February Spotlight – Monterey District, LPNF

The Double Cone Quarterly published some incredible articles about the history of the Monterey District of what is now known as the Los Padres National Forest. Tom Hopkins, current president of the VWA suggested this series for my history spotlight, and for that, I am extremely grateful. There are the five articles which will be spotlighted in this post. I will provide a “lead-in” and a visual for each one, and then a link where my readers can read the rest of the articles.

The first article is about the proclamation made by President Teddy Roosevelt.
“Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the power in me vested by section twenty-four of the aforesaid act of Congress, do proclaim that there are hereby reserved from entry or settlement and set apart as a Public Reservation, for the use and benefit of the people, all the tracts of land, in the State of California, shown as the Monterey Forest Reserve on the diagram forming a part hereof;”

This is the map attached to that proclamation:

Here is the link to the entire article: Winter Solstice 2000

The second article displays some old maps commissioned by Jefferson Davis in the 1850’s with links to the originals in the Library of Congress. Here is one of them:

Here is the link to the article: Fall Equinox, 2001

Here is a more recent map from 1883:

and here is the link for more: Spring Equinox, 2000

The Summer Solstice issue of 2002 (link here)
provides some wonderful history and observations from the early 1900’s by residents about fires and campers.

According to E. A. Sterling (1904): “the largest fire in recent years started last year, 1903, in July, and burned for three months. It started from an unextinguished campfire in Township 18 south, range 4 west [in the Chews Ridge area], and burned a strip of about a township wide through to the coast, becoming wider towards its western end.”(10) On July 21st of that year Eleanor Chew reported that “a fire has been raging on the Carmel for some time past and the air is filled with smoke. The weather has been cool, otherwise it would have been very unpleasant.”(11) Two months later, on September 22nd, 1903, she reported that “the mountain fire which has given the people of this vicinity so much trouble for the past month has again broken out and nine or ten men have been fighting it for several days. The coast fire has also come over the divide and crossed the Carmel river and threatens Andrew Church’s place with destruction.”(12)

The last article from this series is in the fall equinox issue here

This article begins again with the proclamation by Teddy Roosevelt in 1906, and then traces the subsequent federal actions for the next 96 years through 2002, and the acquisitions and designations which occurred.

And that is our Big Sur History lesson for February. I really urge you to check out each article for links to the Library of Congress map and other historical documents, and to the last two lengthy articles. I hope you enjoyed them as much as I did.

Storm Watch, 1/30/10

Received almost 1/2 inch last night, bringing the season’s total to 41.35 inches.

NOAA discussion: “AS OF 3:45 AM PST SATURDAY…UNSETTLED WEATHER IS IN STORE FOR THE UPCOMING WORK WEEK….WITH THE BEST CHANCE OF SIGNIFICANT RAIN LATE IN THE WEEK AND INTO THE FOLLOWING WEEKEND….A SERIES OF SPLITTING SYSTEMS WILL BRING A CHANCE OF RAIN TO THE DISTRICT MONDAY AND TUESDAY….BY THURSDAY AFTN AND INTO THE FOLLOWING WEEKEND A MUCH BETTER ORGANIZED AND STRONGER SYSTEM WILL BEGIN TO AFFECT THE DISTRICT. RAIN IS LIKELY DURING THIS PERIOD….THIS IS STILL FIVE TO SEVEN DAYS AWAY SO THE DETAILS COULD CHANGE BY MID WEEK. REGARDLESS…IF HEAVY RAIN DOES DEVELOP THERE COULD BE CONSIDERABLE HYDRO ISSUES BY THE END OF NEXT WEEK. STAY TUNED.”

Storm Watch, 1/29/10

Despite all reports that there was only a “slight” chance of rain tonight, all the way down here, it began around 7 pm, and continues, steady, with some heavy times.

I never reported Monday’s rain, which was 1.5 inches, bringing the season total to 40.85 inches. Woohoo! We are on our way, and with the strengthening of El Niño in December, could be a very wet winter.

Power Outage, Road repairs, & Storm Watch

2:30 pm – here is the official Cal-Trans power outage update on the River/Road repair:

Date: Friday, January 29, 2010
District: 5 – Santa Barbara, SLO, Monterey, Santa Cruz and San Benito Counties
Contact: Susana Z. Cruz (Bilingual) or Colin Jones
Phone: (805) 549-3138 or (805) 549-3189
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
***UPDATE 2***
EMERGENCY BIG SUR RIVER PROJECT ON HIGHWAY 1 BEGINS NEXT WEEK

MONTEREY COUNTY – An emergency project to prevent the Big Sur River from cutting into the embankment by the Big Sur Lodge/Big Sur Park Campgrounds begins next Monday, Feb. 1, Caltrans officials announced today.

Alternating lane closures with one-way reverse traffic control will be in effect from 7 am to 5 pm Mondays through Fridays for two weeks with closures primarily on the northbound side. Up to 10-minute delays are anticipated

There are power lines in the work zone so PG&E will be shutting down the power for one day only on Monday, Feb. 1, from 8 am to 3 pm due to a power line relocation and setting two power poles across the road. Caltrans roadwork will begin on Tuesday, Feb. 2 and continue for two weeks through mid-February.

The project is necessary as the Big Sur River is rapidly eroding the hillside. Big rocks, approximately 5’ x 5’ x 5’ will be placed via crane in the river to keep it from further cutting into the roadway embankment.
*****************************************************************
And here are the South Coast road repair updates:

Date: Friday, January 29, 2010
District: 5 – Santa Barbara, SLO, Monterey, Santa Cruz and San Benito Counties
Contact: Susana Z. Cruz (Bilingual) or Colin Jones
Phone: (805) 549-3138 or (805) 549-3189
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

HIGHWAY 1 NORTH OF RAGGED POINT NOW OPEN OVERNIGHT

MONTEREY COUNTY – Caltrans officials announced today there will be no more overnight closures due to roadway erosion on Hwy. 1, nine miles north of Ragged Point or three miles south of Gorda, which are both about seven miles into the Monterey County Line from San Luis Obispo.

This segment of Hwy. 1 will continue with continue roadwork during daytime hours (7:30 am to 5 pm) with reverse one-way traffic control.

A section of fill has been washed out by ocean surf due to recent heavy rains.

• The temporary signal south of Lucia for the bridge/rockshed project remains in
operation.

SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY–Construction has resumed to install several horizontal drains on Highway 1 one mile north of Ragged Point during the daytime only, with one-way traffic control with flaggers will continue from 7:00 am until 4:00 pm Monday through Thursday and until 2 pm on Fridays.
***************************************************************

When I drove by the river damage today, 4-5 PG&E trucks were working in the area. Apparently, they are trying to figure out if they can move the power line to maintain service while allowing the necessary crane. A conference call between Cal-Trans, the contractor, and PG&E is being held as I type. As soon as I get official word on the results of said conference, I will post here.

On a different note, NOAA forecast discussion wrote this morning: “.DISCUSSION…AS OF 9:38 AM PST FRIDAY…MULTIPLE CHANCES FOR RAIN THE NEXT SEVEN DAYS.”

They went on to write: “THIS WILL RESULT IN RAIN BECOMING LIKELY FROM NORTH TO SOUTH THIS EVENING INTO THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. (the weekend is expected to be dry)

ENJOY THE DRY WEATHER WHILE IT LASTS…A RAINY WEEK IS EXPECTED TO KICK OFF MONDAY WITH A CHANCE OF SHOWERS. ACCORDING TO THE CPC EL NINO STRENGTHENED DURING DECEMBER, WITH ABOVE AVERAGE SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES ENCOMPASSING THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN EQUATORIAL
PACIFIC OCEAN.

So, bigsurkate will be on storm watch, again, for the next week. It is not predicted to be as wet nor windy as last week was.

Shale Point Seawall building

All photos by Rock Knocker.


From the south, looking north

The old seawall built under Don Harlan in the early 80’s

From the north, looking south.

Comin’ at ya’

Placing rocks by crane

These are the 8-ton puppies


How’s that for perspective?

Okay, that’s it for tonight and probably for Shale Point until it is close to completion. Tomorrow night I’ll try to post other road repair/building projects.

River & Road Repair

UPDATE FOR FRIDAY, JANUARY 29TH: The closures for bringing in the rock tomorrow are only INTERMITTENT. There will be flagging, and some closures, but NOT closed from 9:-3:30 as currently rumored. Here is the relevant language from Cal-Trans update issued earlier today: “There will be a closure this Friday, Jan. 29 from 9 am to 3:30 pm to deliver the rocks to the site and set up for next Monday’s work. This will be an intermittent closure with one-way reverse traffic control with flagging.”

Remember that photo I posted here of the erosion by the Big Sur River? Yes, this one:

and this one:

Well, the repairs are starting, and unfortunately, it means shutting down power to Big Sur and all businesses and residences from the Big Sur State Park to the County line. (Of course, there *IS* no power to the County Line. Lucia has their own power, as does everyone somewhere just south of Esalen.)

The announcement says that it will involve primarily the northbound lane, and this section is on the southbound side, so might be another location, but I’ll let you know tomorrow when I go through that area.

Here is the announcement:

Date: Thursday, January 28, 2010
District: 5 – Santa Barbara, SLO, Monterey, Santa Cruz and San Benito Counties
Contact: Susana Z. Cruz (Bilingual) or Colin Jones
Phone: (805) 549-3138 or (805) 549-3189
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

EMERGENCY BIG SUR RIVER PROJECT ON HIGHWAY 1 BEGINS NEXT WEEK

MONTEREY COUNTY – An emergency project to prevent the Big Sur River from cutting into the embankment by the Big Sur Lodge/Big Sur Park Campgrounds begins next Monday Feb. 1, Caltrans officials announced today.

Alternating lane closures with one-way reverse traffic control will be in effect from 7 am to 5 pm Mondays through Fridays for two weeks with closures primarily on the northbound side. Up to 10-minute delays are anticipated. There will be a closure this Friday, Jan. 29 from 9 am to 3:30 pm to deliver the rocks to the site and set up for next Monday’s work.

There are power lines in the way so PG&E will be shutting down the power during work hours for the two-week project since there are strict specifications on the placement of a crane in relation to overhead power lines. PG&E will be notifying residents/businesses from the Big Sur Lodge/Big Sur Park Campgrounds south to the County Line informing them of the electricity shut off while work is taking place.

The project is necessary as the Big Sur River is rapidly eroding the hillside. Big rocks, approximately 5’ x 5’ x 5’ will be placed via crane in the river to keep it from further cutting into the roadway embankment.

Granite Construction of Watsonville is the contractor for this $925,000 emergency project.

Search for Geo. Carpenter to resume

KION reported tonight that the search for 74-year-old George Carpenter, missing since 12/23/09, whose Jeep was found on Saturday near Lion’s Den, and whose dog showed up at a home on Los Burros last Wednesday, will resume on Sunday, January 31st. San Luis Obispo paper confirms this report. Article here
With weather clearing, what I don’t understand is why searchers are waiting until Sunday. Why not tomorrow, Thursday, January 28th? The family feels as if George, a rockhound, may be investigating old mining claims in our area.

Shale Point: Seawall Building 120

I cannot provide rain totals for this last storm, as I am not home. I headed to town to ride out this storm, as I had serious deadlines today (Tuesday) and tomorrow (Wednesday) and could not afford to get stranded, if the roads closed again. But in all likelihood, based on similar locations, it looks like I will have received over 2 inches in the past 24-hours.

And here is more of the story on the rebuilding of a sea wall…

First, rocks are hauled in by truck (the 8 tons were to be delivered Monday or Tuesday, and craned down — photos up on Thursday) …

But then, of course, they have to be hauled down to where the seawall will be rebuilt … what better than a loader?

… and where Chuck in the excavator is waiting …

“I want those rocks!”

And so, he gets them …

And our local engineer, who has been in charge of most (if not all) these projects down here, and who calls me and so many others after 5 pm to let us know the status of the road and whether it is open or not …

That’s Charlie Hench in the center with the big grin on his face. These guys love this stuff! On the right is Danny Millsap, Supervisor, Willow Springs Station. The third man is also an engineer, but unidentified.

And this?? Some road humor …

Slip slidin’ away …

We now move from “Storm Watch” (although Tuesday should be a challenge, weather-wise) to “Road Watch.” This photo is of Highway One near Willow Creek. It was taken today, Monday, 1/25/10 by Dave Allen. Thanks Dave!

This location is notorious. If past experience is any indicator, Cal-Trans will keep dumping asphalt in here until it won’t work any more, then will grade the whole thing, adding fill and some base, and hold it. It can easily get down to basically 1/2 a lane and that’s where it looks like it is heading, but despite how “bad” this looks — it has a ways to go before it is a “serious” problem — which is always relative.

Honestly? This is nothing new for the South Coast in an El Niño year. Been there, done that — oh so many times. Willow Springs Maintenance Yard is always one of the most challenged areas to work, and these guys and Angie always pull off miracles in keeping this road open for us!! Thanks, guys and gal!!