Monday, 16 September 2024

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When Jet Garner socializes with fellow combat veterans who are studying at the University of California, Berkeley, the conversation often turns to battlefield memories he’d rather forget.

But while whitewater rafting on the American River last summer, Garner and other members of the campus’s Cal Veterans Group were so busy having fun that the topic of their military past barely came up.

“It felt like we were really living in the moment,” says Garner, a veteran of two tours in Afghanistan who is majoring in political economy at UC Berkeley. “It really felt like we were moving on beyond our hang-ups.”

Garner, who has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), is among two dozen UC Berkeley veterans whose psychological and physiological response to the awesomeness of big nature is being studied as part of a multi-year UC Berkeley research project.

Another group of UC Berkeley student veterans will go rafting this summer as part of the study, thanks to the ongoing support of the Sierra Club’s Inspiring Connections Outdoors program, which provides the guides and the rafting equipment, and GoPro, which provides the cameras.

Led by Craig Anderson, a Berkeley doctoral student in psychology, the study is focused on changes observed in war veterans and, separately, in more than 90 inner-city Bay Area middle and high school students during and after one-or two-day whitewater rafting trips along the North Fork American River near Sacramento.

Anderson launched the study in 2014 and hopes to raise enough funding to continue it and follow up with participants over months and even years.

At least 400,000 veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have been diagnosed with PTSD. Symptoms include high stress, anxiety and depression and can lead to domestic violence, self-harm and even suicide. Similarly, PTSD has been recorded in untold numbers of residents of inner-city neighborhoods where gun violence is a common occurrence.

A prescription to get out in nature

Preliminary results of the study suggest that nature-inspired curiosity can trigger positive feelings and ease symptoms of PTSD in the most wary and withdrawn personalities.

Just one week after their rafting trips, for example, veterans reported a 30 percent decrease in PTSD symptoms. And both veterans and teens who had reported feeling a greater sense of awe during their rafting excursion later noted they got on better with friends and family.

“If doctors were able to write prescriptions for people to get out in nature, it would be one of the most cost-effective health interventions available, and would change our relationship to the outdoors,” says Anderson, a New Mexico native who has been an avid outdoorsman since his Boy Scout days.

Moreover, measures of stress hormones, immune function and dopamine regulators before, during and after the rafting trips, showed positive physiological changes in the study’s participants.

Researchers tested participants for pro-inflammatory cytokines, proteins that tell the immune system to work harder. They also measured levels of the stress hormone cortisol, which is thought to contribute to everything from inflammation to anxiety and memory loss.

Stress hormones can be helpful

Surprisingly, they found that higher levels of cortisol were correlated with more positive emotions after the river rafting trip.

“It’s an adaptive hormone. When we sit in front of computers being stressed out, cortisol doesn’t help us,” Anderson says. “But when we’re out in nature and we need more energy to achieve something physically demanding, cortisol goes up in a good way.”

Study participants were tracked via surveys, journals and footage from GoPro cameras attached to their helmets. Hundreds of hours of footage were coded based on facial expressions, body language and interactions.

While their emotions ranged from fear to joy, it was curiosity that most strongly aroused their desire to step outside their comfort zone and learn more about the world around them, especially for those accustomed to acting tough around their peers.

“If you’re in a rough neighborhood, it doesn’t pay to be open,” Anderson says. “You have to keep up a façade because if someone challenges you, you have to fight them. Otherwise you’re a pushover.”

So Anderson was heartened when one teenager who had initially resisted river rafting later asked him, “How could something scary feel so good?”

As for the veterans, Anderson was encouraged to see one former member of the armed forces, who had avoided swimming since his stint on a Swift Boat in Vietnam, frolicking in the water after a rafting trip.

The adrenalin rush and camaraderie of navigating the rapids while trying to stay inside the inflatable raft has left Garner feeling optimistic.

“I hope it’s something that sticks with me and helps me in the future as I recover from my experiences in the military,” he says.

The whitewater rafting study is being conducted under the auspices of UC Berkeley psychologist Dacher Keltner as part of a broader look at the psychological and physiological impact of awe. A presentation of the study is on the agenda of an all-day Art & Science of Awe conference on June 4 hosted by Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center.

Yasmin Anwar writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) has completed its annual survey of waterfowl breeding pairs. Biologists found that after a three-year decline in mallards and total duck species (meaning all species combined), both categories have increased this year.
 
The breeding population of mallards increased from 173,865 to 263,774 (an increase of 52 percent) and total ducks increased from 315,577 to 417,791 (an increase of 32 percent).
 
"The late, abundant spring rains were a real boost to the habitat this year," noted Melanie Weaver, a CDFW waterfowl biologist who participated in the survey. "We expect good production and a larger fall flight this year because of it."
 
CDFW biologists and warden pilots have conducted this annual survey using fixed-wing aircraft since 1948.

The population estimates are for the surveyed areas only, which include the majority of the suitable duck nesting habitat in the state.

Surveyed areas include wetland and agricultural areas in northeastern California, throughout the Central Valley, the Suisun Marsh and some coastal valleys.
 
The full Breeding Population Survey Report can be found at www.wildlife.ca.gov/conservation/birds/waterfowl .
 
The majority of California's wintering duck population originates from breeding areas surveyed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) in Alaska and Canada.

Those survey results should be available in July. CDFW survey information, along with similar data from other Pacific Flyway states, is used by the USFWS and the Pacific Flyway Council when setting hunting regulations for the Pacific Flyway states, including California.

HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – The Hidden Valley Lake Ladies 40-9ers Golf Club played nine holes on Thursday, June 23.

The results are as follows:

– Flight one: first place, Joy Ryan, net 32; second place, Mariana Bendinelli, 34.

– Flight two: first place, Liz Cummesky, 32; second place, Marla Peterson, 43; third place, Elaine Fauser, 44.

– Flight three: first place, Barbara Carver, 35; second place, Denyse McCracken, 37; third place, Linda Millard, 40.

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LAKEPORT, Calif. – Lake County Home Wine & Beer Makers’ Festival on Saturday, June 18, proved to be a great event, according to organizers.

For the annual “Winefest,” the 2016 event may have been the most successful in its 15-year history, according to Charlie Schley, president of the Lake County Symphony Association, which sponsors the event as its main fundraiser.

“We still have some income and expense items to tally, but at first blush it looks like we’ll have more than $10,000 to contribute in part to the Lake County Symphony, which permits us to continue funding what is arguably one of the finest small-market symphonies in the state,” said Schley.

Schley credited the success to the efforts of Symphony Association members who spent weeks canvassing local businesses for donations to the silent auction and raffle which were important elements in its fundraising, and to the generosity of the many merchants who contributed.

He also saluted the many premium wineries and brewing companies who joined the amateurs in pouring tastes for the public, including Laujour, Rosa d'Oro, Wildhurst, Smiling Dogs and Don Angel wineries.

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Special recognition also was given to Westamerica Bank and Kathy Fowler Chevrolet, who co-sponsored the event, and an honorary association membership was awarded to former Lakeport Mayor Martin Scheel who served as announcer and described the activities with accuracy and enthusiasm.

Event organizers also recognized the Lake County Wine Alliance and Umpqua Bank for their contribution to the LCSA Youth Orchestra.

Scheel also gave Mother Nature a salute for the event’s success. “The weather was perfect, and the Library Park venue was spectacular” he said. “People just didn’t want to leave.”

The best accolades, though, were reserved for the amateur winemakers and home brewers who presented the results of their labors to the visitors.

“I think every year has seen the quality of their beverages improve,” said one long-time attendee.

His view seems to have been supported by the panel of professional judges, who sipped and spit their way through dozens of entries.

The result included gold medals awarded to Zack Zoller for two of his wines, a Sauvignon Blanc and a Zinfandel.

Michelle Schultz of Winona Toffoli’s Finley-based Remembrance Group won gold for three entries, a Syrah, a Port and a wine in the “unique” category they called “Vin de Noix.”

Kelseyville’s Tom Harty won two golds, one for his Barbera and the other for a red blend, while other golds went to Jamie Celozzi for a Merlot and Connel Murray for a Cabernet Sauvignon.

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Silver ribbons went to Murray for his Zinfandel and Barbera, to Doug Moore for a Sauvignon Blanc, and to Scott Knickmeyer for both a Syrah and a red blend, and Lucianol Coni for Syrah Port.

Harty won bronze for a Merlot and Meconi for a Syrah Port in the dessert wine category. Harty also took a bronze for his Syrah, as did Moore for his Merlot, while Murray again scored with his Sauvignon Blanc and a blend of red Italian wines.

Beers and ales were not judged by professionals, but rather by the public in the popular “Peoples’ Choice” awards.

Ribbons went to Mike Shoemaker, a member of the Malt Konocti Mashers homebrew group, for his entry in the pale ale category entitled “Raspberry Spring,” while Clint Cole took home an award for his plum and apple hard cider. In the dark beers category, Skip McFarling won for his “Trepidations.”

Home winemakers winning Peoples’ Choice awards were led by Doug Moore, who won in the white category for his Sauvignon Blanc and “The Remembrance Group” in the red wine category for their Syrah. Moore also won for his “Dream Maker’s” as the best wine label.

This year for the first time the Lake County Symphony Association shared the park with the Lakeport Camp 'n Shine chapter of the Norcal Aircooled Car club, giving attendees the chance to inspect some three dozen vintage vehicles while taking a break from their tastings it proved to be a benefit for both groups.

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The USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) has announced the availability of $2,180,870 for organic certification assistance to organic operations in California.

Funds from the National Organic Certification Cost Share Program (NOCCSP) are available through CDFA’s State Organic Program (SOP) to help more organic operations succeed and take advantage of economic opportunities in this growing market.

Cost share helps farmers and processors afford the expense of organic certification by refunding up to 75 percent or $750 of their certification fees.

Cost Share funds are available to any eligible organic operation in California that has received or renewed organic certification between Oct. 1, 2015, and Sept. 30, 2016.

The SOP administers the Cost Share program in California, and is responsible for reviewing and approving cost share applications.

The SOP then works with the State Controller’s Office to process funds for the issuance of reimbursement checks to the organic operations.

In addition, the SOP collaborates with accredited certifying agents to ensure that cost share resources are available to their clients and information is posted on their respective certifier websites.

The deadline for submitting Cost Share applications to CDFA is Oct. 31, 2016. Applications must be postmarked by this date.

The following are needed to complete a Cost Share application:

• A copy of an organic certification document.
• Copies of all associated organic certification and inspection expense receipts.
- Please contact a certifier if you do not have the above documents.
• Completed and signed CDFA Cost Share Application. The applications can be mailed, emailed, or faxed to CDFA.
• Completed Payee Data Record (STD. 204) form. (Name on this form must match the name on the Cost Share application).

To apply, go to the CDFA Web site, http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/is/i_&_c/organic.html and download the Cost Share application packet/documents. Send the completed, signed application to CDFA with all supporting documentation listed above.

Applications are approved on a “first received, first approved” basis. Incomplete applications will be returned and the application process will need to be started again.

Applications must be sent to CDFA. Do not send the application to your certifier. Mail applications to California Department of Food and Agriculture, State Organic Program, Cost Share Reimbursement,
ATTN: Sharon Parsons, 1220 N St., Sacramento, CA 95814.

Please allow six to eight weeks for the completion of the Cost Share process. For additional information or assistance, please contact Sharon Parsons at 916-900-5202 or by email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The next free household hazardous waste dropoff event will be held Friday, July 15, and Saturday, July 16, at Quackenbush Mountain Recovery & Compost Facility, 16520 Davis St., adjacent to the landfill in Clearlake.

From Highway 53 turn on to 40th Avenue, take a left on Moss Avenue, follow the signs to the landfill on Davis Avenue.

Hours will be from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.

Households can bring up to 15 gallons of toxic items free of charge. Fees will be charged for amounts over 15 gallons.

Items that are accepted include paint, solvents, fuels, five-gallon propane tanks (empty), pool chemicals, pesticides, herbicides, batteries, fluorescent light tubes (up to 60 linear feet) and other toxic materials that cannot be put in the trash.

Items that cannot be accepted include televisions, computer monitors, ammunition, explosives, radioactive materials or infectious wastes.

To learn how and where to properly dispose these items, please visit www.recycling.co.lake.ca.us or contact the recycling hotline at 707-263-1980.

Household hazardous waste dropoff services are provided to Lake County residential households by the Integrated Waste Management Division of the Lake County Public Services Department and the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle).

Businesses also are welcome to use this convenient service to properly dispose of hazardous waste and protect our environment, however, businesses must pay for this county-funded service and first make an appointment. Business appointments can be made by calling Lake County Waste Solutions at 707-234-6400.

Beginning in June, ask about receiving a free puncture-proof sharps container at one of these events to use for free sharps disposal.

Free recycling options for residents and businesses:

· Recycled paint is available to both residents and businesses at Lake County Waste Solutions and South Lake Refuse and Recycling Center first-come, first-served basis in five gallon containers. Colors include tan, brown, gray and pink.

· Used motor oil and cooking oil can be dropped off by businesses and residents, at Lake County Waste Solutions, South Lake Refuse & Recycling Center, and the North Shore Fire Protection District station at 6257 Seventh Ave. in Lucerne. Visit www.recycling.co.lake.ca.us for more locations.

· Electronics (e-waste) can be dropped off at Lake County Waste Solutions and at South Lake Refuse & Recycling Center.

Lake County Waste Solutions
230 Soda Bay Road, Lakeport
888-718-4888 or 707-234-6400
Monday-Saturday, 7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.
www.candswaste.com

South Lake Refuse & Recycling Center
16015 Davis St., Clearlake
Open daily, 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m.
707-994-8614
www.southlakerefuse.com

The free Household Hazardous Waste drop off program is subsidized by the Lake County Public Services Department, Integrated Waste Management Division and CalRecycle as a public service to Lake County households.

For more information about recycling, reusing and reducing, visit www.recycling.co.lake.ca.us , call the recycling hotline at 707-263-1980 or like Lake County Public Services on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/LCPublicServices?fref=ts .

LUCERNE, Calif. – The Northshore Community Center will host its Open Mic Lucerne event from 6 to 11 p.m. Saturday, July 16.

There is no charge for attending or performing.

Performers are on stage with house band FOGG starting the evening at 6 p.m. with classic, heavy metal rock and roll with original numbers and covers of your favorites. FOGG and other entertainers will wrap up the evening by 11 p.m. Assistance is available with amplification. 

Band are urged to call 707-274-8779 for your reserved time or come and sign-up beginning at 5:30 p.m.

Don’t miss this chance to showcase your talent. Being in the audience is great fun and free too. Music, comedy, mime, readings, and any other activity that is family-oriented is appreciated.

Room also is available for dancing and relaxing.

A spaghetti feed also is offered with traditional and vegetarian full meals available for $5.

Bring the whole family. All proceeds benefit Northshore Community Center, a not-for-profit serving the Northshore's families and senior populations with on-site lunches, Meals on Wheels, personal advocacy, activities, food pantry and other services.

For more information about events, call Northshore Community Center at 707-274-8779 or stop by at 3985 Country Club Drive, Lucerne.

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Priscilla Jeanne Koernig
Aug. 8, 1933 – June 29, 2016

Born to Frederick Richard Koernig Jr. and Gertrude (Ross) Koernig in San Francisco, when Priscilla was 6 years old the family moved to San Mateo, Calif.

She graduated from San Mateo High School in 1951 and was a member of the Hillsdale Methodist Church in San Mateo.

She worked her entire career at Bank of America.

She loved animals and had many cats and dogs during her life. She also loved to travel abroad as well as in the states, especially to Hawaii to see Don Ho. She was a huge fan of Bing Crosby and at one time was a president of his fan club.

She was also a pianist and her parents bought a baby grand piano which sat in her living room until she moved to Clearlake, Calif.

She lived in her San Mateo family home until she moved to Brookdale Assisted Living Home in Clearlake to be by family. She brought her dog Daisy to live with her.

Priscilla is survived by her cousins, Mary (Cordell) Stiehr (Larry), Thomas Cordell (Linda), William Cordell and Frederick Cordell (Linda), many other cousins and many friends, Joyce and Brian, Fritzi, and Jesse and Marsha. 

Priscilla will be interred at Skylawn Memorial Cemetery in San Mateo on Saturday, July 9, at noon.

In lieu of flowers donations can be made to your favorite animal shelter or Hospice Services of Lake County.

Arrangements under the care of Jones and Lewis CLMC Lower Lake, Calif.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Sen. Mike McGuire’s bill that will again require the state to make payment in lieu of taxes, or PILT, payments to counties has received unanimous bipartisan support in the Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee.

PILT payments were established in 1949 to offset adverse impacts to county property tax revenues that result when the state acquires private property within a county for wildlife management areas.

Currently, the State Department of Fish and Wildlife owes nearly $8 million in payments to California’s 36 rural counties and a change in 2015 to the Fish and Game Code makes it even easier for the state to continue to forgo making these payments.

“The state needs to step up and follow through on a promise and advance Fish and Wildlife PILT payments to rural counties,” McGuire said. “Since 2001, California has been depositing millions of PILT dollars that should have been going to rural counties into the State General Fund and it’s time to give counties their due.”

Holding back these payments to counties on the North Coast has had a detrimental impact on the counties and their bottom line.

For example, in PILT payments alone, Del Norte is owed more than $220,000, Humboldt County is owed more than $160,000, Lake County is owed $93,000, Sonoma County is owed $116,000 and Marin County is owed over $150,000.

“This was an agreement made decades ago and the state has reneged on these payments for far too long,” McGuire said. “Let’s continue to level the playing field for our rural counties.”

SB 1188 is a bipartisan effort to make PILT payments to counties a requirement. It passed unanimously, 15-0, in the Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee. It will now head to Assembly Appropriations.

Upcoming Calendar

17Sep
09.17.2024 9:00 am - 1:00 pm
Board of Supervisors
17Sep
09.17.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
17Sep
09.17.2024 10:00 am - 7:00 pm
Boyles fire local assistance center open
17Sep
09.17.2024 11:00 am - 2:00 pm
Boyles fire support event
17Sep
09.17.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Lakeport City Council
18Sep
09.18.2024 10:00 am - 7:00 pm
Boyles fire local assistance center open
18Sep
09.18.2024 10:00 am - 4:30 pm
Veterans Stand Down
18Sep
09.18.2024 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Free veterans dinner
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

Mini Calendar

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