Elk Are Returning and a Nice Paddle At Jenner Today

Thursday and Friday August 26, 27, 2021 Guerneville CA.

Paddle day

I decided to go paddling today on the river down at Jenner.

On the way down I stopped at John and Cheryl’s and paid a visit.

Elk are returning to this area

I wanted to know if John had seen the Tule elk that was reported by Brendan the park guy I talked with yesterday about a mile down  from my house towards the town of Guerneville as there hasn’t been any elk in the area for a long time as they ate them all up years ago.

John said yes there was one bull elk that’s been  hanging around the Korbel property for awhile now. I hope it likes the spot and goes and finds some Mommas and brings them back and establishes a herd in our area.

As far as I know the nearest place for these elk is up the coast at a place called Usal on the Lost Coast, quite a distance.

Jenner paddle

After a good chat I left them and headed down to the river at Jenner and put my boat in the water around 2.

I decided to paddle about a mile up the river today.

Here I’m crossing over the river to Penny Island and headed on up along it’s edge.river1

 

Brown Pelicans

There were quite a few big brown pelicans flying around.pels2

 

And some of them were resting on the water.pels3

 

I stopped here for a bit to watch and check out whatever I could see.sit4

 

On up the river

And then continued on up the river at my slow pace up along here.river5

 

Cormorants fishing

I saw some splashing up ahead which turned out to be diving cormorants fishing. I backed into the spot just behind them as they left.cors6

 

Far enough

I sat here for a good spell as it was as far as I was going up river today, looking back down towards the town of Jenner.

river8

 

While I was sitting there this osprey flew into the tree over my head long enough for me to get a picture before it took off again.osprey7

 

Headed back

I sat around in that spot for quite some time doing some thinking on things, then started a slow paddle back along here were I stopped for a bit.river9

 

Splash up ahead

I was paddling across here trying to decide whether to go down to the mouth or not when I saw something splash up ahead.river10

 

This is what I saw.otter11

 

A river otter

It turned out to be a lone river otter diving to catch small fish and coming back up to the surface to devour them.otter12

 

I was feeling pretty tired out as I paddled across here and decided to head to the boat ramp up ahead.jenner13

 

As I crossed over I decided to pull my boat out and drive down to the ocean overlook and take some photos.west14

 

Day dreaming

So I got my boat on the car and the next thing I knew I was on the road to home doing some day dreaming so I forgot to go to the overlook.

Oh well, I headed on home for a nap and that was pretty much my day.

Nice day on the river.



Friday

Plug Work and Evening Dirt Bike Ride To Check the Water Level in Our Water Tanks

I got up around noon today and when I looked out the window Kenny was there in his car. Hummm, I haven’t eaten yet. Fortunately I’m on the second day of a fast so I went out and shot the bull with Kenny for a couple hours before drove him off so I could get to work on my van repairs as I wanted to get the spark plug wires installed today at least.

Problems with the plug wires

I got my box of new spark plug wires out to see what I had.plugwires

 

Doesn’t look good as most of them seem a bit short so I went in the garage and found some new old wires where I was able to get one more long one.

So I started hooking up the spark plug wires one by one and realized I still needed some longer ones so what to do.

Local parts place

It was almost closing time of the local parts place so I got it together and drove on down there to see what they had.

Well they  had only one box that wasn’t perfect but at least I could use the long wires and should get this done.

Not as easy as you’d think

So I went on home and worked on getting all the wires hooked up which you’d think would be easy,…………..but.

The wires are all different sizes so you have to figure out where they go. Once that is done some are too long and some are too short so you change them around until you get the best configuration you can.

While doing this you have to make sure the wires don’t touch the exhaust pipes or for that matter any metal parts which isn’t easy in a van’s engine compartment.

Mostly done

In the end I think I did a pretty good job of doing all that but I could use a few more wire separator mounts that help hold the wires in place and off the hot exhaust system. I will need to get these at a parts store next time I go.

That took a lot longer than I thought it would. I did a little more hooking up some ground wires and then closed up the van for the day as I wanted to go up into the  hills and check our water tanks’ water level as my brother started using  more of the water a couple days ago when one of his wells went dry.

Yummy grapes

I checked on the chickens before taking off and looked at the ripening grapes, but I’m on a fast.grapes

 

Water tanks

So I jumped on the dirt bike and rode on up to the water tanks which were almost full so I can still do some watering but will have to cut back a bit so my brother can use some water.tanks

 

Smoky skies

As long as I was out and about on the dirt bike I rode on up to the Guerneville lookout and stopped for a short break. It sure looked smoky out there.smoke

 

From there I rode around a loop in the hills and then headed on home.

No blog post excuse

I decided not to put up a post yesterday because I wanted my family property post to stay up another day before it gets buried like all post do.

Good things happening already

Since I wrote that post I’ve been put into contact with  the head state ranger for the north coast.

Interesting enough the family property post came in real handy  as I emailed the head guy that to get him started and it also states what is needed by us to make this happen and why we need to do it so maybe that will help jump start things a bit.

Nice day.

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Armstrong Redwood Reserve, The Armstrong Ranch and Our Family Property

Saturday August 23, 2021 Guerneville CA.

This is a special post, two posts published today this and the one under it.

A reader of my blog asked about the history of our family property so I thought I’d see what I could do to fill her in.

Armstrong

Armstrong was a logger and he bought the upper part of what is now Armstrong Valley but at the time was called Big Bottom for the huge size of the redwood trees that grow in this valley where I live near the little town of Guerneville.

The loggers moved into this area sometime after 1850 when the area was pristine and some Indian tribes where the only people living in the area until this time. The first town in the area was Mercuryville at the big mercury mine that was here also at that time just a couple miles up the road from my place and Armstrong’s Ranch. My great grand father and his mother where recorded at that mine in the early 1860’s. He was five and his  mother ran a a boarding house, but no mention of his Dad.

Most people where immigrants at that time and  didn’t have much money but knew how to live off the land.

So anyway San Francisco was booming because of the gold rush and they needed building materials to build it and again after the 1906 earthquake which destroyed most of the city.

So they started logging all the big trees around the Guerneville area as they were the hugest trees around, likely some of the largest trees in the world that have amazing building qualities, such as the stuff does not rot easily and is easy to work with.

So Armstrong being a logger bought up most of the best part of the upper valley and built his ranch there as he logged all the trees out.

The Armstrong valley and the town of Guerneville had some of the largest trees in the world growing here. This is a sample of just how big those trees were.bigttee

 

Armstrong had health problems just before about 1900 and his ranch got sold off to several different people.

All the forest was clear cut

This picture is of a small town, Monte Rio, down river of Guerneville and what it shows is just how clear cut they cut down all the forest in this area. Guerneville and the Armstrong valley and hills looked just like this around 1900.monterio

 

It should be noted that all this forest has grown back to a full forest in less than an hundred years and is doing very nicely now.

The park

As it turns out there was one piece of land they did not log for an interesting reason.

Rotten trees

The plot which is now Armstrong Woods Park Reserve was mostly not logged. The reason was because the trees in that plot had a lot of rot in them. In those days they only used the best part of the tree, called clear heart redwood and the rot made those trees unusable and it wasn’t worth taking a week or so to cut one down to find it wouldn’t meet the clear heart wood standard so that plot was left, fortunately for those trees as if they didn’t have some rot they would have been logged and cut down like all the rest. There were no chain saws in those days. Everything was done by hand and animals. Armstrong and his daughter tried to sell the land of those redwoods for a park, but they had a hard time of it until a number of years later.

My Great Grandpa the Teamster

Enter my great grandpa, Henry Ayers who was a Teamster in those days which meant he used animals and wagons to haul stuff for people to make a living as there were no tractors or trucks at that time. When someone had some work to do he’d bring his horses or mules or oxen and wagon or whatever was needed to do the job.

There was a new mine back in the hills over very steep dangerous roads and my great grandfather had a hauling contract with them to haul stuff in and haul the ore out. Magnesite is what they were mining and much in demand as at the time there were very few sources of it.

Armstrong’s ranch was at the bottom of those hills and for sale so Henry Ayers bought all his animal caring and orchard property and some of the steep redwood hills too, the best part of the Armstrong property. The other parts were the main house and the redwoods that eventfully became the park. My grandfather got the working part of the ranch which I didn’t realize until about ten years ago.

Luther Burbank owned our land

My brother Barry found out from an old ledger that Luther Burbank an historic person once owned our family property and the land where the state park is before it was a state park.

The Teamster

This below picture tells a lot. I’m not sure but one of the guys on the first wagon may be my Great Grandfather and these are his wagons hauling sacks of magnesite ore from the Red Slide Mine. There seems to be a parade going on, likely called the Stumptown Parade as that was what the town of Guerneville was first called as there were huge redwood stumps everywhere which eventually got blasted out and removed through the years.

Grandpa Birkhofer

The sign on the wall, Birkhofer was a grandfather on the other side of the family that married Henry Ayer’s daughter, Laura and ran a grocery store until he died when I was about five. If he’d lived I’d likely be a grocer. Downtown Stumptown or Guerneville.henryayers

 

Growing up

So anyway I grew up in my Great Grandfathers old house, remodeled a bit of course, a good place for a  kid to grow up and we spent quite a bit of time playing in the not so popular yet park and on our family property which was mostly orchards and forest land.

Most of that land has been in the family since that time with parcels split off, one for each of Grandma Laura’s kids of which there were four to build their family houses and we all shared the family property.

Very fortunate

After my Vietnam military experience and college and work at HP, I was fortunate to be able to move back into our family house and have been here ever since, a great place to live, one of the best places in the world.

Present times

So let’s bring things up to the present. At first Laura’s four kids owned all the family property but they all have passed on and left the property to their kids, there’s now nine of us with only a few of us living in the area using the property and most of us are getting older which brings us to the present.

We have a problem

The family knows we have a problem coming up and that is if one of us dies and gives their share to one of their kids that aren’t interested in the property we’d have to buy them out to keep the property or  sell it to be able to pay them off and we’d lose the property. Land here is just worth too much money these days so it’s not so easy to just buy someone out.

Good solution for all

For a number of years I’ve been thinking it would be a good idea to move our family property into the state park’s system. One of my Aunts stated to me she’d like it to go into the state park system just before she died and left her share to me and my brothers.

I’ve been looking for a way to do this and recently a way presented itself after I got to know most of the people in the park during the big forest fire around here and in the park last summer.

The state park has a serious parking problem and has a hard time making money to support it because the park has a reserve designation so they can’t do much to change anything in it, but our family property is another flat valley adjoining the park that has a bunch of parking and places and picnic, camp and RV parking spots and lots of fire roads that would  make excellent hiking trails up in the hills.

A family decision to make

So recently I let my follow owners know we had a decision to make to see about getting the family property into the state park system and what do they think about it?

Everyone  else I talked with said it would be impossible to get 9 people to agree on something like this as each and every one has to agree or no go, all or nothing.

We all agreed

Amazingly enough, all nine agreed to see if we can make it happen.

It only takes two things to make this deal that would benefit all the people that will use the park in the future. A fair market value and letting us that still use the property use it like we’ve always used it until we pass on or are too old to use the property any more.

Works like this

So the job now is to get the State parks system interested and get the land trust people interested in buying the property for the state park system. It works like this. The state has a quarter cent sales tax to buy lands that the public can use and in this case the land trust buy the land and give it to the state.

Win, win

The time is right now for this to happen. It’s a good deal for all of us and all of the public too.

I decided to make this public as public support in doing something like this is always very helpful. A win, win, for everyone. I hope we can get this thing moving in the right direction as missing this chance to get this land into the park system would be a loss to the public. It’s time to do it or it may never happen.

That’s the story and our family has been very fortunate to have had this land to grow up on and use and  enjoy.

And that is the rest of the story.

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