Thursday, 28 November 2024

News

Following close to 10 years of searching for Osama bin Laden, the United States learned Sunday night that the world's most sought-after terrorist had been killed.


President Barack Obama announced the news to the nation in a televised Sunday evening address that came with little explanation beforehand regarding the topic.


“Tonight I can report to the American people and to the world that the United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden, the leader of al Qaeda and a terrorist who's responsible for the murder of thousands of innocent men, women and children,” Obama said at the beginning of the nine-and-a-half-minute speech.


Bin Laden, 54, was the self-proclaimed mastermind of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Thousands of Americans were killed when hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, DC. A fourth plane crashed in Pennsylvania, killing an estimated 40 people.


He also was implicated in a series of attacks in Africa in the 1990s that killed hundreds of people and injured thousands more, the Los Angeles Times reported.


The president said that not long after taking office he directed Central Intelligence Agency Director Leon Panetta to make capturing or killing bin Laden a priority.


Last August Obama was briefed on a possible lead to bin Laden's whereabouts.


“It was far from certain, and it took many months to run this thread to ground,” he said.


But last week Obama determined there was enough evidence to take action, and the raid on the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, was carried out on Sunday at Obama's direction by a small group of Americans.


Obama said the group executed the raid “with extraordinary courage and capability,” killing bin Laden after a firefight and taking his body into custody.


The president said none of the American forces were harmed and they avoided civilian casualties.


Congressman Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena), a senior member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said Sunday, “The impact of bin Laden's death cannot be overstated.”


Thompson added, “For over two decades, bin Laden and his terrorist network have brought death and destruction to communities around the world. This is a defining moment in our nation's history and, I hope, a turning point in the ongoing war on terrorism.”


He thanked the intelligence community and the Armed Forces for their hard work bringing bin Laden to justice. “While our fight against terror is far from over, I am hopeful that Bin Laden's death will bring us one step closer to peace."


Gov. Jerry Brown also said Sunday that Americans can be grateful that the president brought bin Laden to justice.


“Our friends as well as our adversaries throughout the world can be assured of America's resolve in combating terrorism and protecting the values of democracy and freedom,” Brown said.


U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) added her praise for the president and Armed Forces, saying of bin Laden, “Today the world knows that he has paid the ultimate price for what he did.”


She added, “His death doesn’t lessen the tragic loss of all those killed by al Qaeda, or the pain of their loved ones, but it closes a chapter on his unspeakable act.”


Also on Sunday, the U.S. Department of State alerted U.S. citizens traveling and residing abroad “to the enhanced potential for anti-American violence given recent counter-terrorism activity in Pakistan.”


The agency said the travel alert will expire on Aug. 1.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews , on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

In commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the founding of Lake County this year, Lake County News is publishing a series of historical stories about the county, its people and places. This week the topic is settlers who moved to Lake County hoping to escape the unrest of the American Civil War, which also marks the sesquicentennial of its beginning this year. The following excerpt is from “Lower Lake Lore,” written by Jane Weaver, a moving force behind the restoration of the Lower Lake Schoolhouse Museum.

 

The Copsey train of some 40 wagons came from Missouri to Lake County in 1856.

 

These pioneers understood that trouble was brewing between the North and South and they wanted to get as far away from it as possible.

 

Pleasant Smith and wife Saphonia Copsey were married on the trip across the plains, and came directly to the Lower Lake area.

 

She was known for naming Jerusalem Valley and giving similar biblical names to other adjoining territory. They also were the first to move to Jerusalem Valley, and they lived there for many years.

 

Only a few years after the Copseys establishing themselves in the lower end of our county the Civil War broke out. Those men that had come with the Copsey train decided that they would have no part of a war and would not fight for either side.

 

Believing it possible that authorities might enforce a wartime draft and compel the younger men to enter the army, they decided to resist.

 

About one-half mile south of where the road crosses Soda Creek in Jerusalem Valley and one-fourth mile up, and west of the stream, is a slope nearly one-half mile long from top to bottom. It is composed mostly of clay, is open country and contains a few small white oaks. The immigrant road from Middletown runs through here.

 

In the middle of this slope is a neat little hill with an appearance as if it had been poured out of a sand bucket. On the top of this hill is a natural formation of broken up rocks ranging in size from small stones to large boulders.

 

Pleasant Smith, George Bishop and others living nearby took advantage of this natural fortress-like location and built themselves what is now known as Jerusalem Valley Fort.

 

Instead of building a wall around a single enclosure, they dug a series of fox-holes. There were four well-defined holes, each about 5 feet across and three feet deep. Another half dozen less perfect holes were started.

 

From this vantage point, the men in the fort had a good view in all directions. With two men to a foxhole, back to back, hidden behind these rock barricades, it would have taken a small army to dislodge them.

 

Necessary supplies, such as powder, lead for bullets and other items to withstand a siege, were brought in with each family furnishing a share.

 

The Civil War ended. No attempt was ever made by the government to force any of the men to enter the conflict, therefore, the fort was never put to use.

 

After all danger was over, the supplies were divided up and given back to the original owners and the Jerusalem Valley Fort was abandoned.

 

A late descendent of one of the parties remembers, as a boy, helping to cut up the remains of a lead brick which had been stored in the fort.

 

The intention had originally been to melt down the brick for bullets. It was cut up and used instead as shot for a muzzle-loading shotgun.

 

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County's annual burn ban, which addresses fire hazards and air quality, begins Sunday, May 1.

 

The burn restriction applies to all areas in Lake County. All burn permits expire on April 30.

 

An annual burn ban was first implemented in 1986 in response to weather conditions that often create extreme fire danger and poor air quality.

 

For many years a managed approach which incorporates fire and air agency concerns has been implemented and improved upon, according to the Lake County Air Quality Management District.

 

The ban as implemented allows a quick fire agency response to all fires observed from May 1 onward, as they are all assumed to be uncontrolled fires unless specifically authorized by an exemption for time and place.

 

County air quality officials credited the program with being a the primary reason for Lake County's superior and healthful air quality.

 

The air quality management ban also helps prevent smoke impacts to the general public and large planned outdoor events by unrestricted vegetative waste burns.

 

The burn ban includes all open waste burning, though exceptions are possible for agricultural operations, essential control burns and public safety burns.

 

To obtain an agricultural exemption, first contact your local fire protection agency so that your burn site can be inspected and evaluated for fire safety.

 

Only after the fire agency has inspected the burn site and notified the Lake County Air Quality Management District that the proposed burn is fire safe, should community members contact district to establish economic necessity and obtain a written exemption permit.

 

Anyone responsible for open burning without a valid written exemption permit may be subject to a citation, fines and the cost of the agency response to extinguish the fire.

 

Burn restrictions will remain in effect until Cal Fire declares an end to fire season.

 

The public is asked to observe the ban and, in doing so, to help reduce the danger and losses caused by uncontrolled fires, and protect the county's designation as the only air basin in the state to meet all ambient air quality standards.

 

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CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif. – The Clearlake Oaks/Glenhaven Business Association is sponsoring the 28th Annual Catfish Derby, from noon Friday, May 13, through noon Sunday, May 15.


Known by many as “the largest catfish derby west of the Mississippi,” the event features an Adult Derby and a Kids Derby for those under 16 years old.


The grand prize winner of the Adult Derby will receive a cash prize of $4,000 (based on minimum of 350 adult entries) and the winner of the Kids Derby will receive a Nintendo Wii System.


Derby headquarters will be located at the Clearlake Oaks Fire Station, 12655 East Highway 20, and will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.


Derby headquarters also will be open for preregistration from noon to 11:00 p.m. on Thursday, May 12. No registrations will be accepted after 11 p.m. on Friday.


Registration for the Adult Derby is $45 ($40 for those who preregister on Thursday). Registration for the Kids Derby is $10.


Proceeds from the event benefit community projects.


For applications, call (888) CL-DERBY, (707) 998-1006; for information, (707) 998-3795, www.clearlakeoaks.org.


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One day, years from now – or maybe billions of years, no one knows – aliens might be surprised to run across an old spaceship from Earth.

 

Improbably far from home, the ancient probe is space cold, its nuclear power source spent long ago; an iconic white antenna points silently into the void, beaming no data to the species that made it.

 

Yet this Voyager may speak to its finders.

 

A golden record is fixed to the side of the probe, and if ET can decipher it, he might be surprised again, because Voyager has a story to tell – and it's a love story.

 

Rewind to 1977.

 

Jimmy Carter was president, Star Wars was the top-grossing film, and NASA was preparing to launch the two Voyager probes to the outer planets.

 

Like Pioneer 10 and 11 before them, Voyager 1 and 2 would fly by the gas giants and, after a frenzy of data-taking, slingshot out of the solar system.

 

These spacecraft were to become interstellar ambassadors. Less than nine months before launch, Carl Sagan was asked by NASA personnel to assemble “some message for a possible extraterrestrial civilization.”

 

Later, one member of Sagan's small team would describe the process as “a fire drill” with nothing less at stake than First Contact itself.

 

“The chances of aliens finding the Voyagers in the vast emptiness of space are small – some say infinitesimal – but we took our jobs seriously,” recalled team member Ann Druyan. “From the moment when Carl first broached the project to Tim Ferris and me, it felt mythic.”

 

Voyager would carry a selection of Earth's greatest music, a photo gallery of our planet and its inhabitants, and an audio essay of terrestrial sounds, both natural and technological.

 

But how would this information be conveyed?

 

A popular technology in the 1970s was the 8-track tape. That would never do. For one thing, what would ET think? Moreover, magnetic tape is susceptible to degradation by space radiation and magnetic fields. A message recorded on such a medium would decay long before it was found.

 

Radio astronomer Frank Drake, who became a key member of Sagan's team, suggested a phonograph record. Extraterrestrials would stand a good chance of figuring out how to play back such an old-school technology – and phonograph records were tough.

 

By one estimate, the etchings on a suitably-shielded metallic phonograph record could last for hundreds of millions of years in interstellar space, eroded mainly by a slow drizzle of micrometeoroid impacts. A copper record coated in gold would satisfy the thermal and magnetic requirements of the Voyager probes.

 

“Eventually we decided on having the record designed for 16 2/3 revolutions per minute,” wrote Sagan. This was half the speed of a conventional 33 1/3 platter. “[There would be] some loss in fidelity but not, we believe, an extremely severe loss, especially if the recipients were as clever as they would have to be to acquire the record in the first place.”

 

Choosing the contents of the record was a heady and agonizing process. Even with the stepped-down spin rate, there was only enough room for about 90 minutes of music and a hundred or so images.

 

“I remember sitting around the kitchen table making these huge decisions about what to put on and what to leave off,” said Druyan. “We couldn't help but appreciate the enormous responsibility to create a cultural Noah's Ark with a shelf life of hundreds of millions of years.”

 

In their book, “Murmurs of Earth,” Sagan and the team describe the decision-making process.

 

Much of the challenge was intellectual – for example, how to cover the complete geographical, historical and cultural variety of the world’s music in 90 minutes or less.

 

Among Western music, Beethoven's Fifth Symphony and Chuck Berry's “Johnny B. Goode” made the cut; selections from Jefferson Starship did not.

 

Some challenges were legal: The Beatles' “Here Comes the Sun” could not be sent because the Fab Four, who unanimously wished their work sent to the stars, did not hold the copyright to their own song.

 

Other challenges were bureaucratic. In one of many anecdotes that illuminate the human condition as well as anything on the Golden Record, Sagan describes the tortuous process of obtaining permission for a number of UN delegates to simply say “Hello.”

 

Ultimately, it couldn't be done, and Sagan appealed to the foreign language departments of Cornell University, where professors and students were eager to help. Thus a representative set of short greetings was assembled, beginning with Sumerian, one of the oldest known languages, and ending with a greeting from an American 5-year old: “Hello from the children of planet Earth.”

 

When all was said and done, Voyager blasted off with 118 photographs; 90 minutes of music; greetings in 55 human languages and one whale language; an audio essay featuring everything from burbling mud pots to barking dogs to a roaring Saturn 5 liftoff; a remarkably poetic salutation from the Secretary General of the United Nations; and the brain waves of a young women in love.

 

Of all the selections on the record, it is the latter which might pique ET's interest most. It certainly has this effect on human listeners.

 

Just how do you stumble upon a woman in love and record her brain waves for an interstellar message? It helps when the young woman is herself a member of the recording team: Ann Druyan.

 

“I had this idea,” said Druyan, “that we should put someone's EEG on the record. We know that EEG patterns register some changes in thought. Would it be possible, I wondered, for a highly advanced technology of several million years from now to actually decipher human thoughts?”

 

Sagan and the others liked the idea, and volunteered Druyan to provide the brain waves.

 

“I contacted Dr. Julius Korein of the New York University Medical Center, and with Tim Ferris's help we set up an hour-long recording session for my innermost self,” she said.

 

The EEG was scheduled for June 3, 1977. Druyan prepared a script to guide her thoughts – “a mental itinerary of the ideas and individuals of history whose memory I hoped to perpetuate.” She could not prepare, however, for what happened two days before the scheduled recording.

 

“On June 1, 1977, Carl and I shared a wonderfully important phone call,” she said.

 

Without the aid of a date or even a romantic moment alone, the two had fallen in love during the mad rush to complete the Golden Record.

 

“We decided to get married. It was a 'Eureka' moment for both of us – the idea that we could find the perfect match,” she said. “It was a discovery that has been reaffirmed in countless ways since.”

 

Echoes of that moment reverberated through her mind during the recording session. Her conscious mind may have been reciting culture and philosophy, but her subconscious was buzzing with the euphoria of the Great Idea of True Love. The hour was electronically compressed to a single minute that sounds, appropriately, like a string of exploding firecrackers.

 

“My feelings as a 27 year old woman, madly fallen in love, they're on that record,” said Druyan. “It's forever. It'll be true 100 million years from now. For me Voyager is a kind of joy so powerful, it robs you of your fear of death.”

 

If aliens ever do find one of the Voyagers and decipher its contents, they will briefly meet dozens of musicians, artists, whales, dogs, crickets, engineers, and common working people. But the only one who they might have a chance to truly get to know is that young woman – not a bad choice.

 

It has been pointed out that the most probable finders of Voyager will be … us. Eventually, technology may allow humans to overtake and recover the distant probes. In that case, they will be reduced to mere time capsules from the year 1977.

 

Arthur C. Clarke recognized this possibility and suggested adding a note to the Golden Record: “Please leave me alone; let me go on to the stars.”

 

Because Voyager has a story to tell.  

 

Tony Phillips works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

 

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Looking for an adventure? Get up in the wee hours of the morning May 6 and head out into the country, far from the city lights. You won't be alone. The birds will be up and singing about the coming dawn, and, of course, about the eta Aquarid meteor shower.

 

The eta Aquarids are best viewed from the southern hemisphere, but there's something special about them no matter where you live: “Each eta Aquarid meteoroid is a piece of Halley's Comet doing a kamikaze death dive into the atmosphere,” explained NASA astronomer Bill Cooke. “Many people have never seen this famous comet, but on the morning of May 6th they can watch bits of it leave fiery trails across the sky.”

 

A messenger from the dawn of the universe, Halley's Comet orbits the sun once every 76 years. Each time it swings by the sun, intense solar heat vaporizes about 6 meters of ice and rock from the nucleus.

 

The debris particles, about the size of sand grains, spread along the comet's orbit, filling it with tiny meteoroids.

 

“Although Halley's Comet is deep in the outer solar system at the moment and won't return to Earth until 2061, it treats us to a meteor shower twice a year as our planet passes by the debris cloud,” said Cooke. “In May we have the eta Aquarids, and in October the Orionids.”

 

And there is something especially significant about the 2011 eta Aquarids.

 

“This is your one chance this year to see meteors blaze across the sky without glaring moonlight dimming them.”

 

A thin crescent moon will vacate the sky in the early evening, leaving a dark canvas for the display. Early risers are in luck, as the best viewing is an hour or two before dawn. Lie down where you can see as wide an expanse of sky as possible to catch more meteors with your peripheral vision. Look up into the darkness and relax.

 

The radiant for the eta Aquarids is in the constellation Aquarius: diagram. But you don't need to look toward the radiant to see the meteors.

 

“Meteors can appear in any part of the sky,” said Cooke. “In fact their trails will tend to point back toward the radiant, so if you look that way the meteor may appear somewhat stubby. They'll appear much longer going by you than coming at you.”

 

You won't need binoculars or a telescope to observe eta Aquarid meteors. The naked eye's field of view is usually best for seeing meteors, which frequently streak more than 45 degrees across the sky.

 

“Eta Aquarids are fast, moving at 66 km/s (148,000 mph!), and often trace long paths across the sky, sometimes leaving glowing, persistent trains. In the northern hemisphere, depending on your latitude [the closer to the equator the better], you should see from 10 to 40 meteors just before dawn,” said Cooke.

 

Remember to pack a reclining chair or an old blanket to lie on, and a thermos of hot coffee would be nice. After all, you'll be up mighty early.

 

The spring night air may be damp and chill, so bring along another blanket – or better yet, a big furry dog, both for warmth and company. Golden Retrievers work nicely.

 

It's sure to be a memorable experience. A night breeze caressing your cheek, the aroma of hot coffee in the predawn air, a gently rising chorus of birdsong accompanying your own personal light show – and your greatest admirer by your side. It just doesn't get any better.

 

On May 5, NASA meteor experts will host an afternoon live Web chat from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Central time and an “up all night” chat from 10 p.m. on May 5 to 4 a.m. on the May6 (Central time).

 

Get ready to help NASA watch the skies. Join live the Web discussion about this shower – spawned by Halley's Comet – and all things meteoric. Details here: www.nasa.gov/connect/chat/aquarids2011.html.

 

Dauna Coulter works for the National Aeronautics Space Administration.

 

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Rehorse Rescue of Jamestown, Calif., is dedicated to rescuing horses, which are increasingly being abandoned and victimized due to the poor economy and owners who don't properly care for their animals. Photo courtesy of Raquelle Van Vleck.

 

Last year two Lake County residents were rescued from a very dangerous situation. They resided in a location where they should have been safe and protected but were instead found unclean, malnourished and injured.

 

Those two residents were a 4-year-old pinto stallion named TJ and a 14-year-old pinto mare named Breezy, owned at the time by former Animal Control Officer Terrie Flynn.

 

Thanks to rescue and rehabilitation efforts from the Rehorse Rescue Ranch in Tuolumne County the two horses have come full circle, both making exceptional recoveries.

 

Breezy was adopted, according to Rehorse Rescue director Raquelle Van Vleck.

 

TJ also is in the process of being adopted by a volunteer, she said.

 

“We wait for them to find their human,” she said. “They'll stay as long as they need to.”

 

Each of the horses was underweight and suffered from rain rot, a condition in which bacterium creates lesions on the horse’s body and is usually caused from insect bites and unclean stable conditions.

 

Breezy’s hooves were severely overgrown and TJ suffered from a serious injury to his penis, possibly caused from a barbed wire fence. They conducted a reconstructive surgery to remove the scar tissue and avoid amputation.

 

 

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Breezy, a mare surrendered in 2010 by a Lake County Animal Care & Control officer, has been adopted after being rescued and rehabilitated by Rehorse Rescue of Jamestown, Calif. Photo courtesy of Raquelle Van Vleck.

 

“He's just as happy as he can be,” Van Vleck.

 

Situations such as the ones with Breezy and TJ have become all too common throughout the state and nation, and are currently on the rise, according to Van Vleck and animal rights groups that monitor the treatment of horses.

 

With the number of calls more than tripling since the rescue of Breezy and TJ the Rehorse Rescue Ranch has seen a significant increase in the number of mistreated horses in need of help.

 

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TJ, a stallion surrendered to Rehorse Rescue of Jamestown, Calif., in 2010 by a Lake County Animal Care & Control officer, is in the process of being adopted. Photo courtesy of Raquelle Van Vleck.
 

 

“Last year at this time we had 17 horses and now we’re up to 45, if that is any indication of the increase there has been as far as the number of horses in crisis,” Van Vleck said.

 

The startup of the Rehorse Rescue Ranch came as a bit of a surprise, even to Van Vleck.

 

She began to notice the amount of horses that were suffering a little over three years ago and started taking the animals in.

 

“We didn’t even know we were doing rescue when we were doing rescue,” she said.

 

Once the need for a large animal equine rescue in the area was identified she decided to start the Rehorse Rescue Ranch. It officially incorporated in February of 2009 and received nonprofit status in June of 2010.

 

Although there have been numerous success stories at Rehorse Rescue, including the adoptions of 24 horses and the relocation of 53, the increase in horse abuse provides Van Vleck with many challenges.

 

“We’re getting calls from Las Vegas and Southern California and emails from all over the country,” she said in an exhausted tone. “It’s been tough. We want to help as many horses as we can, but because our community and surrounding counties are in crisis we have to put them first and foremost.”

 

In one particularly serious case earlier this year Van Vleck, along with animal control, rescued 10 Morgan horses from a property in Calaveras County.

 

The horses were kept in the backyard of a house, fenced by barbed wire, in conditions so unclean they “almost had to swim through feces and urine” in order to access their water trough, she said.

 

One stallion also was housed in a 10-by-10-foot chain link dog kennel with a roof on top inhibiting him from lifting his head.

 

Rehorse Rescue works in collaboration with county officials; however, due to increases in budget cuts many animal control offices do not have the funds to hold horses until they can be placed and have turned to Van Vleck in order to save horses from facing euthanasia.

 

They have currently taken horses from five different animal control offices including Calaveras, Tuolumne, Stanislaus, San Joaquin and Lake counties.

 

A growing crisis

 

The effects of the recession are felt in nearly all aspects of equine rescue.

 

Many of the rescue and rehabilitation facilities rely on fundraisers, adoption fees, donations and sponsorship for funding and due to the economic downturn have experienced decreases in cash flow.

 

According to Jacque Schultz, senior director of community outreach for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the organization awarded more than $1 million in grant funding to equine efforts in 2010, nearly doubling the amount given the year prior.

 

“California was yet again the No. 1 state,” Schultz said “They’ve been No. 1 in the number of grants applied for and received since I’ve been in charge of the program for four years.”

 

Van Vleck says that they’ve applied for some grants but with the stiff competition it’s hard to rely on the funding. She usually tries to find money elsewhere.

 

“We're beyond struggling,” she said, adding she takes it “one day at a time.”

 

The challenges are exacerbated by the current cost of hay, at $13 a bale, and expected to go as high as $20 by the summer. Van Vleck said she feeds 12 bales of hay each day.

 

She worries what those climbing hay prices will do for horse owners barely making it right now.

 

Because of the hefty expenses involved with caring for a horse, the troubled economy also is considered to be a contributing factor in the rising numbers of horse abandonment cases around the nation.

 

However, Van Vleck believes that this is a much bigger problem than can just be pinned on the recession.

 

“It’s not just the economy,” she said. “I think the recession has a lot to do with it, but the reality is that there are still people out there that need to take care of their horses.”

 

Often times, she said, the source of the problem is new owners who aren’t educated on how to properly care for a horse or people who wait until the situation has escalated to dangerous levels to ask for help.

 

With an increased number of horses at the facility and an extremely tight budget it is much easier for the Rehorse Rescue Ranch to maintain and relocate a horse than it is to rehabilitate one, she said.

 

Van Vleck believes commitment and responsibility will help decrease the number of mistreated horses.

 

“Horses depend on us for everything, every bit of care,” she said. “We have domesticated them and we are therefore responsible for them.”

 

How you can help: Visit Rehorse Rescue online at www.rehorserescue.org, make a donation or adopt a horse into a loving forever home. The group also can be reached at telephone 209-337-5886; e-mail, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; or at P.O. Box 494, Jamestown, CA 95327.

 

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 SACRAMENTO – Sharing is a concept that a person learns at an early age; it’s a concept that can be applied not only to life, but on the highway.

 

May is Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month, and the California Highway aPatrol (CHP) along with its traffic safety partners are reminding all motorists to safely share the road; it may save a life

 

Following several years of increases, in 2009, the most recent year for which finalized data from the Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System (SWITRS) is available, the number of people killed and injured in motorcycle-involved collisions dropped.

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That year in California, 396 people died and 11,488 were injured as a result of a crash involving a motorcycle.

 

“The drop in overall number of collisions is encouraging, but there is more work to be done,” said CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow. “All motorists are reminded to be extra alert when on the road to help keep everyone safe.”

 

One of the main reasons motorcyclists are killed in crashes is because the motorcycle itself provides virtually no protection in a crash.

 

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, approximately 80 percent of reported motorcycle crashes result in injury or death; a comparable figure for automobiles is about 20 percent.

 

“Motorcyclists are much more vulnerable than passenger vehicle drivers,” said Robert Gladden, Vice President of the Motorcycle Safety Foundation. “In addition to wearing the proper safety gear, especially a helmet that is certified by its manufacturer to meet DOT specifications, riders are encouraged to enroll in a training course.”

 

The CHP strongly encourages all riders to sign up for the California Motorcyclist Safety Program (CMSP) before beginning to ride.

 

CMSP offers the Basic RiderCourse for beginning motorcyclists and Basic RiderCourses 2 for riders who are interested in improving their skills.

 

CMSP expects to train 65,000 motorcyclists per year and operates more than 120 training sites throughout California. To find a location nearest you, go to www.ca-msp.org/.

 

Committed to developing and promoting traffic safety campaigns that help save lives, the CHP uses educational campaigns as an avenue to reach the public with its motorcycle safety message. These campaigns are made possible by grants from the California Office of Traffic Safety (OTS).

 

“Increased awareness by everyone on the road will result in greater safety,” said OTS Director Christopher J. Murphy. “Through the continued efforts of law enforcement, traffic safety organizations on every level and the public, we can extend this downward trend in collisions statewide.”

 

Helping the CHP spread the word about motorcycle safety awareness to the motoring public is the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). During may, caltrans is set to display an important message, statewide on the agency's changeable message signs: Share the road, look twice for motorcyclists.

 

“Exercising common sense and courtesy on the road will go a long way in this traffic safety endeavor," said Commissioner Farrow.

 

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Retitling assets, like stock and bonds, from one’s name into one’s living trust is necessary to avoiding an unnecessary probate of such assets if held outside of the trust.

 

Sometimes people fail to transfer some or all of their intended trust assets into their trust. A general assignment of assets to one’s living trust provides an important safeguard.

 

Let’s examine what a general assignment is and how it helps to fund one’s trust and avoid a probate.

 

A general assignment of assets transfers ownership on a wide variety of assets as the name implies.

 

An all-encompassing general assignment is regularly used by estate planners to transfer all types of financial assets (excluding tax deferred retirement accounts) and personal property (such as the contents of one’s home) into the trust. It is a half-step towards actually re-titling the securities and the financial accounts into the name of the trustee.

 

Nevertheless, the settlor should still proceed to contact the banks, brokerages, and stock transfer agents (as relevant) to formally transfer legal title into the name of the trustee.

 

But, in the event that the formal legal title is not transferred prior to death, the general assignment can be used to obtain a court order to transfer legal title into the trust.

 

In Kucker v. Kucker, (2011), 192 CA 4th, 90, the Court of Appeal reversed a trial court decision wherein the trial court disallowed a petition to transfer stocks into a trust based on a general assignment of all assets by the settlor to the trustee.

 

The Court of Appeal agreed with the petitioner that a general assignment of all or substantially all of the settlor’s assets into one’s trust does cause the stocks to be owned by the trustee. An otherwise unnecessary probate was thus avoided thanks to a general assignment by the settlor.

 

Similarly, a declaration of trust by a settlor to hold certain assets listed on a schedule of pledged assets attached to a trust document can likewise be used to accomplish the same result.

 

Most attorneys use a schedule of initial trust assets and a general assignment to reinforce one-another.

 

Moreover, unlike the general assignment, the schedule of trust assets will also include the real estate – together with a full legal description -- for the same reason.

 

That is, if a trust transfer deed is not properly executed prior to the settlor’s death, then the schedule of initial trust assets to a declaration of trust can be used to petition the court to transfer legal title into the trust without a probate.

 

While the general assignment and the declaration of trust are important safeguards against the failure to formally transfer title to trust assets while the settlor is still alive and competent, such safeguards are just safeguards.

 

The better course of action is to see that one’s real estate, stocks and bonds, and financial accounts (and other trust assets) are properly titled in the name of the trustee of one’s trust.

 

After all, filing a court petition entails further expenses and delay in the administration of the trust that can be avoided.

 

Dennis A. Fordham, attorney (LL.M. tax studies), is a State Bar Certified Specialist in Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Law. His office is at 55 First St., Lakeport, California. Dennis can be reached by e-mail at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or by phone at 707-263-3235.

 

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If I had just one herb to use in the kitchen forever, it might be thyme. Basil is sometimes called the king of herbs, and, along those lines, I’ll dub thyme the wise butler. And this behind-the-scenes butler gets along with virtually everyone.

 

There are so many wonderful applications for thyme in both sweet and savory cooking that I’m hard pressed to mention them all. Suffice it to say that I appreciate its amazing versatility.

 

Restaurant critic Jeff Cox, a gardening and culinary guru, says if you have only one pot to use for an herb planting, plant thyme.

 

If you’re inclined to plant a backyard or windowsill herb garden, now’s the “thyme” to start, and there are plenty of varieties from which to choose.

 

The basic thyme used in most recipes is common or garden thyme, with the botanical name thymus vulgaris. It grows as a small, woody shrub with petite and flavorful gray-green leaves. In mid-summer, when most thyme plants flower, it sports tiny blooms in shades varying from white to lilac. This is the thyme that is typically found for sale in markets.

 

Another popular version of this herb is lemon thyme, prized for its light citrus taste. It’s popular in the garden and, as its name implies, adds a lemony touch to beverages and foods. A simple tea may be brewed by pouring a cup of boiling water over four or five sprigs in a cup. Lemon thyme is wonderful with fish and fresh summer salads.

 

Caraway thyme, native to the islands of Sicily and Corsica, was imported to continental Europe, where it’s beloved because its caraway overtones are perfect for flavoring beef.

 

Other thymes with interesting scents and flavors include nutmeg thyme and camphor thyme, which smell and taste of their namesakes.

 

Different thyme varieties grow as shrubs, hanging plants or ground creepers. Mother-of-thyme is a creeping variety used in landscaping, often planted between flagstones on a path. Its lavender flowers are a favorite of bees.

 

When buying the herb fresh, whether for planting, cooking or drying, run your hand gently over the leaves. If they don’t lightly scent your hand, choose another plant.

 

Thyme is one of the herbs central to the cooking of Provence, France and is featured in the popular “herbs de Provence” dried herb mixture, along with lavender, fennel and a variety of other herbs. Every company has its own signature blend.

 

It’s also commonly used in the traditional French “bouquet garni,” a bundle of fresh herbs tied with kitchen spring or enclosed in cheesecloth and dropped into a soup or stew to flavor it. The bouquet garni is then pulled out prior to serving.

 

Thyme goes with almost all meats – fish, beef, chicken, lamb, pork and some game animals such as venison or rabbit. It also pairs well with sweet vegetables, such as carrots; meaty vegetables, such as mushrooms and eggplant; with cooked onions and tomatoes; and even with fruits such as figs and strawberries.

 

In addition to its use in the cooking of France, other Mediterranean cuisines enjoy its benefits, such as Italy, Greece and Spain. It’s used in Middle Eastern and Jamaican dishes, as well.

 

It’s wonderful with beans and other legumes; it flavors soups, stews and ragouts; it pairs well with cheeses such as cheddar and chevre (fresh goat cheese); it’s fantastic in vinaigrette dressings; and it’s even used to flavor honey.

 

Other herbs that are companionable with thyme include bay leaves, oregano, marjoram, basil, savory, lemon verbena, mint, tarragon and rosemary.

 

It gets along well with spices as varied as cloves, allspice, paprika, coriander, mustard and nutmeg, to mention a few.

 

Other friends include garlic and lemon.

 

See what I mean about this behind-the-scenes butler getting along with everyone? Thyme is definitely the belle of the ball, the popular debutante.

 

One herbal newsletter has gone so far to advise, “When in doubt, use thyme.” Thymely advice, indeed.

 

The plant’s reputation as a medicinal curative has grown over the centuries. It’s been thought to assist in the cure or relief of ailments as diverse as epilepsy, melancholy, nervous disorders, flatulence, stomach aches, asthma, coughs, nightmares and even shyness.

 

As recently as World War I, thyme oil was used as a battlefield antiseptic.

 

While modern science hasn’t connected the dots in all the claims made by thyme enthusiasts through the years, it has found the volatile oils in thyme to be beneficial to our health in many circumstances.

 

Thyme has long been thought to be beneficial to respiratory conditions, such as coughs, bronchitis and chest congestion, and several volatile oils in the herb have been isolated in the aid of these ailments.

 

Not only does thyme have antimicrobial properties (specifically against bacteria and fungi), it contains significant antioxidants and flavonoids that protect cells against damage.

 

Thyme is considered a nutrient dense spice, with excellent stores of iron and manganese. It’s also a very good source of calcium and dietary fiber.

 

The word “thyme” may be traced to ancient Greek, where it was derived from either a word meaning “courage,” appropriate for its invigorating quality, or from one meaning “to fumigate” since the burning of thyme was used to chase stinging insects from ancient Greek homes.

 

Thyme may be used as a fresh or dried herb. My preference is to use fresh thyme, but the flavor of this herb holds up well when dried. Since dried herbs are more concentrated, use about two-thirds less than when using fresh.

 

Late spring and summer is “thyme” for thyme, and here are some ideas for its use.

 

Serve sprigs of fresh thyme with yogurt or sour cream on beet borscht, hot or chilled, in place of dill.

 

Sauté strips of red and yellow bell pepper with olive oil, garlic and thyme and serve with pasta.

 

Marinate artichoke bottoms in olive oil, lemon juice and fresh thyme.

 

Add thyme sprigs to olives in their brine.

 

Scoop out the inside of halved cherry tomatoes and fill them with a mixture of yogurt or sour cream, minced fresh thyme, basil and a bit of Dijon mustard.

 

Don’t forget about thyme blossoms. Use them as a beautiful garnish along with thyme leaves.

 

The recipe for today is a springtime brunch tart with a variety of flavors that, though diverse, complement one another: thyme, cardamom, balsamic vinegar, apricot jam, sweet spring strawberries and freshly ground black pepper. I especially like the combination of strawberries, cardamom and fresh thyme.

 

If goat cheese is unavailable, you may double the amount of cream cheese used. Enjoy!

 

 

Strawberry brunch tart with thyme and black pepper

 

1 sheet of frozen puff pastry, thawed

1 egg, beaten

1/4 cup white sugar

1 teaspoon ground cardamom

1 pound (2 pints) fresh strawberries, sliced

3 tablespoon apricot jam

1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar

1 – 2 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, crushed slightly

Freshly ground black pepper

Brown sugar to taste (about ½ - 1 tbsp)

4 ounces cream cheese (low fat is OK)

4 ounces goat cheese, “fresco” style

 

 

With a fork or a whisk, mix the cardamom and sugar together in a bowl until they’re evenly combined. Set aside for later.

 

Unfold the puff pastry and roll it out a little to flatten it and seal any seams.

 

Crack an egg into a bowl. Whisk it with a fork to blend well.

 

With a pastry brush, spread the beaten egg along each edge of the puff pastry.

 

Fold one edge over about three-quarters of an inch or so and repeat with the other three sides, so that your puff pastry looks like it has a picture frame around it.

 

Place pastry on parchment-lined baking sheet.

 

Brush the pastry with beaten egg.

 

Sprinkle the whole thing (edges + center) with cardamom sugar.

 

Bake at 400 degrees for 15 minutes, or until puffed and golden. Set aside to cool.

 

Wash, hull and slice strawberries into medium bowl.

 

Combine jam, balsamic and thyme leaves in small saucepan and heat until just warm.

 

Pour over strawberries and mix well. Add ground pepper and brown sugar to taste.

 

Combine goat cheese and cream cheese in food processor with a teaspoon of cardamom sugar, or mix by hand until creamy.

 

Spread over cooled pastry.

 

Spoon strawberry mixture onto tart. Spread evenly to edges of “picture frame” but not on it.

 

Cut into squares and enjoy!

 

Recipe by Esther Oertel.

 

Esther Oertel, the “Veggie Girl,” is a culinary coach and educator and is passionate about local produce. Oertel teaches culinary classes at Chic Le Chef in Hidden Valley Lake, Calif., and The Kitchen Gallery in Lakeport, Calif., and gives private cooking lessons. She welcomes your questions and comments; e-mail her at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County's Red Cross is now a partner with two other counties' chapters, which officials say is drawing on synergy between the groups to accomplish the mission of assisting those in need.

 

Lake County's Red Cross chapter formally merged with the Red Cross of Sonoma and Mendocino counties last summer, according to Ellen Maremont Silver, the Sonoma Red Cross' director of marketing and communications.

 

For the five years before that, Lake County had been combined with the Yolo Red Cross after the local independent chapter was closed. Yolo has since been merged into the Capital Region Chapter, officials said.

 

Tim Miller, chief executive officer of the Red Cross Chapter of Sonoma, Mendocino and Lake Counties, said they are excited to team up.

 

“The Red Cross nationally had been reorganizing,” said Miller, noting that the combination of the Sonoma, Mendocino and Lake County chapters made sense.

 

The three-county chapter has its main office in Santa Rosa, with offices in Ukiah and one in Lakeport, at the Lakeport Senior Center, 527 Konocti Ave.

 

Locally, the Red Cross reported that its primary activities include disaster response, cardiopulmonary resuscitation classes and service to the Armed Forces.

 

There's also its ongoing mission of raising funds for areas hit by natural disasters, including Haiti and Japan.

 

A month after the devastating 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on March 11, the American Red Cross reported that its donations for that disasters had reached $103 million

 

Just in the Lake, Sonoma and Mendocino area, Silver estimates the total will be around $137,000; volunteers are currently counting the donations. That amount doesn't include donations made directly to the American Red Cross or Japanese Red Cross, officials said.

 

On Friday, Plank picked up a donation from East Lake Elementary School, which raised an estimated $600 in a penny drive the children held for Japan, as Lake County News has reported.

 

Silver said the vast amount of work done for the Red Cross is accomplished by volunteers.

 

Miller said the three-county area has about 650 volunteers, most of them prepared to offer disaster services, but some also acting as administrative volunteers. They work both in the Red Cross' office and their homes.

 

One of Lake County's well-known Red Cross volunteers is Pam Plank, who in 2001 went to New York City to assist in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks. She's often on the scene of local incidents, notably leading the effort to set up a shelter in Clearlake Oaks when the 2008 Walker Fire broke out.

 

Plank helps oversee Lake County's Red Cross volunteers.

 

“I have a cadre of about 65 people,” she said, with about 10 of those being volunteers who can be called on at any time.

 

While in the past Red Cross volunteers were called out in major disasters, a new change is in effect as of this year, with more regular trainings and gatherings taking place, Plank said.

 

Plank said she plans to hold disaster planning meetings for current and prospective disaster volunteers the third Monday of every month so volunteers can be ready for any eventuality. The meetings are held at the Lakeport Senior Center, 527 Konocti Ave.

 

Silver said Red Cross does many “table drills” with volunteers. Essentially, those are planning exercises to go through how a disaster might be approached.

 

“They are amazingly effective,” Silver said, noting that it's amazing how the “heart gets pumping” when talking about how to react in such situations. “These are not insignificant practices.”

 

Miller said that, in addition to the organization's mission of preparation and response, it also offers critical support to families of members of the armed forces.

 

The Red Cross assists military families by offering referrals to key social services, as well as a military comfort kit and stress management tools. Those services to military families are carried out solely by volunteers, Miller said.

 

When military families are hit with an emergency situation, the Red Cross also is able to act as official communicator with the military in an effort to get family members sent home when necessary.

 

“It's a very powerful service,” said Silver.

 

Plank personally saw this service in action. She was at Camp Pendleton when her grandson was born, and she was able to use Red Cross channels to contact her son's command in Iraq to inform him of the birth of his son.

 

Miller said that, on the disaster services end of the organization's operations, they respond to between 70 to 100 local incidents annually across the three counties. Many of those are home fires, where the Red Cross offers temporary housing assistance.

 

In such cases, the Red Cross also offers trained emotional support, as Silver pointed out that losing one's home is very traumatic.

 

Besides home fires, “There are a whole host of other things that can happen” – from earthquakes and floods to chemical spills, added Silver.

 

Silver said the Red Cross has open recruitment for volunteers, but it's during disasters that volunteers come to them.

 

Miller said that as long as the Lake County community supports the Red Cross, “it will be a safer community to lie in.”

 

Those wanting to donate to the Red Cross can do so at www.arcsm.org, www.redcross.org, can mail donations to the American Red Cross, 5297 Aero Drive, Santa Rosa, CA 95403, or can do so by phone at 707-577-7627.

 

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The latest report from the California Association of Realtors shows that median home prices and sales for California are increasing, but Lake's median price now is the lowest in the state.

 

The report, based on information the association collects from more than 90 Realtor associations and multiple listing services statewide, showed that closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 514,090 units in March.

 

That amounted to a 3.1-percent month-over-month sales increase, and 1.5-percent over March 2010, the report showed. The association said those numbers aligned with its expectations.

 

“For the first time in many months, we are seeing a genuine improvement in the overall economy, especially with respect to jobs,” said association President Beth L. Peerce. “However, while interest rates and current home prices are favorable, uncertainty about whether the economy has stabilized, concerns about inflation, and an unresolved state budget have created hesitation among buyers.”

 

The statewide median price of an existing, single-family detached home sold in California increased 5.4 percent in March compared with February to $286,010, but declined 4.9 percent compared with March 2010’s median price of $300,900.

 

The decline from the March 2010 numbers can be attributed partly to an increase in distressed sales in recent months, and to last year’s federal home buyer tax credit, which pushed both sales and home prices higher, according to California Association of Realtors Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young.

 

In Lake County, the report showed that the median home price was $94,170 in March, down from $123,330 in February, a decrease of 23.6 percent, which also constituted the biggest month-over-month value drop in the state for March.

 

Home prices have dropped 39.2 percent since March 2010, when the median home prices was $155,000, based on the statistics. That 39.2-percent drop also was the largest year-over-year change among the state's counties.

 

The next county closest in home price was Siskiyou, with a February median home price of $112,500, the report stated.

 

Marin County had the highest median price statewide, $826,700, a 30.7-percent increase over February's median home price of $632,580 and 4.6 percent above the $790,620 median price reported in March 2010.

 

Tehama had the highest month-over-month increase, 50 percent, with the February median home price of $83,330 jumping to $125,000.

 

Lake's unsold inventory index, which calculates how many months it would take to deplete the supply of home son the market, was 7.7 percent in March, down from 8.4 in February but up from 6.9 in March 2010.

 

Some good news – homes were selling faster in Lake County in March. The median time on the market was 83.9 days, down from 112.8 days in February and also down from 94.3 days in March 2010.

 

In other findings, the report also showed that the Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family detached homes was 5.3 months in March, down from 7.3 months in February 2011, but up compared with March 2010’s 4.8-month supply.

 

The index indicates the number of months needed to deplete the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate.

 

Thirty-year fixed-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.84 percent during March 2011, compared with 4.97 percent in March 2010, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustable-mortgage interest rates averaged 3.22 percent in March 2011, compared with 4.20 percent in March 2010.

 

The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was 56.7 days in March 2011, compared with 37 days for the same period a year ago, the association reported.

 

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