2015 EASt KErn VISIonS
Transcription
2015 EASt KErn VISIonS
Spotlight: Whiskey Flat and the Kern River area East Kern January 2015 Visions Furnace Creek getaway Bakersfield Condors hockey Burro Schmidt’s tunnel East Kern January 2015 Visions Publisher John Watkins Editor Aaron Crutchfield Advertising Director Paula McKay Inside this issue Burro Schmidt’s Tunnel.....................3 Bakersfield Condors ..........................4 Tierra Del Sol Golf Course ................5 Whiskey Flat Days .............................7 Ewings on the Kern...........................9 Advertising Sales Rodney Preul Barbara Schultheiss Writers Cheryl McDonald Ryan Kuhn Joyce Grant Aaron Crutchfield Jessica Weston Adam Robertson For this issue, we take a look at the major festival that is Whiskey Flat Days in Kernville. We also feature restaurant Ewing’s on the Kern, a local institution that recently reopened. 2 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS Whiskey Flat Days events ...............10 California City 50th anniversary ......11 Furnace Creek..................................12 Movie extra casting agency .............13 Upcoming theater productions .......15 On the cover: The Kern River, by Wikimedia Commons user Rastrojo Burro Schmidt’s tunnel: A study in perseverance BY CHERYL MCDONALD For the Daily Independent I was flipping through the channels the other evening, on my way to the News Hour, and I came across an episode of Huell Howser’s California Gold. It was his episode on the “California Underground.” The last half of the show was just beginning, and guess who was on the agenda: Burro Schmidt and his tunnel. I made my own trip to Burro Schmidt’s tunnel in 2013 on a field trip with the Historical Society of the Upper Mojave Desert. Several of us did a car/truck caravan out to the location in Last Chance Canyon just this side of Red Rock Canyon State Park off of Highway 14 (I highly recommend the HSUMD field trips, always interesting with lots of knowledgeable people). Burro Schmidt, or William Henry Schmidt, was from Rhode Island. He came to California for his health — most of his family died of consumption before the age of 30. On arriving in California he went to work for the Kern County Land Company and got interested in mining. Although he did do some mining in Copper Canyon, he began digging a tunnel in the El Paso Mountains through Copper Mountain in 1906, and this became his reason for life. He believed this tunnel would be a useful way to get ore mined in Last Chance Canyon over to Cantil and the train station on the other side of the mountains. Unfortunately, it took him 32 years to complete the tunnel, and by then there were faster forms of transportation. However, digging this half-mile tunnel probably saved his life. He lived to the ripe old age of 81, dying just a few days before his 82nd birthday. William got his nickname of “Burro” because his only companions were two burros he used for hauling supplies. He never married for fear of passing on the family disease — consumption is now known as tuberculosis. During the summers he worked in the Kern River Valley on farms as a ranch hand earning money to buy the supplies he needed. In the winters he worked alone digging the tunnel with only a jack hammer, dynamite, a shovel and a single ore cart, which he pushed in and out by hand to remove the dirt and rock from the tunnel. His concern was not so much about the ore he was finding, but completing the tunnel. He lived in a small cabin he had built, insulated with magazines and newspapers, eating flapjacks and beans. Near the end of his life, he offered the tunnel to the University of California for their studies on mineralogy, news spread and soon Schmidt was entered into “Ripley’s Believe it or Not” as the “human mole.” He eventually gave his interest in the tunnel to Mike Lee, and when Mike passed on, Toni Seeger purchased the claim from the county seat, Bakersfield. We Will Meet Or Beat Any Advertiser’s Price! High Desert Home Center 824 W Ridgecrest Blvd (760)375-9741 962 N. N orma 1-760-446-3240 PHOTO BY CHERYL MCDONALD The view once you emerge from the other end of Burro Schmidt’s tunnel. She lived in a newer house next to Schmidt’s cabin. Her home was equipped with all the amenities, including pumped water from a well and power from a gas powered generator. When Toni passed on in 2003 at the age of 90, there was no longer a caretaker or guide to share the tunnel with tourists. Although I never met her I have heard numerous stories of her hospitality from others who used to visit on a regular basis. Toni is buried in the Johannesburg Cemetery and was loved by many in the mining community. Since her passing the cabin sites have been ransacked and pretty much destroyed by those with no respect for the history of this place. The tunnel is still open and is well worth the trip. The view from the entry side is quite beautiful: Robber’s Roost, the Southern Sierras and Walker Pass. As you enter the tunnel, you will need a flashlight, as it gets dark pretty fast. It is a narrow straight run for most of the length with only a couple of side deviations. Near the other end there is a sharp turn to the right and then you are soon out on the other side of the mountain with an incredible view of Koehn Lake and Cantil in Fremont Valley, and off to the left is Highway 395 and the Rand Mining District. Burro Schmidt’s tunnel is really worth the trip. An amazing tribute to the power of what a focused individual can achieve. Cheryl McDonald is a local artist and resident of Ridgecrest. You can see more of her work on her website, www.cherylmcdonald-art.com. ❖ Home of the Famous Philly Cheese Steak Sandwich Steve & Marnie Dobbs Owners 10% Military Discount 1-760-384-4541 760.384.1709 501 N. China Lake Blvd. Ridgecrest, CA PHOTO BY CHERYL MCDONALD A group walks through the tunnel, nearing the end. 237 W. Ridgecrest Ridgecrest, CA 93555 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 3 Condors: Hockey just over the mountains BY RYAN KUHN The Daily Independent One might think hockey is only popular in places where deep layers of snow fall and lakes are frozen over, but here on the west coast, hockey’s popularity is actually on the rise. Even before the National Hockey League’s Los Angeles Kings won its two Stanley Cup Championships, hockey was popular in Southern California. You just have to drive west heading over the Tehachapi Pass. Since 1998, the Bakersfield Condors have been entertaining fans on the ice and have been successful, making the playoffs eight out of the last 11 years. “You can’t live (in Bakersfield) and not hear about the Condors or know someone who goes to the game,” said Kevin Bartl, vice president of communications. “After 17 years and 3 million fans coming through our doors, this has turned into a pretty good spot.” The Condors started by playing in the West Coast Hockey League before it disbanded in 2003, and some of the teams, including Bakersfield, were absorbed into the East Coast Hockey League. The ECHL is divided into two leagues, with two divisions in each league. The Condors play in the Pacific Division, which includes teams from Alaska, Utah, Colorado and other cities in California. Just as minor league baseball helps give young players experience, each team in the ECHL has an NHL affiliate. For years, the Condors were affiliated with the Anaheim Ducks, but just this last year, the Edmonton Oilers purchased the team. Staying around has not been easy. While the Condors have seen continuous success, other minor league teams have not. Both the San Francisco Bulls and Fresno Falcons, who each had ECHL seasons in the past, folded midseason. “You have to go back 17 years ago to when we got started and our whole M.O. was getting the players out in the community and working with nonprofits,” Bartl said. “We try to work with as many groups as we can, and we have woven ourselves into this community.” This season, Bakersfield is currently 18-18, but first-year coach Jean-Francois Houle said it is a challenge every day. “One part of our job is to develop players to move on to the next level, and sometimes they leave,” Houle said. “That said, it is a lot of fun to come to the rink every day, and it’s the best job in sports.” The Condors not only cater to hockey fans, but to anyone that wants to have a good time. Some promotional nights that have been held include Star Wars Night, celebrating Seinfeld’s 25th anniversary, “Frozen” Night, and the infamous Teddy Bear Toss, where fans bring teddy bears and throw them on the ice after the team scores its first goal. The teddy bears are then donated to charity. Another reason the Condors have been successful is their impact in the local RYAN KUHN/DAILY INDEPENDENT Bakersfield goalie Frans Tuohimaa looks to keep the other team from scoring during a recent game. youth hockey community. “We have a rapidly growing youth hockey program that is guided along by explayers who still live here,” Bartl said. “As opposed to other communities, our youth players are growing up being taught by ex-pros, and it has done wonders for us.” Bakersfield has 28 games remaining on the schedule. Whether you have watched hockey since you were a child or have never been to a game, the Condors welcome any type of fan. “For years we had a saying: ‘We don’t have hockey fans, we have Condors fans,’” Bartl said. ❖ For All of Your Automotive Needs Call Today For Spring Cleaning Specials (760) 371-1428 4 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 25% Off any Repair or Purchase Jewelry To Go EXCLUDING PANDORA • NO OTHER OFFERS APPLY (760) 375-4123 501 W. Ridgecrest Blvd. Mon-Fri 10-5:30 Sat 10-4 760.371.1308 115 E. California Ave jewelerytogo.net tierra Del Sol is tops for golf in high desert BY JOYCE GRANT master academic classes in a curriculum that instructed him in every aspect of the golfing world. The Tierra Del Sol (“Land of the Sun”) Golf Following this rigorous preparation, Dacey Course in California City is widely considered secured a position as head golf pro at the Apone of the best-kept secrets in the high ple Mountain Country Club in Belvidere, New desert. Jersey, where he remained for five years during The golf course, which opened in 1977, was which time he also opened up the Howell Golf originally owned by Great Western Cities. It Academy. was part of what was termed the “317 Project” Known for his talent on the golf course, as by the developers who eventually deeded the well as his administrative and people skills, in 317-acre property to the city, under whose the 1990s Dacey was recruited for the top golfownership it remains to this day. ing job in California City, where Dacey and his Second-generation P.G.A. professional and wife, Joyce, have resided since June 1995. New Jersey native Bob Dacey has been the The Tierra Del Sol Golf Course is a Bruce course manager for the past 20 years. Dacey’s Devlin and Robert von Hagge design. The father, a golf professional, oversaw his son’s well-known pair of pro golfers and golf course early career, which began when Dacey won JOYCE GRANT/MOJAVE DESERT NEWS architects collaborated in the ‘70s and ‘80s on his first golf tournament at the age of 11. signature golf course designs that featured East Kern County is home to first-class golf facility, Tierra Del Sol Golf To this day, Dacey and his brother, John, Course, located in California City. beautiful trees, elevation drops, and fast are the only two siblings to have ever won the greens. New Jersey State Boys and Junior Golf Championship. The course, a six-mile walk from first tee to the 18th hole, is like a scenic park After graduation from Ramapo College with a degree in communications, lined with benches and pleasant walkways, filled with the sounds of nature, and Dacey embarked on an intensive seven-year program that culminated with his abounding in wildlife, including a peaceful duck pond on the periphery that is receiving the coveted status of PGA golf professional. surrounded by cattails and bamboo. While formally apprenticing himself to his father, Dacey was also required to Golfers who are birding enthusiasts appreciate that the property is also a stateMojave Desert News Northern Mojave Visitor Center and Death Valley Tourist Center Nor thern Mojave Visitor Center and Death Valley Tourist Center SHOP 24/7 AT SHOP.M ATURAN GO.ORG Maturango Museum and Gift Shop 100 East Las Flores Ave. • Ridgecrest CA 93555 760-375-6900 • Fax 760-375-0479 • www.maturango.org Open 10am - 5pm Daily Except Major Holidays JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 5 Tierra del Sol golf Course Winter Specials Monday: Senior day green fee and cart $20 Tuesday: Lunch special unlimited golf & cart for the day, lunch and drink included $31 Wednesday: $1 a hole day,18 holes $18 27 holes $27 min of 18 holes for special Thursday: Lunch special unlimited golf & cart for the day with lunch and drink $31 Friday: Unlimited golf for the day with cart $31 Saturdays: 18 hole green fee &cart $36 Sunday: NFL Sunday, green fee, Cart lunch & drink $36 Tee Times call toll free 888 golf tds or 760 373 2384 (760) 373-2384 10300 NORTH LOOP BLVD. CALIFORNIA CITY, CA 93505 6 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS registered bird sanctuary and attracts a wide range of interesting species. According to Dacey, the golf course is open “sunup to sunset,” and is closed only at Christmas. At the clubhouse, one can order home-cooked meals, prepared by Joyce Dacey in the Bunker Restaurant, which is open from 7 a.m. until 4 p.m. seven days a week. The restaurant is open to the public. The Pro Shop, offering shoes, hats, jackets and golfing equipment, is also located in the TDS clubhouse. Special orders from any golf manufacturer can be requested, and Dacey offers a full range of club repair and club fitting. TDS annually hosts the High Desert Classic Pro/Am every September. The popular event attracts entrants from all over the state of California and the Southwest, and as far as the East Coast. TDS also holds an annual charitaJOYCE GRANT/MOJAVE DESERT NEWS ble fundraiser known as the Grace Bob Dacey, PGA golf professional and manResources Golf Marathon in which ager at the Tierra Del Sol Golf Course in California City, shows off the Pro Shop located participants play 100 holes of golf in the clubhouse. per person with the proceeds going to benefit the Grace Resources Center, an organization located in Lancaster that provides emergency food, shelter, clothing and job training. On Sept. 28 of this year TDS, which has raised more than a half-million dollars for the charitable organization, will host its 23rd annual fundraising event for Grace Resources. Both resident and non-resident memberships are available at TDS with discounts offered to senior citizens, aged 62 and above. Golf lessons are available for all skill levels starting at ages 5 and up. Private lessons with Dacey are available by appointment. His son, Robert, a scratch golfer, assists with free clinics, which are offered throughout the year to area students. Clinics are also offered to the golf team at California City High School and three high school golf leagues in Ridgecrest and the Antelope Valley. Dacey said he’s encouraged to see the growing emergence of girls golf teams. “This trend is really great, compared to the situation a few years ago,” he said. “People are starting to appreciate the availability of golf scholarships for girls as a viable avenue to higher education.” As one can imagine, golf courses have been hit hard by the water crisis in California. “All golf courses have been going through some tough times,” he said. “We’ve had to cut back on water consumption already and we plan to do more in the future.” However, in the process, staff have become creative in dealing with the water issues in ways that have made the course more environmentally friendly and cost-effective, he said. “We feel we’ve successfully met the challenges and, as long as the city keeps supporting us, we’ll be here keeping this a first-class facility,” Dacey promised. The Tierra Del Sol Golf Course is located at 10300 North Loop Boulevard in California City. Further information can be obtained at the website, www.tdsgolfclub.com, or by calling 760-373-2384 or 1-800-GOLF-TDS. ❖ A taste of the Wild West at Whiskey Flat Days BY AARON CRUTCHFIELD The Daily Independent Locals and travelers can get a taste of what the Old West was really like when Kernville is taken over by Whiskey Flat Days Feb. 13 through 16. The 58th annual event, featuring a carnival, rodeo, parade, wild west shootouts and more, attracts about 55,000 people over the course of President’s Day Weekend. For comparison, Kernville and the surrounding area has a population of about 3,000 the rest of the year. “It’s an outdoor event, and it encompasses the entire Kernville,” said Lily Mason, Executive Director of the Kernville Chamber of Commerce. “We have people booking their stays here six months to a year in advance. It’s amazing how our town welcomes all those people, who come from all over southern and northern California, all over the United States, and we have had some international travelers for this event, too.” This year’s theme for Whiskey Flat Days is “Fearless Fighting Bucket Brigade.” Travelers can visit the Whiskey Flat Encampment, across from the rodeo grounds and hosting more than 200 participants, dressed in period-correct attire to show how things were 150-plus years ago. Watch hold-ups and gunfights, sawmill demonstrations, horseshoeing, a shotgun wedding, and more. The encampment runs from noon till sundown each day. “This encampment is an amazing learning experience for anyone that wants to learn more about the Wild West,” Mason said. An Old West event would be remiss without a rodeo, and Whiskey Flat Days delivers on that. “We have a rodeo, the Wild West Days Rodeo, and that rodeo takes place on the 14th and 15th,” Mason said. “It starts at 1 p.m. at the McNally Rodeo Arena in Kernville. That is a fantastic event. It draws about 10,000 people.” There is also a carnival, and the parade starts at 11 a.m. on Saturday. There will also be music, with the headliners being the Rock Bottom Boys. “They are an amazing band,” Mason said. “They travel all over the place — Kern County Fair, Ventura Fair — and we’re lucky enough to have them for a second year here. They’ll be playing concerts on Saturday and Sunday throughout the day. Of course, we have additional bands that will be opening for them.” But the most suspense comes from the mayor’s race. The winner won’t be announced until Sunday. Leading up to the event, each of the two candidates will be selling “bribes” to raise funds for local causes, with the biggest fundraiser as the winner. “We have two mayor candidates running currently,” Mason said. “We have Man-Trackin’ Jami. She is running for the Kern County Search and Rescue, so she’ll be raising funds for that. The other group is a duo. It’s Rockin’ Rex and Jelly Belly Joel, and they’re the Keeper Brothers. One of them is one of the founding members of the Keepers of the Kern, so they’re raising money for that, and also FILE PHOTO A group of revelers at a previous Whiskey Flat Days. for the Nuui Cunni Cultural Center here in Lake Isabella. So the race is under way.” The event started off 58 years ago as a way to bring people to Kernville in the offseason, as the town relies on tourism to keep its economy moving. During the summer, Kernville offers the Kern River and whitewater rafting and kayaking available on it. But in February, not so much. Thus, the Whiskey Flat Days celebration was born. “I believe we had about 3,000 people at the first Whiskey Flat Days, so it’s grown in its 58 years,” Mason said. “It was to be able to bring more people and tourism into town to support our local businesses.” The history of Kernville goes back to 1845, when artist and topographer Edward Kern accompanied John C. Fremont on his expedition. They camped at the confluence of the north and south forks of the Kern River. A gold rush in 185 led to the formation of town, which was first called Rogersville, then Williamsburg, and then Whiskey Flat after a bar opened. The town was renamed again in 1864, this time to Kernville. The original site of the town is now under water — it was flooded when the dam for Lake Isabella was completed. Kernville was moved upstream to its present location. ❖ Come visit our drive-thru warehouse! 877-459-6237 (toll free) 760-379-4631 4700 Lake Isabella Blvd., Lake Isabella www.lmlumber.com HARDWARE • PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL We’re celebrating our 51st year in business. Serving you since 1964 Mon-Fri 7-6, Sat & Sun 8-5 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 7 Now open to serve you 7 days a week • 7am-9pm ~ Serving ~ BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER Dining ◆ Drinks ◆ Views Enjoy The Amazing One-Of-A-Kind View While Dining or Sipping A Cocktail On Our Patio 125 BUENA VISTA DRIVE • KERNVILLE • 760.376.2411 PHOTO FROM EWINGS ON THE KERN FACEBOOK PAGE The view of the Kern River from the dining room at Ewings on the Kern. Kernville native brings back Kernville institution BY AARON CRUTCHFIELD The Daily Independent A Kernville local has brought a local icon back. Ewings on the Kern, an iconic steakhouse built in 1954 on a cliff overlooking the river, had been closed for a while, but reopened a month and a half ago after Mark Preston and his wife, Sherry, bought the place. “In ’66 when I got here, it was a pretty amazing building and restaurant,” Mark Preston said. “Movie stars were coming in from LA, and it was a destination.” After escrow closed, the Prestons spent time getting the building ready. “It just needed some love, so we went through an almost eight-month renovation, inside and out,” Preston said. “We’re not quite done with the outside, but the inside is done and gorgeous.” Ewings features traditional steakhouse fare, including steaks, lobster, lamb, pork and halibut. There are banquet rooms, a bull bar, a wine cellar with a few hundred bottles, a dining room with a spectacular view of the river, and an openair patio with a fireplace and big-screen TVs. Ewings is open at 7 a.m. seven days a week, with the last order coming at 9 p.m. and a bar menu that takes over after that. As for the house specialty? “Probably prime rib, of course, and our steak,” Preston said. “We have a lot of different specialties that are really nice, medallions that are beautifully presented.” He also said he’s gotten a good reception from the community. “Everybody’s just excited and thankful that it’s back,” Preston said. “Being a part of this community — I’ve been doing the grocery business since I was 11 and I’m 60 now — they know me and what my expectations are, and I think they’ve received it well. Like anything, we’re going to have bumps, but I think we’re bumping through it.” It’s something Preston has a personal investment in, after spending nearly five decades in the grocery business in Kernville. Ewings on the Kern 125 Buena Vista Drive Kernville, CA 93238 769-376-2411 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 9 Whiskey Flat Days schedule of events FRIDAY FEBRUARY 13, 2015 11AM: WHISKEY FLAT ENCAMPMENT Cowboy and Mountain Man Encampments on Scodie Ave across from the Rodeo Grounds. You’ll see history and gunfights. All day there will be a Wells Fargo station and eatery, Chuck wagon cook'n and coffee, a horse trader and livery. There’ll be horse shoe'n and horse doctor'n, the Whiskey Flats Saloon, a Justice of the Peace, a Saddle maker and leather craft, a Bath house, Beautifier and Hygienist, storytellers of the Old West, mining and sawmill demonstrations and a Civil War Confederate camp! 1PM: GOLDEN GULCH OPENS Circle Park: Crafts, handmade items, jewelry, info booths, & art vendors. Food vendors are non-profit organizations: Kern Valley FFA, Sweet Adelines, White Blanket Allotment, and the Rotary Club of KRV, Whiskey Flat Headquarters & Info on the corner of Kernville Road & Tobias Street selling Whiskey Flat shirts & memorabilia. 1PM: RIVERSIDE PARK & FRONTAGE RD. OPENS Riverside Park: Food Court, Family Entertainment and misc. vendors. Frontage Rd.: Vendors, vendors, vendors! 2PM: BUFFALO BILL’S WILD WEST SHOW Cowboys & Indians Exhibition. Buffalo Bill himself will salute you at each performance. Special appearances by Annie Oakley and Chief Sitting Bull! Located at Riverside Park. 5PM: SCHOEPPNER AMUSEMENT CARNIVAL OPENS On Kernville Road, across from Pizza Barn, by the Forest Service Work Center, enjoy great adult and children’s rides & games. 6PM: MAIN STAGE Music & Street Dance with Obsidian. Put on yur dancin’ boots and hit the street! Let‘s rock! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 7PM: MELODRAMA! "Double Take At Beatrice's Boardin' House" ("Things Ain't Always What They Seem”).At the Kernville Elementary School auditorium. Admission is $7.00 for adults, $5.00 for children 12 and under, and as always, lap sitters and stroller riders are free. SATURDAY FEBRUARY 14, 2015 9AM: GOLDEN GULCH OPENS 9AM: RIVERSIDE PARK & FRONTAGE RD. OPENS Riverside Park: Food Court, Family Entertainment and misc. vendors. Frontage Rd.: Vendors, vendors, vendors! 9AM: WHISKEY FLAT DAYS CHECK-IN/LINE UP ALONG SIERRA WAY & KERNVILLE RD. 10AM: SCHOEPPNER AMUSEMENT CARNIVAL OPENS On Kernville Road, across from Pizza Barn, by the Forest Service Work Center. 10AM: MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 10AM: TROUT HATCHERY OPEN (Sat., Sun.)Museum & Visitor Center 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. Sierra Way, 1 Mile North of Kernville. Free Admission 10AM: KERN VALLEY MUSEUM OPEN 10:00 am to 4:00 pmon Big Blue Road next to the Post Office. Historical Society ~mining info ~ Indian exhibits ~ artifacts 11AM: WHISKEY FLAT DAYS PARADE SPONSORED BY SO. CAL. EDISON 2015 Grand Marshall: Mr. Steve Gradowitz of KUZZ Radio. 1PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys!. The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 1PM: WILD WEST DAZE RODEO SPONSORED BY BUD LIGHT McNally Rodeo Arena. Brought to you by Cotton Rosser’s Flying U Rodeo. Open Team Roping, Bull Riding, Hide Race, Open Barrel Race, Junior Barrel Race, Calf Scramble, Sheep Riding, and more. 1PM: WHISKEY FLAT ENCAMPMENT 2PM: “FIRST HEAT” FROG JUMPING CONTEST! Held at the corner of Big Blue and Kernville Rd. Look for the Green Stage come and bet on your favorite jumpin frog! 2PM: BUFFALO BILL’S WILD WEST SHOW 2:30PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 3PM: BUFFALO BILLS WILD WEST SHOW Cowboys & Indians Exhibition. Buffalo Bill himself will salute you at each performance. Special appearances by Annie Oakley and Chief Sitting Bull! Located at Riverside Park. 4PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 6PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music & Street Dance by The Stoneflys. Stoneflys are an original alternative/ska/reggae/jazz group of musicians formed out of Ventura and Kernville, California. The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 7PM: MELODRAMA: "Double Take At Beatrice's Boardin' House" (or "Things Ain't Always What They Seem.) At the Kernville Elementary School auditorium. Admission is $7.00 for adults, $5.00 for children 12 and under, and as always, lap sitters and stroller riders are free. SUNDAY FEBRUARY 15 8AM: WHISKEY FLAT ENCAMPMENT 9AM: GOLDEN GULCH OPENS Circle Park : Crafts, handmade items, jewelry, info booths, & art vendors. Food vendors are non-profit organizations: Kern Valley FFA, Sweet Adelines, White Blanket Allotment, and the Rotary Club of KRV. 9AM: RIVERSIDE PARK & FRONTAGE RD. OPENS Riverside Park: Food Court, Family Entertainment and misc. vendors. Frontage Rd.: Vendors, vendors, vendors! Y E K F L S I A H W 2015 T Wild West Daze Rodeo February 14·15 Saturday · Sunday 1pm Both Days Rain or Shine 10 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 10AM: SCHOEPPNER AMUSEMENT CARNIVAL OPENS On Kernville Road, across from Pizza Barn, by the Forest Service Work Center. 10AM: WHISKEY FLAT ENCAMPMENT Old West church service at 10 a.m. 11AM: Alta One MAIN STAGEMusic by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 1130AM: “FINAL HEAT” FROG JUMPIN’ CONTEST Held at the corner of Big Blue and Kernville Rd. Look for the Green Stage come and bet on your favorite jumpin frog! 12PM: CONTEST SIGN UP TIME! 1860’s COSTUME CONTEST SIGN-UPS! Adult & Children forms at WFD’s Info Booth. Judging starts at 12:30 p.m. PET PARADE SIGN UPS! Forms at WFD Info Booth – Judging at 2:30 p.m. 12:05PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 1230pm: COSTUME CONTEST Held at the corner of Big Blue and Kernville Rd. Look for the Green Stage 1PM: WILD WEST DAZE RODEO SPONSORED BY BUD LIGHT 1PM: SIGN UPS FOR WHISKERINO CONTEST Whiskers, beards, & all mustaches apply. Ribbons awarded. Free to enter. Forms at Whiskey Flat Days Info Booth. 1:50PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 2PM: BUFFALO BILL’S WILD WEST SHOW 2PM: OLD FASHIONED WHISKERINO JUDGING Held at the corner of Big Blue and Kernville Rd. Look for the Green Stage. 2:30PM: PET PARADE JUDGING-At the Green Stage on Big Blue Rd. and Kernville Rd. 2:55PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by The Rock Bottom Boys! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. 3:55PM: ALTAONE MAIN STAGE Music by OMG! The AltaOne Main Stage is located at the northeast end of Circle Park. MONDAY FEBRUARY 16 9AM-3PM: GOLDEN GULCH OPENS 9AM-3PM: RIVERSIDE PARK & FRONTAGE RD. OPENS Riverside Park: Food Court, Family Entertainment and misc. vendors. Frontage Rd.: Vendors, vendors, vendors! 10AM-3PM: SCHOEPPNER AMUSEMENT CARNIVAL OPENS On Kernville Road, across from Pizza Barn, by the Forest Service Work Center WHISKEY FLAT DAYS INFO BOOTH Pick up your Whiskey Flat Days Gear, Claim Jumper, Whiskey Flat Miner and the most “upto-date” Schedule of Events, Adult Costume Contest, Child Costume Contest, Pet Parade Contest, & Whiskerino Contest. ON THE CORNER OF TOBIAS AND KERNVILLE RD. For more information on Entries: Kellee Scott PO Box 1809, Kernville, CA 93238 Office (760) 376-8703 Fax (760) 376-8603 Cell (760) 417-1152 Kernville Chamber gotokernville.com (760) 376-2629 California City celebrates 50 golden years The area where California City now exists was largely uninhabited prior to the 1960s. Padre Francisco Garcés, a Franciscan missionary, camped at Castle Butte in what is now California City in 1776 during the Juan Bautista de Anza expedition of Arizona and California. In the late 19th century, the Twenty Mule Team Trail, which carried loads of borax to the railhead in Mojave from Harmony Borax Worksmines in the east, ran through the California City area. California City had its origins in 1958 when real estate developer and sociology professor Nat Mendelsohn purchased 80,000 acres of Mojave Desert land with the aim of master-planning California's next great city. He designed his model city, which he hoped would one day rival Los Angeles in size, around a central park with a 26-acre artificial lake. Growth did not happen anywhere close to what he expected. To this day a vast grid of crumbling paved roads, intended to lay out residential blocks, extends well beyond the developed area of the city. Satellite photos show how it stakes its claim to being California's third largest geographic city, 34th largest in the U.S. California City was incorporated in 1965 and is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year by getting everyone involved in plenty of activities all year long to culminate by a dinner/dance celebration on Dec. 5, which is five days before the official Dec. 10 incorporation of the city. The celebration was to kick off Jan. 22, 2015, with a dinner hosted by the East Kern Historical Museum Society. In February, the Arts Commission and the Desert Rose Garden Club will hold a ‘60s Valentine Party followed in March by a Quarter Auction and Golf Tournament organized respectively by the Sunshine Vendors and the Parks and Recreation Department. April will bring the ever-popular Easter Egg Hunt hosted by Parks and Rec, and May is the celebration of the Chamber of Commerce’s Desert Tortoise Days and the Annual Art Show of the Arts Commission. May is also the East Kern Historical Museum Society’s Mother’s Day Tea. June is the Father’s Day NAPA Truck and Car Show in collaboration with the California City Optimist Club. The Fourth of July Firework Gala is an event comparable as other displays seen in much bigger cities. The California City Community Club brings a Casino Night in August, and the Museum Society will have a groundbreaking ceremony for the building of the New TV Gorden Museum to replace the museum that burned in the early ‘80s. October is the Renaissance Fair weekend hosted by Parks and Recreation, the Cancer Awareness Walk hosted by the East Kern Health Care District and the scary Halloween presented by the Parks and Rec Department. In November, the Senior Citizens Association will present historical displays of California City Through The Years. December will also bring the famous Tree Lighting and Parade followed by the 50th Anniversary Dinner Dance. The California City EDC will host their second annual Holiday Village and the California City Quails bird Are you missing out on conversations? Many Insurance companies now offer benefits that never have in the past. Call today for your free hearing test. Ann Thomas & Bonnie O’Carroll The Mother & Daughter Team Serving the Antelope Valley for Over 27 Years (661) 948-4776 • 43797 15th St. West • Lancaster watchers will hold their Christmas Bird Count. In spite of the areas of California City that haven't developed, California City has grown from 3,200 people in 1985 to over 14,000 in 2009 and is still a growing community. Nat Mendelsohn was right about everything except maybe the timeframe. According to most residents, the best is still to come. For more information about the 50th Anniversary celebrations, please contact Mary Ann LeBlanc at 760-977-8064 or [email protected]. ❖ Nat Mendelsohn, founder Desert Area Resources and Training 201 E. Ridgecrest Blvd. • Ridgecrest, CA 93555 Our Mission, Their Dreams Since 1961... The premier provider of programs and services of the intellectually and developmentally disabled, in the Indian Wells Valley and surrounding communities of the Central Mojave Desert. DART is a private, not-for-profit 501 (C) (3). • • • • • • • • • • • Fully CARF accredited, State of California Licensed. Information and Referral Full day Early Childhood Services, infant, toddler and preschool Full time adult employment program with benefits Supported Living Services Transportation services for those enrolled Summer Autism Day Camp, “Artists On The Edge” program Over Fifty years of operations Thrift Store, Commercial Contracts, Ability One - Federal Contracts Accepting referrals from the Kern Regional Center Certified E-Waste Collecter Document Destruction dartontarget.org or call 760-375-9787 Se Habla Español JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS 11 Furnace Creek offers Death Valley recreation BY ADAM ROBERTSON The Daily Independent The Furnace Creek Resort, situated in Death Valley National Park, is part of one of the hottest places on Earth; with daily highs reaching or exceeding 110 to 120 degrees in July, it is not a place one wants to get lost. However, during the cooler fall to spring months, the conditions are perfect for people to enjoy the myriad attractions the area has to offer. Death Valley itself, reported as one of the hottest places on Earth and home to the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere, is only a stone’s throw from Furnace Creek. As one of the nation’s largest national parks, the valley has some amazing sights. “Everywhere you look, you will find natural wonders unknown in any other part of the world,” touts the resort’s website. A variety of outdoor activities, ideal recreation during the cooler months, are available through the resort and National Park office. For equestrian enthusiasts, horseback rides along trails as well as tours are available from fall through to spring. According to the resort’s website, the Ranch at Furnace Creek offers one- and twohour guided rides; the one-hour ride goes out to the floor of Death Valley while the two-hour takes riders into the foothills of the Funeral Mountains. The ranch's staff offers basic riding instruction and is able to answer any questions about the area. The stables can provide helmets to any who need them, though children 6 to 18 years old are required to wear one. The ranch also offers carriage rides to the lowest points of the valley, at 282 feet below sea level, and hay wagon rides. The carriage rides are approximately 45 minutes long and described as perfect for an afternoon of relaxation. Walking and hiking opportunities are available for people wishing to explore and view the desert’s beauty under their own power. The resort offers high claims of the natural landscapes available. “The breathtaking scenery itself justifies recreation and guests are encouraged to take advantage of the several hiking and walking trips,” states the resort’s website. PUBLIC DOMAIN VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS A sign marks where people cross below sea level in Death Valley National Park and the Furnace Creek area; a variety of activities can be enjoyed below sea level, including the world's lowest golf course. According to the their website, while formal trails do not exist, the paths other visitors have taken are easy to follow. Attractions like the Harmony Borax Works, Gold Canyon and the sand dunes of Mosaic Canyon are within a one- to threemile hike of the resort. They also offer guided walks with naturalists each day with illustrated talks about the environment in the evening. Various walking and hiking options are available and “many points of interest are accessible for the casual or seasoned walker.” Wildflower viewing and bird watching are also activities available in Death Valley and around the resort. Off-road adventures through Jeep rentals are also available for those seeking a more high-tech or fast-paced experience. The resort's website states people can take the Jeeps through canyons, craters and around old mines. The website states the area “offers unparalleled views and adventure only available when you leave the paved highways behind.” The Jeeps are only available for rent from mid-September to mid-May. While no off-roading experience is required, renters must be 25 years old and have a valid driver’s license as well as proof of insurance covering a rental vehicle. HIGH DESERT DRIVING SCHOOL “We take you from permit to license” 661.940.8835 www.highdesertdrivingschool.com/online DMV State Lic# 2087 12 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS As a very low-tech attraction, the desert is perfect for stargazing. With very few city lights around and a huge expanse of open valleys right out the proverbial back door, the Furnace Creek area is ideal stargazing territory. According to the resort’s website, it is 120 miles from Las Vegas and 295 miles from Los Angeles; this gives stargazers a perfect view of the sky free from skyscrapers and almost no city lights for miles. While stargazing is welcome and encouraged year-round, the National Park rangers hold events for stargazers during the winter and spring. The park has even been labeled a Gold Tier Dark Sky Park, the highest-level award a stargazing area can receive. “Whether you’re an astronomer using a high-powered telescope, or someone who simply enjoys stargazing, Death Valley’s dark skies offer an opportunity to see things that cannot be detected in most of the world,” states the resort’s website. While it is over 50 miles away from the resort – near the Nevada state line – Scotty’s Castle is another place to visit in a trip to Death Valley and Furnace Creek. The home was built by Albert Johnson and his wife in the early 1900s as a sum- $2,495 Now Offering Class A Programs ENROLL NOW We can customize the services needed Only $299 Class C Program (SAVE $61) Free Driver’s Ed when you pre-pay the 6 hour driver’s training mer home after they fell in love with Death Valley. After the Johnsons’ deaths, the National Park Service purchased the area the house was built on. Guided tours of the luxurious home are given by park rangers in 1930s-era dress, year round. Tours of the house itself are available, as well as tours of the underground tunnels where the inner workings of the building are located. The house tour is ADA accessible, but the tunnels are not. Other activities around the resort at various times of the year include camping, theatric shows, festivals and educational programs, shopping, bicycle rentals, golf courses – including tournaments – and hundreds of photography opportunities. The resort itself also offers a number of attractions – such as basketball courts, swimming pools, a spa and children’s playground – although, many of these are reserved for guests of the inn. More information on the resort and its attractions can be found at furnacecreekresort.com. ❖ Wind, Oil, Natural Gas & Communication Tower Industries are Growing and Need Certified Technicians AIRSTREAMS Renewables, Inc. can help you become part of it Call us about our Renewable Energy & Communications Tower Technician Program Classes Start Monthly 661-822-3963 www.air-streams.com JESSICA WESTON/DAILY INDEPENDENT Elena Vitale stands next to a movie poster for Planet of the Apes. Her agency provided extras for use in some scenes. Casting for movie extras in ridgecrest BY JESSICA WESTON The Daily Independent According to Elena Vitale, if you are working as an extra on a movie set, there are two words you need to know. “What I tell the extras is, there’s two words that you are really, really listening for: one is ‘action,’ and the other is ‘cut.’” Vitale ought to know. In a recent interview, she ran through an impressive resume: a UCLA graduate with a degree in film, she runs the High Desert Talent Agency & Casting. She has been involved in local theater in one form or another since 1971, having directed over 200 shows. She also had her own theater on Balsam Street for five years. In addition, she taught at Cerro Coso Community College as an adjunct faculty for 18 years and currently teaches classes for the community education program for the college, she said. Of it all, however, “film has always had a soft spot in my heart.” Consequently, she has been running her talent agency since 1995. “It has evolved into doing various and sundry different films,” she said. The office is associated with the Ridgecrest Regional Film Commission and the websites are linked, she said. She has supplied as many as 170 people to film shoots, providing extras for movies such as G.I. Jane, Planet of the Apes, Arizona and the Brave, she said. On the TV program The Event, for example, “I've had over 100 people on set” and “when they filmed another recent [production] we had over 100 people again.” In addition to “action” and “cut,” Vitale said she trains her extras in the finer points of on-set etiquette. “You have to arrive early,” Vitale said. “No alcohol, no drugs, there’s nothing like that. Don’t bring anything that makes noise. And you’re going to sit there for hours,” so bring something to do that is quiet. The sound equipment is very sophisticated, she explained, and picks up many noises. Extras are usually parked in a certain area. “And they’re not supposed to leave from that area, so that they're there when they want them.” Extras can wait for hours, she said, and Vitale is occasionally called on to “wrangle” them. Pay can run $50 for an eight-hour day, with time and a half or double-time for longer hours. “It’s not glamorous to be an extra,” Vitale said. “They’ll use you and then [you're] done.” Still many people sign up for the experience, intrigued by a behind-the-scenes glimpse of movie-making magic. Vitale has some stories of her own. She said she provided about 120 people to Johnny Depp's film, The Brave, but said “my experience with that film was probably the most difficult of experiences.” The movie filmed in Red Mountain, she said, and was plagued by disorganization and last-minute changes in plans. The set, she said, was impressive. The storyline had to do with Depp's character living around a junkyard “and so they built this magnificent city.” It had chicken wire with artistically applied garbage flipped over the dirt walls that the production wasn’t supposed to touch. Vitale said she was intrigued by Depp and watched him work, albeit discreetly. She described him as complicated and “a very quiet man.” Casting the film provided challenges. Depp was not present at the first meeting, leaving Vitale to contend with his his first AD [assistant director] and his second AD. Vitale said the ADs had provided a book of the type of people they were looking for and “I’m looking at this book, and in my mind I’m thinking, 'Where am I going to find these people?' “And as it turned out, we found raunchy looking people, so to speak.” The background characters were meant to be “kind of the dredges of the world, and so we had to provide him with that.” Although the film was ultimately never released in the US, Vitale said, “I got some poetic justice. He took it to the Cannes film festival and they didn’t like it. The only thing they liked was the background folk.” Planet of the Apes, she said, “was a different kind of an experience,” complete with having to share casting duties with another agent. That movie added something new to the extras' preparation. “The first few weeks was kind of amazing in that the actors [had] to go through ‘Ape School.’ They brought people up from LA to train [them]. “They had to be crouched, they had to use their hands, they had to maneuver around. It was quite a rigorous kind of education.” Ultimately, she said, when filming was done by the Pinnacles, “you had these wide open spaces and they had to lope along as apes in the larger scenes.” According to Vitale, movie experiences vary. “And the type of experiences that you glean, some are good, some are not good.” One good experience was working with Amy Brenneman. According to Vitale, she was a pleasant person. “Oh, my gosh. So friendly, so — I want to say — human,” despite being poised for subsequent stardom with Judging Amy. Prospective extras check in with Vitale’s agency. “We take a picture, they fill out paperwork and then it's on file.” Anybody can do that, she said. Parental approval and participation are required for kids to take part and “there's different rules when they use children on sets. So we make sure that those rules are followed.” There is no telling what a production may require. One commercial required a person who could fit into a particular costume. “They gave me the measurements that this person had to fit into this suit. Had to. So we had a female that I had to get into a specific thing,” she said. “You never know. They've wanted little people, a photo double to an actor. It varies. Each one is a unique experience and each one comes in with their own requirements and their own needs.” A recent addition to her services, according to Vitale, is definitely high tech. “Aerial Perspectives” uses remotely piloted vehicles to take cameras along for the ride. “It’s very economical by comparison to the use of helicopters and planes,” she said. For more information see www.highdeserttalent.com or http://www.racvb.com/filmdeserts/production. ❖ Toni Rae Caraker Hours: Office #: 13359 M-Sat. 9am-9pm Entity #: 5761 Sun. 1pm-7pm 979 W. Valley Blvd., #2 Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: (661) 822-0660 & 822-7513 Cell: (661) 428-3601 • Fax: (661) 822-7511 [email protected] 14 JAnuAry 2015 EASt KErn VISIonS Changing jobs or retiring? Call to schedule your appointment. GARY CHARLON 760-446-4279 995 N NORMA ST., SUITE A WWW.GARYCHARLON.COM ‘Come out and play’: Local theater groups prep spring productions BY JESSICA WESTON For more information call CLOTA at 760-446-2411 The Daily Independent Measure for Measure, ridgecrest Community theatre troup There’s no need to leave town for live theatrical entertainment this upcoming season. For local theater-goers, springtime (and summer) options abound. From comedy to drama to a little bit of good old-fashioned Hollywood murder, our local theater groups have got it covered. Goodbye Hollywood, presented by the ridge Writers at My Enchanted Cottage This original mystery by Daniel Stallings is set in 1943 Hollywood and will be presented as a “full immersion” experience. The vintage Hollywood theme was inspired by the Enchanted Cottage, the event’s venue, he said. “The space needed something that was set in an era of glamour.” March 21, 28, April 25 at 2 p.m. at My Enchanted Cottage Tickets on sale March 1 at Red Rock Books, 760-375-3454 on Golden Pond, CLotA Larry Lier is directing this classic production for Community Light Opera Theater Association (CLOTA). “This is our golden anniversary for CLOTA and we wanted to find things that kind of related,” he said. The play is a comedy-drama about relationships and how an 80 year old man deals with them. He makes up with his daughter and “resigns himself to the fact that he's not going to live forever and he's going to go out fighting.” Performance dates: March 6-8, 13-14, 20-21 The CLOTA building For more information call CLOTA at 760-446-2411 According to director Pearl Woolam, Measure for Measure is considered one of Shakespeare's problem plays because it mixes genres, but it is a personal favorite of hers that has been getting more attention in recent years. Performance dates: April 10, 11 7:00 p.m. The Old Town Theater Tickets on sale in March at Red Rock Books, 760-375-3454. Dreams, rMES The 2015 major production by the Ridgecrest Musical Enrichment Society (RMES) will be “DREAMS.” The group describes it as a new variety show featuring characters from storybook, fantasy and fairytales. Expect to hear music from productions such as The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Mary Poppins, The Pirates of Penzance, Anastasia, Into the Woods, Frozen and other works. Open auditions are planned for early May, with rehearsals beginning in June and performances scheduled for the August/September timeframe. For more information see www.RMESonline.com. Editor’s note: DI reporter Jessica Weston’s mother is scenic artist Dorothy Saitz. She has worked with or is working with many of the people mentioned in these theater articles and is currently working on several of these shows. Saving Water For Future Generations the Lion in Winter, CLotA To celebrate their anniversary, director Barbara Roberts said, CLOTA let members vote from among past shows which they would like to see again. “The Lion in Winter and Sweeney Todd were selected.” As for Roberts, it’s a show “I have wanted to direct for years. It's a fabulous show. The art of repartee could have been invented for this.” Auditions are in March. Performances June 12-13, 19-21, 26-27 The CLOTA building Your Local Full Service Facility • Mortuary • Cemetery • Crematory 760-375-2352 417 W. 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