Friday, 20 September 2024

News

Curtis, Tina and Tenae Stewart would like to take this opportunity to thank all the good people of Lake County who supported our family and businesses for 23-plus years.

The Valley fire took it all from us.

We have all relocated to Sonoma County to be close to family, sold our property and sold Middletown Florist & Gifts, now the new owners can make new memories.

Not everyone is on Facebook and we feel we have left a lot of wonderful friends in the dark and we want to let them know we are OK, moving forward with life and making new memories, too.

If anyone would like to get in contact with us our new mailing address is P.O. Box 3952, Santa Rosa CA  95402.

Time heals – joy returns … ever so slowly.

Tina Stewart lives in Santa Rosa, Calif.

estherandharmony

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Esther Siegel of Redwood Valley will be inducted into a special group of senior dressage riders and horses on Saturday, June 25, at the Lake County Summer Dressage Show at Highland Springs Equestrian Center in Kelseyville.

The ages of Siegel and her horse, Harmony, qualify them to become members of The Dressage Foundation's Century Club.

The Century Club recognizes dressage riders and horses whose combined ages total 100 years or more.

Siegel is 65 and Harmony is 35.

In addition to having ages totaling 100 or more, horse and rider perform a dressage test of any level at a dressage show and are scored by a dressage judge.

The Dressage Foundation provides a Century Club ribbon and wall plaque to each horse and rider team. Local dressage clubs, family and friends help to make the ride into a celebratory event.

The Century Club was formed at The Dressage Foundation in 1996, at the suggestion of noted dressage judge and instructor, Dr. Max Gahwyler. The intent was to encourage older dressage riders to remain active in the sport.

Since that time, the Century Club has grown into a meaningful and popular endeavor and has more than 220 members to date.

Dressage is a word drawn from the French verb for “to train.” Dressage is both a method of training horses and a competitive sport, and is designed to develop correct movement in the horse.

TDF's Century Club is sponsored by Platinum Performance. Visit www.platinumperformance.com/equine for more information.

For more information about The Dressage Foundation or the Century Club, please contact Jenny Johnson, executive director at 402-434-8585 or visit www.dressagefoundation.org .

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson’s (CA-5) bipartisan provision requiring every American flag purchased by the Department of Defense (DOD) to be 100 percent manufactured in the United States, from articles, materials or supplies that are 100 percent grown, produced or manufactured in the United States, was passed by the House of Representatives on Thursday.

Thompson's provision passed as part of H.R. 5293, the DOD Appropriations Act of 2017.

The provision previously passed in the last Congress as part of H.R. 3547, the Fiscal Year (FY) 2014 consolidated appropriations bill, was signed into law by the president in January 2014, and was implemented by the Pentagon in 2015.

Thompson again introduced this provision to ensure its continued inclusion in DOD appropriations.

“I am proud to continue my efforts to ensure that every American flag the DOD buys is made in America, by American workers and with American products,” said Thompson. “This provision is commonsense. The brave men and women who serve our country in uniform should do so under an American-made flag.”

Specifically, Thompson's provision applies the Berry Amendment to the American flag.

The Berry Amendment, originally passed in 1941, prohibits DOD funds from being used to acquire food, clothing, military uniforms, fabrics, stainless steel and hand or measuring tools that are not grown or produced in the United States, except in rare exceptions.

Thompson's provision applies the same rules for the DOD's acquisition of American flags, which previously were not listed as a covered item.

Precedent already exists for such a provision. Currently, the Department of Veterans Affairs is required to only purchase U.S.-made American flags for servicemembers' funerals.

H.R. 5293 passed the House of Representatives by a vote of 282-138. The legislation will now go to the Senate for consideration.

Thompson represents California’s Fifth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Contra Costa, Lake, Napa, Solano and Sonoma counties.

HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – The Hidden Valley Lake Ladies 40-9ers Golf Club held a flag tournament on June 9.

The results are as follows:

– Flight 1, first place, Joy Ryan, net 32; second place, Bonnie Eagleton, 36.

– Flight 2, first place, Mariana Bendinelli, 35; second place, Elaine Fauser, 44.

– Flight 3, first place, Liz Cummesky, 35; second place, Toni Stratton, 37; third place, Gwen DeRosa, 39.

– Flight 4, first place, Linda Millard, 39; second place, Denyse McCracken, 45; third place, Babara Carver, 46.

THE CONJURING 2 (Rated R)

With accomplished director James Wan once again at the helm of a supernatural thriller, “The Conjuring 2” brings the same feeling of dread that permeated the original story of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren doing their best to help a family in need.

To say that “The Conjuring 2” is a sequel to the first film would be akin to calling “The Amityville Horror,” the 1979 original, a sequel to 1973’s “The Exorcist.” The only common denominator is the existence of pure evil in a ghostly state.

“The Conjuring 2” is described as “based upon a true story,” and indeed, there is plenty of documentation, through various means, that something terribly wrong was happening at a council house in North London back in 1977.

Others may claim that it would be more appropriate to say “loosely based” on a true story at best, if not to describe the events as a hoax or, at the very least, a fabrication built upon a series of unexplained incidents that don’t merit a mystical designation.

But first, the film opens with Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga), who considered themselves demonologists rather than ghost hunters while conducting a postmortem séance at the Long Island house where the Amityville haunting unfolded.

The traumatic experience of confronting a demonic vision during this dinner table communication with the dead causes Lorraine to thereafter continuously sense the apparition of a malevolent force that represents pure evil.

With the effects of Long Island still haunting them, the Warrens come out of a self-imposed sabbatical in late 1977 and travel to England to take on a vile demonic entity that has taken root in the home of single mom Peggy Hodgson (Frances O’Connor) and her four children.

Apparently, the Warrens are unable to resist a case of children in peril. The two oldest children are the first to encounter the strange events. In particular, 11-year-old Janet (Madison Wolfe) suffers the greatest harm from a ghostly force intent on frightening everyone.

Janet’s 13-year old sister Margaret (Lauren Esposito), sharing the same bedroom, is also most directly affected by the onset of mystical happenings, witnessing her sibling’s nightmares and eventual levitations as well as the strange noises and moving of objects.

The two younger brothers, 10-year-old Johnny (Patrick McAuley) and 7-year-old Billy (Benjamin Haigh) are also tormented by a ghostlike creature that calls itself Bill Wilkins and insists with great malice in his voice that the Hodgson family must leave his house.

Prior to the arrival of the Warrens, the Hodgson home had attracted the attention of the media and had been frequented by police, with one officer, Carolyn Heeps, filing a report stating unequivocally that she witnessed a chair moving across the room on its own power.

Others coming to the scene of the unexplained happenings included parapsychologist Anita Gregory (Franka Potente), a skeptic who is unmoved by any evidence of the mystical, and paranormal investigator Maurice Grosse (Simon McBurney), who finds reason to believe.

The necessity of intervention brings the Warrens to the house, first for the purpose of obtaining enough proof of demonic possession that they would be able to convince the Catholic Church of the essential obligation to conduct an exorcism.

As to be expected in a well-crafted horror film, which James Wan is perfectly suited to achieve, the suspense builds nicely as the strange occurrences take on greater menace with the ghost possessing Janet such that he gives voice to the irrational complaints of a bitter old man.

Though care is taken to record Janet’s possessed voice, skeptics continue to suggest the Hodgson family had created an elaborate hoax, either for publicity or fortune, which if the latter were true, you’d think a move to a nicer home would have happened with haste.

Perhaps the most compelling aspect of the terror on display is that even the Warrens, experienced as they were in dealing with the paranormal, demonstrated fear in the face of an element of danger that could have come from a demonic force.

To be sure, there is no need to have seen “The Conjuring,” which was set in a haunted Rhode Island farmhouse, while this second film is a wholly different story in a foreign land. Both films, though, rely on suspense and scares rather than unrelenting gore and blood.

The saving grace for “The Conjuring 2” is that the characters are uniformly interesting as they grapple with the extremely disturbing events. Moreover, it’s a scary movie without going overboard. It’s likely to prove to be one of the best horror movies of the year.
  
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Lake County Zoning Administrator will consider approving Minor Use Permit (MUP 16-11) of DENNIS BOOTH in accordance with Lake County Code to allow low volume live jazz music indoors several nights per month at an existing business, Live Oak Grille. 

The project is located at 5570 Live Oak Dr, Kelseyville, CA, and further described as APN 008-710-46.
The Planner processing this application is Joshua Dorris, (707) 263-2221 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

The Zoning Administrator will approve this Minor Use Permit with no public hearing if no written request for a public hearing is submitted by 5:00 P.M., June 29, 2016 to the Community Development Department, Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport, California.

Should a timely request for hearing be filed, a public hearing will be held on July 6, 2016 at 2:00 p.m. in Conference Room C, 3rd Floor of the Courthouse.


COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
Robert Massarelli, Director


By: ______________________________________
Danae Bowen, Office Assistant III
               

Upcoming Calendar

21Sep
09.21.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Passion Play fundraiser
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:30 pm - 10:00 pm
Lake County Wine Auction
23Sep
09.23.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Lakeport City Council candidates' forum
24Sep
09.24.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
28Sep
09.28.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
5Oct
10.05.2024 7:00 am - 11:00 am
Sponsoring Survivorship
5Oct
10.05.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day

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