Hazard Mitigation Forum

Dear BSMAAC and Big Sur community members:

Monterey County Office of Emergency Services is hosting a Hazard Mitigation forum at the Big Sur Grange Hall on January 16th from 6pm to 8pm.

Join us to help your community be hazard ready!

Monterey County is updating its current (2016) Multi-Jurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan. In compliance with FEMA’s published requirements and procedures for local hazard mitigation plans in 44 CFR §201.6(c)(1), the public outreach strategy for hazard mitigation will provide a mechanism for coordination and accountability among the jurisdictions, as we seek to enhance community engagement and education.

Monterey County is a community with diverse concerns and needs. Hazards such as, fires, drought, floods, landslides and severe weather are just a few hazards that cannot be prevented. Come join us on our hazard mitigation community event to learn more about creating strategies to reduce disaster loses and foster community resiliency.

You can register to attend here:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/monterey-county-hazard-mitigation-community-forum-district-5-tickets-86190822069

The Lookouts of Big Sur

Here is my latest article for Voices of Monterey Bay:

In the fall of 1984, Soaring Jenkins and future husband Isa Starkey climbed up Cone Peak for the first time. She made it up the 2¼-mile trail — cussing, sweating — and there met Ruth Albee, who’d been a lookout in various places for a decade.

Ruth “was in her 60s and loved the trail I’d just sworn at,” Jenkins said. “But I looked around and fell deeply, instantly in love with the tiny glass room and the wide expanse of ocean and mountain views. I told her I wanted to be a lookout and she said, ‘Go ahead and apply here; I’m going to work next year at Chews Ridge Lookout.’”

It was that easy. Jenkins was a lookout there for the next six years and she says she did it for the love of the place. Other Big Sur fire lookouts I know say they do it out of a feeling of service and duty. It’s a way to give back to Big Sur.

Though it was one of the most difficult and isolated lookouts in California, Jenkins-Starkey told me that “I wanted that job more than anything, I felt a strong magnetic pull to be there, yearned for it, and learned everything I could through the Fire Brigade training, to prepare for it.”

For the rest of the article, including interviews with Nadine Clark, of Big Sur, and Scott McClintock, of the Federal Fire Lookouts Association, on the Chew’s Ridge Lookout Program, see https://voicesofmontereybay.org/2020/01/02/they-look-out-for-us/ :

“I had a May Sarton quote taped next to my desk: ‘Loneliness is the poverty of self, solitude is the richness of self,’” said Jenkins-Starkey. “It got me through a lot. After I’d been there several years I began to feel that everyone ought to have a long, long period of solitude to learn the contents of their mind, to learn how to exist, to just be, instead of always doing something.”

Learn the contents of one’s mind through solitude. I like that.

Two Missing Teens from Carmel—UPDATE: Found safe

They have been missing since yesterday (12/28) morning. They are thought to have been hitchhiking to Big Sur and on to LA. They are boyfriend and girlfriend.

Found Dog at Pfeiffer Beach — Update: Reunited with his human!

The parks management people at the Pheiffer Beach Kiosk found the dog pictured below. I’m sending the photo to you in hopes that you’ll put it on your blog.
It’s a male, maybe around 80 lbs, boxer mix. Nice dog, let all of us pet him and pull ticks off.
The 2 contacts for more information are:
Bridgette
ilikeyelling@yahoo.com
Or
Colllin
waggoner.collin@gmail.com

Photo Sunday, 12/29/19

I needed some bright color and pick-me-up on this overcast day with rain coming in this afternoon…so from the archives…

Calm Enforcement at Bixby Today

The following photos were taken by Cheryl Richardson and posted on my timeline, taken today. Waiting for confirmation of the time they were taken, but I got them around 12:30, so guessing around noon.

MCSO & CHP Photo by Cheryl Richardson
Photo by Cheryl Richardson
Photo by Cheryl Richardson

Now, let’s find a permanent solution. Ban selfies, jumping, and parking at Bixby Bridge, and give expensive citations.

Bedlam at Bixby…

…Or when Highway One became two lanes headed south.

This was the day after Christmas, or yesterday. Bumper-to-bumper so some people took matters into their own hands:

I am certainly glad I chose to stay home.

Photos provided by a friend and used with permission.

And here is another shot taken today, Friday Dec. 27:

NB Traffic takes a gamble, photo by Martha Diehl