Spanish map of the Bay Area from the Presidio in Monterrey (sic) to Bodega Bay in the north. Note the Carmelo River flows into the Bahia de Monterrey.

"Exploration of the California coastline resumed after the Spanish conquest of the Philippines in 1565. Starting in 1566, Spanish vessels known as Manila Galleons carried trade between Mexico and the Philippines.
The voyage to the Philippines was a fairly direct one, while the journey back required the Manila Galleons to take advantage of currents across the north Pacific which ended in northern California."

From: FoundSF

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Pinus radiata: Monterey Pine


"The closed-cone Monterey Pine spread northward into California about 15 million years ago. By this time, Pinus radiata had already evolved into a distinct species that flourished throughout the Pleistocene. Not until a warm, dry period 4,000 to 8,000 years ago was driven to near extinction, surviving in the form of five small populations"

From: Understanding Evolution
Photo by Roger Gilbert

Friday, July 12, 2013

Carmel River Fishery Report for February 2013


During February 2013, Carmel River streamflow conditions were in decline the entire month, but were adequate for migration of juvenile and smolt stages of steelhead.
Adult steelhead migration conditions were impaired the entire month, with mean daily flows less than 61 cubic-feet per second.
At San Clemente Dam the first steelhead recorded over the counter was on December 5, 2012. Through the end of February there have been a total of 111 fish recorded passing the counter, 18 in December, 46 in January and 47 in February.

From: CRWC
Picture from: Trout Unlimited