Wednesday, 27 November 2024

Community

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Republican Party of Lake County (RPLC) is hosting an ice cream social on Monday, Sept. 13, at the Cowpoke Café, located on Highway 29 in Middletown, beginning at 6 p.m.


This event is a campaign fundraiser for Karen Brooks, candidate for state Assembly, and Loren Hanks, candidate for U.S. Congress.


Ice cream and toppings are included for a campaign donation of $10 per person.


Both Brooks and Hanks will be in attendance to meet with you and discuss issues that are important to you.


For more information, contact the Republican Party of Lake County at 707-263-7811.

UPPER LAKE, Calif. – The Northshore Dive Team will hold a meeting this Friday, Sept. 10.


The meeting will be held beginning at 7 p.m. at Northshore Fire Protection District's Station 90 in Upper Lake.


Wear fire shirts or dive shirts for team pictures.


All interested personnel are encouraged to attend.


The training will follow.


The team, which operates through community donations, also is seeking help in updating its dive gear. Donations can be sent to the team at P.O. Box 61, Upper Lake, CA 95485.


For more information, call team leader Capt. John Rodriguez at 707-275-9007 or 707-349-3367, e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or visit the team's Facebook page at www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/pages/Upper-Lake-CA/Northshore-Dive-Team/289897949089?ref=ts.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The usual cornucopia of Lake County’s food harvest crests this time of year with the likes of tomatoes, cucumbers and squash.


A group of organic growers in the Kelseyville area, though, have expanded the variety of Lake County grown food crops and pushed the county’s locally consumed food production to new heights.


Full Moon Farm, Love Farm, Bio Farm and Leonardis Organics, some of Lake County’s newest and innovative organic growers, are offering a unique variety of some old favorites, such as Leonardis’ heirloom varieties of tomatoes that present themselves as Rembrandts in color, texture and flavor; Bio Farm’s cherry-sized tomato mix that blends Sun Gold, Sweet Million and Red Pear; and Love Farm’s Sun Gold, Red Cherry and Black Cherry medley, that add a sweet splash to any summer salad.


The long-enjoyed summer favorites of cucumbers, such as lemon, are offered by Full Moon Farm and Leonardis Organics, but these growers also grow distinctive cucumber varieties such as the Chinese Suyo Long, Italian Heirloom Tortarello Abruzzese, Striped Armenian and the Japanese Satsuki Midori, which reminds the connoisseur that cucumbers are part of the melon family.


Melon season is upon these growers, too.


Bio Farm features Charentais, a French heirloom that is smaller and sweeter than the American cantaloupe and considered to be the most flavorful in the world.


Full Moon Farm offers the succulent Bella Dulce melon and Eden’s Gem, a spicy, softball-sized heirloom melon. Heirloom varieties are a favorite of all these growers as they retain complex flavors over modern day varieties and contribute to biodiversity in our food crops. Full Moon Farm saves seeds from those plants that perform well in our climate, creating a future of varieties well-suited for Lake County soils and climate.


Along with spicing up the seasonal favorites, the growers are experimenting with great success other culinary delights such as Bio Farm’s Bintje and Pink Pearl potatoes, Full Moon Farm’s Inca Gold potatoes, and Love Farm’s Russian Fingerling potatoes.


Leonardis Organics offers several Italian varieties of eggplants, Italian sweet peppers, such as Nardellos and Ruffled Pimiento, and heirloom varieties of summer squash, including the smooth tasting and tender French Ronde de Nice, which grow in variegated green, round balls.


Love Farms is becoming well known for tender and sweet lettuces long beyond the normal growing season, and the melt-in-your-mouth, sweet and juicy peach varieties that Love has planted strategically to ripen over extended periods, lengthening their availability, are reaching their peak ripeness.


Leonardis features Genovese basil, the favored basil for pesto, as well as buttery edamame (fresh soy beans) and Blue Lake and Palermo green beans. Bio Farm has an early stock of winter squash and pumpkins ripening in their fields.


All of the farms are certified organic, save Love Farm which farms organically but is not certified, and all are working together to increase local variety, extend the growing season and to find the varieties that are most prolific in Lake County, while increasing availability to local food consumers and decreasing duplication of production.


Residents and visitors can enjoy the broad variety offered by these pioneering producers through a variety of local food venues such as the weekly farmers’ markets, the Lake County Community Co-op’s online ordering system, local retail stores and featured at local restaurants.


Farmers’ market locations include Kelseyville’s Steele Winery (Saturdays, 8:30 a.m. to noon through October), Lakeport’s Library Park (Wednesdays, 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.) and Clearlake’s Redbud Park (Fridays, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. through September).


On a weekly basis, residents can purchase from these producers through the Lake County Community Co-op’s (www.lakeco-op.org) newly released FOODS (facilitated online ordering and distribution system).


These farmers supply the co-op’s CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) boxes, and now, members of the Co-op can pick and choose from the weekly plentifulness of offerings by these producers and have the products delivered to any one of 10 convenient drop points throughout the county on Thursdays.


Local stores now carrying these producers are Nature's Food Center in Lakeport and the Market at Harbin Hot Springs. Local restaurants now featuring their products include the Saw Shop in Kelseyville, Zino’s Ristorante in Soda Bay, Twin Pines Manzanita Restaurant in Middletown, and the Blue Wing in Upper Lake.


These growers welcome visitors to their farms and most will prepare orders in advance of pick up. To contact the farmers directly:


Bio Farm – Judith and Leonard Diggs, 707-695-7705, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.;

Full Moon Farm – Doug and Sean Mooney, 707-245-5770, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.;

Leonardis Organics – Jim Leonardis, 707-483-4004, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.;

Love Farm – Teale Love 707-349-7880, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Chic Le Chef and Middletown Florist & Gifts will present “Halloween on the Silver Screen” from 7 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Oct. 30, at the Hidden Valley Lake Country Club.


The event will be an evening of delicious food and wine pairings, frightful black and white Halloween movies and a silent auction.


Costumes are encouraged and are required to be eligible for the fabulous door prizes.


Not only will it be a great time but it is for a good cause as well: a portion of the proceeds are to benefit Hospice Services of Lake County.


Remember: Halloween isn't just for kids so come spend a fun, spooky evening with them.


Tickets are $25/person and are available at Chic Le Chef and Middletown Florist & Gifts.


For more information call Middletown Florist & Gifts, 707-987-9500 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

NICE, Calif. – Come enjoy an Italian style dinner and dance Saturday, Sept. 11, at the Sons of Italy.


They will serve Chicken Parmesan, rigatoni, salad, French bread with dessert, at the club hall, 2817 E. Highway 20 in Nice.


The bar will be open for socializing at 5 p.m. then dinner will be served at 6 p.m.


Enjoy dancing to music of Jim Williams, right after the meal.


All tickets cost $15 at the door. Everyone is welcome.


For information about this event or renting the hall for your own, call 707-263-1606.

LAKEPORT – Peter Windrem, a local attorney and long-time Lake County resident, is guest speaker for Lake County Land Trust annual dinner, Saturday, Oct. 9, 5 p.m., at Moore Family Winery, 11990 Bottle Road, Kelseyville.


His presentation is “Chi and the Lake County Land Trust – A Fish Story.”


As consultant to the Lake County Land Trust, Windrem helped facilitate two Land Trust projects, Rodman Slough Preserve and the Black Forest.


A conservationist, Windrem grew up in Kelseyville and graduated from Kelseyville High School. His family still owns their home ranch near Finley.


Windrem’s conservation action includes preservation of Boggs Lake with the California Native Plant Society and the formation of the Lake County Energy Council, the first group to review local impacts of geothermal development.


He’s a founding member of the local chapter of the Sierra Club, and a founding member of Chi Council for the Clear Lake Hitch, a group dedicated to protection and preservation of Clear Lake’s most threatened native fish.


As a real estate attorney, Windrem helped the land trust negotiate a complicated purchase of Rodman Slough Ranch. The 1999 purchase required numerous documents and escrows because of interim financing and other aspects of the transaction. He donated his time and knowledge to facilitate the deal.


Windrem also served as the trust’s pro-bono attorney for the purchase of the Black Forest on the slopes of Mt. Konocti, another complicated transaction involving numerous parties, including the Bureau of Land Management, current Black Forest owners.


Most recently, Windrem spearheaded Lake County’s purchase of 1,700 acres on Mt. Konocti, soon to become a public park and hiking area.


Windrem and his wife, Kathy, live on their ranch in Kelseyville. They have two children and now enjoy their three grandchildren.


Event tickets are $60 per person for dinner by Ciao Thyme Catering, Lake County wines, live music, and silent auction.


Tickets are available by calling 707-262-0707 or emailing This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


Proceeds from the dinner support the Land Trust’s preservation of Lake County’s beautiful places, as well as operate Rodman Slough Preserve and Nature Education Center on Clear Lake’s north shore.


Lake County Land Trust is a nonprofit, 501(c)3, volunteer group working cooperatively with landowners, private groups and governmental agencies to protect important local land resources including lakeside areas, wetlands, wildlife habitats, parks, forests, watersheds, riparian stream corridors and trails.


 


For more information, see www.lakecountylandtrust.org. Follow Lake County Land Trust on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lower-Lake-CA/Lake-County-Land-Trust/137282176534?ref=ts&__a=10& and Twitter at http://twitter.com/lclandtrust.

 

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