
LAKEPORT, Calif. – When the Clear Lake High School varsity football team walks onto its home field to defend its Bass Bowl Trophy on Friday, Oct. 26, it will encounter more than just the Kelseyville football team; they will be looking down the barrel of a Civil War cannon.
For the second year in a row, there will be a Civil War cannon firing after every score at the SERVPRO Bass Bowl.
The Bass Bowl committee, through a cooperative effort with the California Historical Artillery Society (CHAS) will bring Civil War living history to Lake County for the SERVPRO Bass Bowl.
“We wanted to have a Civil War cannon at the Bass Bowl to commemorate the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, in addition to bringing more bang to the game,” Bass Bowl Executive Director Phil Smoley explained. “If you live within a mile of the stadium, you will hear the cannon.”
The Bass Bowl Committee provided 30 “man-days” of labor at Civil War Days in Duncans Mills last July, and in return, CHAS, the sponsors of Civil War Days, agreed to bring an artillery team to Lake County.
Besides historical reenactments, CHAS is involved with horse rescue. They use Standardbred trotters rescued from California's tracks and retrain them as artillery horses These horses now live on a lush 40-acre ranch in the Salinas Valley.
They presently use more than 30 horses that were destined for an unpleasant demise. These ex-trotter race horses, typically of no use to anyone, are discarded at auction by the pound. They are used exclusively by CHAS and given a second chance at life in the service of the “Army.” Horse enthusiasts can help support them by “sponsoring” a favorite horse and contributing toward its care.
The Bass Bowl committee puts on a series of fundraising events leading up to the game, and tries to increase attendance to the game itself. Net proceeds of these events are to be split between the two schools athletic departments.
“Funding for local sports programs is nearly non-existent,” according to Smoley. “Without strong local support, they will go away, and that would be a disaster. These events will go a long way to keep these schools athletic programs going.”