Wednesday, 08 May 2024

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The “locavore” movement helps America’s farmers. Could it also help the country's fishing industry?

Two new NOAA Sea Grant studies will look at how new business models, based on the success of community supported agriculture, could benefit fishing communities in Washington, Oregon and California.

“I am very excited about these projects because they get to the heart of what coastal seafood lovers want – delicious, fresh, local and sustainably caught seafood on their dinner plates,” said NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco, Ph.D., who announced the studies Thursday in Santa Barbara, Calif.

“California Sea Grant is pleased to partner with the three other West Coast Sea Grant programs to support a portfolio of social science research with region-wide significance to coastal communities, fishermen and the natural resources upon which they rely,” said California Sea Grant Director James Eckman, Ph.D.

The four West Coast Sea Grant programs selected these two projects, totaling $500,000, through an independent peer-review process. NOAA provided funding through its National Sea Grant College Program.

Community supported fisheries (CSFs) are a hot trend in seafood marketing.

Fishermen in some areas are finding that they can get better prices for fresh, locally caught fish sold directly to consumers through CSFs.

Patterned after community supported agriculture, the CSF business model is the subject of a new California Sea Grant study.

Direct marketing to consumers

Barbara Walker, Ph.D., a cultural geographer at the University of California, Santa Barbara, will lead a study of community-supported fisheries and other direct-marketing programs in Washington, as well as North Carolina and South Carolina.

The emphasis will be on helping fishermen learn about direct marketing and identify approaches that might be appropriate for the local fisheries and consumer base.

“With the Sea Grant award, we will be able to systematically investigate the upsides and downsides of direct marketing of seafood and tailor the results specifically to West Coast fisheries and fishing communities,” Walker said. “There are a lot of successes with community-supported fisheries, and, on the other side, there are programs that are struggling.”

Project co-investigator Caroline Pomeroy, Ph.D., a California Sea Grant advisor, said that the scientists “want to objectively evaluate the actual benefits and costs, and what it takes for such programs to succeed.”

“Our goal, ultimately, is to provide fishermen and fishing communities with scientifically sound information they can use to make decisions that give them the best possible chance of success,” she said.

High value product lines

Besides direct sales, another avenue for increasing revenue from fishing is to develop higher-value product lines, for example, by delivering fish live, or by smoking, freezing, or otherwise processing product. The second Sea Grant-funded project looks at this approach.

Ana Pitchon, Ph.D., an assistant professor of anthropology at California State University, Dominguez Hills in Los Angeles County, and James Hilger, a fisheries resource economist at NOAA's Southwest Fisheries Science Center in San Diego, will explore what can be done to add value to fish and shellfish landed locally, using four fisheries – Pacific sardine, Dungeness crab, near-shore live finfish and spot prawn – as case studies.

Findings from the project will be presented at workshops and town hall meetings and developed into a set of recommendations to be shared with coastal communities and managers.

Josh Fisher, vice president of the California Lobster and Trap Fishermen’s Association, called the research “vital to the survival of West Coast fisheries.”

NOAA’s California Sea Grant College Program is a statewide, multi-university program of marine research, extension services, and education activities administered by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego.

It is one of 32 Sea Grant programs and is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.

Visit www.csgc.ucsd.edu to sign up for email news or follow them on Facebook or Twitter.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Pacific storm system that was headed toward Northern and Central California Friday night is expected to bring rain to the region Saturday and Sunday.

The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory for Lake and other portions of Northern California in anticipation of the storm.

Forecasters predicted that rainfall would be mostly light to moderate, and would occur primarily on Saturday and Saturday night, with reduced chances of rainfall on Sunday morning.

Lake County's rain amount over the weekend is anticipated to be up to just over an inch and a half at the most.

Snow is expected in higher elevations in the Coastal Range as well as the Sierras, the National Weather Service said.

While rain is forecast to taper off later on Sunday and early on Monday, another storm system is expected to bring rain to Lake County through much of next week, the agency reported.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

The human eye is crucial to astronomy. Without the ability to see, the luminous universe of stars, planets and galaxies would be closed to us, unknown forever.

Nevertheless, astronomers cannot shake their fascination with the invisible.

Outside the realm of human vision is an entire electromagnetic spectrum of wonders. Each type of light – from radio waves to gamma-rays – reveals something unique about the universe.

Some wavelengths are best for studying black holes; others reveal newborn stars and planets; while others illuminate the earliest years of cosmic history.

NASA has many telescopes "working the wavelengths" up and down the electromagnetic spectrum. One of them, the Fermi Gamma-Ray Telescope orbiting Earth, has just crossed a new electromagnetic frontier.

"Fermi is picking up crazy-energetic photons," said Dave Thompson, an astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "And it's detecting so many of them we've been able to produce the first all-sky map of the very high energy universe."

“This is what the sky looks like near the very edge of the electromagnetic spectrum, between 10 billion and 100 billion electron volts,” Thompson added.

The light we see with human eyes consists of photons with energies in the range 2 to 3 electron volts.

The gamma-rays Fermi detects are billions of times more energetic, from 20 million to more than 300 billion electron volts.

These gamma-ray photons are so energetic, they cannot be guided by the mirrors and lenses found in ordinary telescopes. Instead Fermi uses a sensor that is more like a Geiger counter than a telescope.

If we could wear Fermi's gamma ray "glasses," we'd witness powerful bullets of energy – individual gamma rays – from cosmic phenomena such as supermassive black holes and hypernova explosions. The sky would be a frenzy of activity.

Before Fermi was launched in June 2008, there were only four known celestial sources of photons in this energy range. "In 3 years Fermi has found almost 500 more,” says Thompson.

What lies within this new realm?

"Mystery, for one thing," said Thompson. "About a third of the new sources can't be clearly linked to any of the known types of objects that produce gamma rays. We have no idea what they are."

The rest have one thing in common: prodigious energy.

"Among them are super massive black holes called blazars; the seething remnants of supernova explosions; and rapidly rotating neutron stars called pulsars,” Thompson said.

And some of the gamma rays seem to come from the “Fermi bubbles” – giant structures emanating from the Milky Way's center and spanning some 20,000 light years above and below the galactic plane.

Exactly how these bubbles formed is another mystery.

Now that the first sky map is complete, Fermi is working on another, more sensitive and detailed survey.

"In the next few years, Fermi should reveal something new about all of these phenomena, what makes them tick, and why they generate such 'unearthly' levels of energy," said David Paneque, a leader in this work from the Max Planck Institute in Germany.

For now, though, there are more unknowns than knowns about "Fermi's world."

Says Thompson: "It's pretty exciting!"

Dauna Coulter and Dr. Tony Phillips work for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

A recent flurry of eruptions on the sun did more than spark pretty auroras around the poles.

NASA-funded researchers say the solar storms of March 8-10 dumped enough energy in Earth’s upper atmosphere to power every residence in New York City for two years.

“This was the biggest dose of heat we’ve received from a solar storm since 2005,” said Martin Mlynczak of NASA Langley Research Center. “It was a big event, and shows how solar activity can directly affect our planet.”

Mlynczak is the associate principal investigator for the SABER instrument onboard NASA’s TIMED satellite.

SABER monitors infrared emissions from Earth’s upper atmosphere, in particular from carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitric oxide (NO), two substances that play a key role in the energy balance of air hundreds of km above our planet’s surface.

“Carbon dioxide and nitric oxide are natural thermostats,” explained James Russell of Hampton University, SABER’s principal investigator. “When the upper atmosphere (or ‘thermosphere’) heats up, these molecules try as hard as they can to shed that heat back into space.”

That’s what happened on March 8 when a coronal mass ejection (CME) propelled in our direction by an X5-class solar flare hit Earth’s magnetic field. (On the “Richter Scale of Solar Flares,” X-class flares are the most powerful kind.)

Energetic particles rained down on the upper atmosphere, depositing their energy where they hit. The action produced spectacular auroras around the poles and significant1 upper atmospheric heating all around the globe.

“The thermosphere lit up like a Christmas tree,” said Russell. “It began to glow intensely at infrared wavelengths as the thermostat effect kicked in.”

For the three day period, March 8-10, the thermosphere absorbed 26 billion kWh of energy. Infrared radiation from CO2 and NO, the two most efficient coolants in the thermosphere, re-radiated 95 percent of that total back into space.

In human terms, this is a lot of energy.

According to the New York City mayor’s office, an average NY household consumes just under 4,700 kWh annually. This means the geomagnetic storm dumped enough energy into the atmosphere to power every home in the Big Apple for two years.

“Unfortunately, there’s no practical way to harness this kind of energy,” said Mlynczak. “It’s so diffuse and out of reach high above Earth’s surface. Plus, the majority of it has been sent back into space by the action of CO2 and NO.”

During the heating impulse, the thermosphere puffed up like a marshmallow held over a campfire, temporarily increasing the drag on low-orbiting satellites.

This is both good and bad. On the one hand, extra drag helps clear space junk out of Earth orbit. On the other hand, it decreases the lifetime of useful satellites by bringing them closer to the day of re-entry.

The storm is over now, but Russell and Mlynczak expect more to come.

“We’re just emerging from a deep solar minimum,” said Russell. “The solar cycle is gaining strength with a maximum expected in 2013.”

More sunspots flinging more CMEs toward Earth adds up to more opportunities for SABER to study the heating effect of solar storms.

“This is a new frontier in the sun-Earth connection,” said Mlynczak, and the data we’re collecting are unprecedented.”

Stay tuned to Science@NASA for updates from the top of the atmosphere.

Dr. Tony Phillips works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County’s unemployment rate dropped slightly in February with the addition of 160 jobs, according to the newest report on local and state unemployment, released Friday.

The California Employment Development Department reported that Lake County’s preliminary February jobless rate was 16.5 percent, down from the revised January rate of 16.6 percent, and down from 18.5 percent from February 2011.

Lake was ranked at No. 42 out of the state’s 58 counties for its February unemployment rate, an improvement from No. 43 in January, according to the state’s data.

At the same time, California’s rate was unchanged in February at 10.9 percent, down from 12 percent the previous February. Nonfarm payroll jobs increased by 4,000 during February for a total gain of 333,100 jobs since the recovery began in September 2009.

Nonfarm jobs in California totaled 14,184,500 in February, an increase of 4,000 jobs over the month, according to a survey of 42,000 California businesses measuring jobs in the economy. The year-over-year change – February 2011 to February 2012 – showed an increase of 127,300 jobs, up 0.9 percent.

A federal survey of 5,500 California households serves as the basis for determining California unemployment rate.

On a nationwide level, the unemployment rate in February was 8.3 percent, the same as in January, and down from 9 percent in February 2011, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Dennis Mullins of the Employment Development Department’s North Coast Region Labor Market Information Division said total Lake County wage and salary employment increased 160 jobs between January and February and remained up by 410 jobs over the year.

Government remained down for the year over, with a loss of 40 jobs, he said.

Year-over job growth occurred in farm, 380;  trade, transportation and utilities, 40, professional and business services, 30; leisure and hospitality, 10; and other services, 60, according to Mullins.

Mullins said industry sectors with no change over the year included manufacturing and financial activities.

Industry sectors with decline over the year included mining, logging and construction, with a loss of 30 jobs; information, down 10; private educational and health services, down 30; and government, a loss of 40 jobs, he said.

While Lake enjoyed a slight improvement in its rate, its neighboring counties – with the exception of Napa – saw their rates climb slightly in February, based on the Employment Development Department’s report.

Lake’s surrounding counties' employment figures were as follows: Colusa, 27.1 percent, No. 58; Glenn, 17.1 percent, No. 46; Mendocino, 11.1 percent, No. 19; Napa, 8.9 percent, No. 7; Sonoma County, 9.3 percent, No. 10; and Yolo, 14.4 percent, No. 33.

Marin County had the state’s lowest unemployment in the state, remaining at 6.6 percent, while Colusa County's rate ticked up by one-tenth to 27.1-percent, according to state data.

The Employment Development Department reported that there were 565,418 people receiving regular unemployment insurance benefits during the February survey week, compared with 575,895 in January and 666,260 in February 2011.

At the same time, new claims for unemployment insurance were 55,287 in February 2012, compared with 59,344 in January and 68,203 in February of last year, the report showed.

Report shows slight increase in jobs for California

The federal survey of California households, done with a smaller sample than the survey of employers, showed an increase in the number of employed people.

It estimated the number of Californians holding jobs in February was 16,455,000, an increase of 12,000 from January, and up 293,000 from the employment total in February of last year, according to the Employment Development Department.

The number of people unemployed in California was 2,013,000 – down by 6,000 over the month – and down by 185,000 compared with February of last year, the state reported.

EDD’s report on payroll employment (wage and salary jobs) in the nonfarm industries of California totaled 14,184,500 in February, a net gain of 4,000 jobs since the January survey. This followed a gain of 1,500 jobs, as revised, in January.

Four categories – manufacturing; information; professional and business services; and educational and health services – added jobs over the month, gaining 24,400 jobs, the report said.

The category of information posted the largest increase over the month, adding 9,300 jobs. Six categories – mining and logging; construction; trade, transportation and utilities; financial activities; other services; and government – reported job declines over the month, down 20,400 jobs, the Employment Development Department said.

Government posted the largest decrease over the month, down 10,300 jobs. One category, leisure and hospitality, was unchanged over the month, data showed.

Eight categories – construction; manufacturing; trade, transportation and utilities; information; financial activities; professional and business services; educational and health services; and leisure and hospitality – posted job gains over the year, adding 184,200 jobs, according to the state’s statistic.

Professional and business services posted the largest gain on both a numerical and percentage basis, adding 67,700 jobs, up 3.2 percent.

Two categories, other services and government, posted job declines over the year, down 56,900 jobs, while the state said government posted the largest decline on both a numerical and percentage basis, down by 49,800 jobs, a decrease of 2.1 percent.

One category, mining and logging, was unchanged over the year, the report said.

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

SANTA ROSA, Calif. – Two teenagers saved a man’s life while traveling overseas; a doctor traveled to Nepal to perform life-changing cataract surgeries; a man saved a woman from a burning car; several men rushed to save two young men from a house fire.

These are just a few of the 11 powerful stories that will be presented at the ninth annual Real Heroes Breakfast and Fundraiser.

The American Red Cross, serving Sonoma, Mendocino and Lake Counties, is presenting the invitation-only event on Thursday, April 19, at 7:15 a.m., at the Doubletree Hotel in Rohnert Park.

More than 50 individuals from the three counties were nominated as heroes this year.

The Real Heroes Breakfast honors the extraordinary compassion and commitment of community members, while also raising funds to support essential local Red Cross services.

Among those who will be honored in the “rescue professional” category are Lake County heroes Gabe Lopez, a firefighter, and California Highway Patrol Officer Josh Dye, Security Operations Manager Steve Atkinson and Security Officer Byron Atkins who saved the lives of Jordan Armstrong and Kevin Hart, who were victims of a house fire in Hidden Valley Lake in December.

While off duty, Lopez spotted the fire and immediately went to help.

Without any fire gear, Lopez went into the home to rescue one of the victims who was still in the house.

Lopez was assisted by the other rescue professionals in treating the victims, getting the rescue helicopter to the site of the fire, calming the community.

Both young men survived, although one had burns over 80 percent of his body.

The honorees at the April 19 event also include the following exceptional men and women.

Good Samaritan, Youth

Caitlyn Hallman and Phil Coren of Ukiah put their CPR and first aid training to use while they were on a study-abroad program.

While visiting the cliffs of Portugal, Hallman and Coren went into rescue mode when heavy winds swept Canadian Mark Jefferies over the cliff.

Hallman's and Coren's actions helped save Jefferies’ life.  

Good Samaritan, Adult

Chris Cox of Petaluma was driving down Stony Point Road when he spotted a car on fire.

Cox cut the seat belt of Ricki Ann Thiele, who was unconscious, and freed her dog, who was trapped in the car as well.

Then, with the help of another bystander, he pulled the woman to safety.

Cox, who lost his 19-year-old-son Danny in a car crash just three months earlier, was inspired by his son’s dreams of being a firefighter and helping others.

Good Samaritan, Senior

Louis Hopfer of Sebastopol is a volunteer at The Tamayo House, a home run by Social Advocates for Youth for 18- to 25-year-olds.

The Tamayo House helps young adults transition from foster care or homelessness to becoming functioning, self-sufficient adults.

Hopfer shares his life experience with those who need it most, guiding grateful youth in the right direction.

Law enforcement

Santa Rosa Sgt. Clay VanArtsdalen is dedicated to public service and his profession as well as to improving the Police Department and his community.

Sgt. VanArtsdalen helped organize the “Shop with a Cop” program.

This event gives residents from children’s homes and shelters gift cards to purchase gifts during the holidays.

Education

Dr. Glenn Langer of Little River in Mendocino County, a retired professor of medicine at UCLA, and his wife Marianne, founded the mentoring program Partnership Scholar in 1996.

This program gives underprivileged youth the opportunity to succeed in school and attend college.

In the last three years, almost 100 percent of the programs participants have been accepted into colleges.

Medical

Ophthalmologist Dr. Gary Barth of Santa Rosa traveled to Nepal to assist renowned Nepal cataract surgeon, Dr. Bidya Pant with advance eye care surgeries for poor residents.

In this farming community, blindness can mean severe hardship, and the surgery team does hundreds of surgeries per day.

Dr. Barth has helped cure blindness in India, Cambodia and elsewhere.

Animal

Dr. Grant Patrick of Santa Rosa is a veterinarian who volunteers his time caring for injured wildlife.

He has treated as many as 100 fawns a year since 1987.

He has also treated countless other animals, both domestic and wild, including foxes, jack rabbits, coyotes, mountain lions, squirrels, cats and dogs.

Military

Lee Gooding of Forestville, executive director of Helping American Veterans Endure (HAVE), works with veterans who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

A Vietnam veteran, Gooding has created programs to help vets alleviate stress and live healthier.

HAVE workshops include such activities as writing, humor, art classes and even pet therapy.

Through HAVE, Gooding has created a place of healing for military veterans.   

Environment

Thomas Furrer, a retired wildlife biology instructor from Santa Rosa, was teaching about the irretrievable loss of fish species, when one student asked: “What can we do?”

That question, and Furrer’s dedication to the environment, led him to spend 30 years reviving our waters and fish.

He founded the United Anglers Conservation Fish Hatchery in 1983.

With the help of his students, Furrer’s hatchery is the only high school-based, fully licensed fish hatchery in the U.S., and is dedicated to protecting of the steelhead salmon from extinction.

Furrer also founded the Adobe Creek Restoration Project, which, again with his hundreds of students over the years, turned a formerly dead stream into a vital, living creek.

At the breakfast, videos projected onto 10-foot screens will show each hero telling his or her story in compelling, brief vignettes.

More than 350 business and community members are expected to be in attendance to honor the heroes.

Those wishing to attend the fundraiser may call the Red Cross at 707-577-7627.

There is no set ticket price, but guests are encouraged to contribute the suggested minimum donation of $131, which represents $1 for every year the American Red Cross has been serving the American people.

For more information visit www.arcsm.org or www.redcross.org .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The trial of a man accused of stabbing to death a neighbor in 2007 has been tentatively scheduled to begin this May.

Ivan Garcia Oliver, 34, is set to go to trial beginning May 23, based on a discussion between the prosecution and Oliver’s defense attorney, Stephen Carter, at a Friday morning hearing in Lakeport.

Oliver is charged with murder, burglary and causing injury to an elderly person for his alleged attack on 67-year-old Michael Dodele on Nov. 20, 2007.

Oliver was accompanied to court by four correctional officers, was closely cuffed and dressed in a high-security pod red and white jail jumpsuit.

Judge Richard Martin set the May trial date at the request of Carter, the defense attorney for Orlando Lopez, who along with Paul Braden is now on trial for the June 2011 murder of 4-year-old Skyler Rapp and the wounding of five others.

With that trial currently expected to run through at least May 21, Carter suggested that he could be ready to proceed in Oliver’s case on May 23.

On Friday Judge Martin also set a trial readiness and settlement conference in the case for May 14, and a trial assignment hearing for May 18.

Oliver and Dodele had been neighbors for a short time in the Western Hills Mobile Home Park in Lakeport, where Dodele had moved after being released from prison.

Dodele had served 19 years after being convicted of committing a rape in Sonoma County, and had been required to register as a sex offender under Megan’s Law.

The case against Oliver alleges that he saw Dodele on the California Attorney General's Megan's List Web site, and due to unclear wording in the listing concluded that Dodele had been in prison for a crime involving a child, as Lake County News has reported.

Oliver has remained in custody since his arrest shortly after Dodele’s fatal stabbing.

Hinchcliff said Oliver’s case has experienced numerous delays, in part due to several of his previous defense attorneys leaving the case. Carter also has requested a continuance for further investigation.

Oliver’s case also was delayed due to his being returned to San Diego County to undergo trial on a federal illegal dumping case in 2008, in which he was sentenced to 15 months in prison for violating the federal hazardous waste law.

In addition to the charges in the case involving Dodele’s death, Oliver is facing an additional felony charge relating to a shank a correctional officer at the Lake County Jail found in his possession in December 2007. Jail officials at the time said he made the weapon from a toothbrush.

Hinchcliff said that second case is trailing the main murder case.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Launching a new program intended to “build capacity and effectiveness” of vineyard workers, the Lake County Winegrape Commission is sponsoring a series of training sessions for a select group of foremen and crew heads from Lake County vineyards.

The first group of “Master Vigneron Academy” participants is scheduled to meet once a month through August, then break for the harvest months of September and October before concluding the one year of coursework with a meeting in November.

Each session will cover one or more topics important to vineyard management and maintenance, including pruning, canopy management, vineyard layout, planting stock, equipment, health and safety of workers, conflict resolution, harvesting, winegrape quality and wine tasting.

The World English Dictionary defines the French word “vigneron” as “a person who grows grapes for winemaking.”

Wikipedia takes it a step further: “A vigneron is someone who cultivates a vineyard for winemaking. The word connotes or emphasizes the critical role that vineyard placement and maintenance has in the production of high-quality wine.”

The commission’s goal with its new project, the first of its kind in California, is two-fold: production of high quality wine and the development of some of the best vineyard workers to be found, according to Lake County Winegrape Commission President Shannon Gunier.

The commission will reward the individuals who successfully complete the academy with a “Master Vigneron” certificate.

“The end result is expected to be higher quality outputs in the vineyard with more efficient and skilled employees,” says Gunier. “Another key element is that better-trained workers will have greater confidence and develop into more valued employees. It is hoped that employers will recognize this, leading to better pay and enhanced advancement opportunities in the wine industry.”

The concept for the yearlong program was developed by the Commission’s Education Committee chair, Randy Krag of Beckstoffer Vineyards.

The commission has tapped its education director, Paul Zellman, to coordinate the program.

Zellman, who has 30 years of grape growing and winemaking experience, was selected to help the Commission accomplish the Master Vigneron Program goals.

The Ukiah viticulturalist will also assist with the continuing sustainable winegrape growing program, according to Gunier.

“We are excited to welcome Mr. Zellman to our team. His expertise will guide us through this brand new program,” said Gunier. “As it states in the mission statement for the Master Vigneron Academy, the commission directors believe ‘the vineyards are at the heart of producing world class wines and that experienced vineyard workers and foremen are the key to bring out the best of those vineyards.’ In developing this program, the commission directors sought to find the ideal teacher and coordinator. We have found a skilled, passionate and experienced individual in Paul.”

Zellman began his viticulture career as vineyard manager for MacGregor Vineyards, San Luis Obispo, in 1980, the same year he earned his bachelor of science degree in viticulture from the University of California, Davis.

He added a master of science degree in soil science from the University of California, Riverside, in 1995.

He has professional and personal ties to Lake County. “In 1998 I became the grower rep for Kendall-Jackson Winery for Lake, Mendocino and parts of Sonoma counties,” said Zellman. “At that time, Kendall-Jackson purchased about 60 percent of the total Lake County Sauvignon Blanc crop. During this period I met many Lake County growers and families.”

Zellman previously worked with the Lake County Winegrape Commission, from 2001 to 2003, directing a comprehensive wine quality assessment. He also developed maps and reports supporting the High Valley AVA application.

He is well-acquainted with Lake County, too, because of family. “I first become familiar with Lake County when visiting my wife’s family in Lakeport. My father-in-law is retired Superior Court Judge John Golden,” said Zellman. “My wife also has family in Ukiah where I now live and where we raised our two sons.”

Zellman has worked as a vineyard manager at San Pasqual Vineyards in Escondido, Calif., a grower relations representative with Kendall-Jackson in Santa Rosa, a cellar worker with Geyser Peak Winery in Geyserville, and an assistant winemaker with Brutocao Cellars in Hopland.

Speaking about anticipated outcomes of the Master Vigneron Program, Zellman said, “Growers will see crews that are supervised by graduates of the MV Program performing tasks correctly and at lower costs. Ultimately, wineries and wine drinkers will recognize these efforts by the production of better wines.

“Furthermore, as the word spreads of the professional training that we provide for our supervisors, Lake County will attract and retain more key vineyard supervisors. Also, other employees will see an opportunity to advance their own professional development and an enhanced livelihood.”

The first class of the Master Vigneron Program consists of 10 experienced Lake County vineyard workers.

They are Amador Duran of Obsidian Ridge Vineyards, Jaime Rosas of Lyon Vineyard, Gabriel Martinez and Felix Aguilar of Bella Vista Farming Co., Jeronimo Rico of Dorn Vineyards, Antonio Batres and Alonso Raygoza of Beckstoffer Vineyards, Tarciscio “Tacho” Corona of Stokes Vineyards, Federico Gonzalez of L & L Vineyards and Gerardo Mendoza of Red Hills Vineyard.

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Amador Duran, Obsidian Ridge

Amador Duran is a vineyard foreman with Nissen Vineyard Services. He has worked on the Obsidian Ridge vineyard project since 1998.

His 15 years of vineyard experience, including many years on the Maxwell Ranch in Kelseyville, has given him the knowledge and skills to perform his current job as ranch foreman, he said.

He especially enjoys working with many people. Speaking about the range of tasks in his job, Duran said, “I love it.”

He looks forward to the Master Vigneron Academy courses, noting that he hopes to gain additional information about roots and plant stock.

Duran has lived in Lake County for more than 20 years and currently resides in the Clearlake area with his wife Alejadra.

The couple has four children: a son who is in college, a daughter in high school, a son in elementary school, and a 2-year-old daughter.

Jaime Rosas, Lyon Vineyard

Jaime Rosas is veteran of vineyard work in the Kelseyville area for more than 30 years.

Managing all operations of winegrape production for Walt Lyon’s Vineyard, Rosas came to Lake County in the mid-1970s and spent a few years working “here and there, like everybody else” until Walt Lyon offered him full-time employment.

Rosas had made the trek from Mexico in about 1974. His part-time experience included Lyon’s ranch.

It was around 1978 that Rosas was “fortunate” to be asked by Lyon to work for him. “Walt and I have a trust in each other. We understand each other,” said Rosas.

He joked, “(Walt) trusts me enough to mess things up,” adding that his employer allows him to try out ideas and sometimes they work out.

Rosas looks forward to the Master Vigneron Program, saying he is continuing to learn new things about winegrape production.

He lives near the Lakeport/Kelseyville border with his wife of 30-plus years, Marcia. The couple reared three boys who attended Kelseyville schools from kindergarten through graduation from high school.

Gabriel Martinez, Bella Vista Farming Co.

Gabriel Martinez currently manages all field operations on the five Bartolucci properties of the Bella Vista Farming Co.

He joined Bella Vista’s management team in 2009 following a two-year stint as supervisor at Bartolucci Vineyards.

His work experience includes employment with Syd Stokes over 14 years during which he worked his way up to foreman/supervisor.

Born in La Nopalera de Ecuandureo, Michoacan, Mexico in 1963, Martinez immigrated to the United States in 1981 and settled in the Finley/Kelseyville area.

He has worked in vineyards and pear orchards since. He is familiar with all cultural practices for both crops, having worked in pruning, picking, machinery operation, pesticide and fertilizer application, frost protection, irrigation and labor supervision.

In 1996, Martinez became a U.S. citizen.

He is married and has two sons, two daughters, and a granddaughter.

Felix Aguilar, Bella Vista Farming Co.

Felix Aguilar has worked for Bella Vista Farming Co. and/or Quercus Ranch since 1995.

Originally hired for his mechanical and fabrication skills, he was moved into a supervisory role because of his ability to plan work and manage people.

He oversees most vineyard and orchard activities for a number of Bella Vista’s clients, as well as repair and maintenance activities for much of the farm equipment used in those operations.

Aguilar owns property in Texas and Mexico where he grows Milo. He also enjoys buying, rebuilding and selling used cars and pickups.

Aguilar was born in Progreso del Campecino Rio Bravo, Tamaulipas, Mexico in 1952, and became a U.S. citizen in 1998.

He is married and has one daughter, four sons, and 14 grandchildren.

Jeronimo Rico, Dorn Vineyards

Jeronimo Rico has worked for Dorn Vineyards since the mid-1970s – “1974 or ’75,” he said – having previously been employed as a pear pruner in the Kelseyville area.

He is a supervisor for the Dorns, overseeing every aspect of the vineyard maintenance and winegrape production.

With his experience in all vineyard skills, Rico says he especially enjoys being a foreman and supervising other workers in the production process.

A resident of Kelseyville for nearly 40 years, Rico lives with his wife Adelina and daughter Esther.

Antonio Batres, Beckstoffer Vineyards

Antonio Batres has worked for Beckstoffer Vineyards for 11 years, mostly as vineyard supervisor but with experience in all vineyard skills.

He came to the company with a variety of experiences in California orchard crops.

Batres studied one year at CIANO (Centro de Investigaciones Agricolas del Noroeste) in Ciudad Obregon, Sonora, Mexico, research home of the “father of the green revolution” and Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug.

Batres and his wife live in Lakeport with their three children, ages 10 months to 16 years.

Alonso Raygoza, Beckstoffer Vineyards

Alonso Raygoza has worked for Beckstoffer Vineyards for over 12 years, learning vineyard skills from the ground up.

He is an experienced equipment operator extraordinaire. As harvest forklift operator, he loaded and unloaded most of the more than 2,200 valley bins that were dispatched from Beckstoffer’s operation last harvest.

Raygoza lives in Clearlake Riviera with his wife and 10-month-old daughter.

Tarciscio “Tacho” Corona, Stokes Vineyards

Tarciscio “Tacho” Corona is in his sixth year of employment with Stokes Vineyards. He has been picking grapes for Lake County growers for many more years, having been in the area for 14 years.

The 33-year-old is a foreman/supervisor who has shown his skills in working with people. He handles crews very well, according to his employer.

He is also a very good equipment driver and an excellent mechanic. Corona says his favorite vineyard activitiy is pruning.

He lives in Lakeport with his wife Apolonia (“Polly”) and three children ages 3 ½, 8 and 9.

Federico Gonzalez, L & L Vineyards

Federico Gonzalez is a vineyard foreman for L&L Vineyards where he has worked for 13 years. His duties are extensive and involve every aspect of the winegrape growing process.

As foreman, he is responsible for crew training and supervision. He drives tractors for spraying, discing and other maintenance, and actively oversees L&L’s irrigation and harvesting tasks.

Originally from the state of Michoacán, Gonzalez lives in Lakeport with his wife Gloria.

The couple’s children, three daughters and a son, range in age from 6 years to 20 years old.

Gerardo Mendoza, Red Hills Vineyard

Bringing experience from three years of work in Santa Rosa for vineyard owner Bob Mount, Gerardo Mendoza is new to vineyard work.

He began working at Mount’s Lake County vineyard this year. As a rookie to winegrape growing, Mendoza is charged with learning everything there is to know about the process. He says he is dedicating the next years of his life to doing so.

Mendoza moved from Santa Rosa to make a new home in the Red Hills region of Lake County. He and his wife Maria del Rosario have a son and a daughter, ages 5 and 2 years old.
 
Course outline

The first class of Master Vigneron Academy was introduced in November at the Winegrape Commission’s 10th Annual Sustainable Winegrape Growing Seminar at Ceago Vinegarden.

The first “official” class meeting of the group followed in January when the participants attended the 2012 Unified Wine & Grape Symposium in Sacramento.

One of the highlights of this year’s trade show was the Spanish language seminar sessions.

Several coursework hours will take place in the Finley Grange hall and in Lake County vineyards, according to the Academy outline.

“Participants will also have the opportunity to learn about the broader wine industry itself. (They) will engage in wine education with the chance to taste the ‘finished product’ and make connections between their critical work in the vineyard and how that results in what ends up in the bottle,” said Gunier.

The Master Vigneron students are scheduled to visit Guillaume Nursery and University of California at Davis vineyards during one of the in-field course days in March and will take another trip in June to a Sonoma County winegrape grower’s operation in Healdsburg.

In a welcome letter to participants, Zellman told the group the areas to be covered in the course include vineyard cultural practices, vineyard development, nursery stock, winegrape varietals, and labor management.

“This is a hands-on course consisting of vineyard tours, classroom activities and seminar sessions. Practical labor management skills will be honed through specially arranged training assignments with role playing as a key component of the process,” he said.

The Master Vigneron Academy graduates will be able to use the knowledge they gain to enhance their work as “leaders, mentors and mediators” in their vineyard careers, said Zellman. The participants will get a glimpse of the entire California winegrape industry, he added.

Zellman said he looks forward to working with each of the students selected for the program. The course, as it progresses, will provide opportunities for the experienced group to expand their interactions with Lake County and Northern California winegrape producers, he noted.

Established in 1991 by the winegrape growers of Lake County, the Lake County Winegrape Commission is a local marketing order.

Its primary function is to provide marketing, education, and research programs to Lake County winegrape growers.

For more information about upcoming events and workshops, check the commission’s Web site, www.lakecountywinegrape.org , or call the commission office at 707-995-3421.

For information about the seminar or the Master Vigneron Program, email Zellman at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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