Community

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Horse Council is hosting a “Save the Trails, Ride the Roads” Horseback Poker Run on the Old Toll Road at Highland Springs Recreation Area on Saturday, Feb. 23, with a rain date of Saturday, March 2.

This event is to promote and encourage riders to protect the lovely trails at Highland Springs by riding only on the county roads and fire roads at Highland Springs during the wet season.

The five mile ride is open to horseback riders and cart drivers with five stations along the route to collect cards to make up a poker hand at the end of the ride.  

Each station will also have a trail trial activity for riders and drivers to attempt before riding on down the road to the next station.

Entry fee will be $10 per rider for Horse Council members, $20 for non-Horse Council members which includes a one-year membership, and $5 for juniors (under 18).

Juniors are required to wear helmets, ride with an adult and arrive with a waiver signed by a parent or guardian – no exceptions.  

Entry fees include a catered lunch and live entertainment at the ride’s end. Prizes will be given to the top poker hands.

Raffle tickets will also be available for a $75 gravel donation from R.B. Peters.

Rig parking will be limited so carpooling is encouraged for this event. Registration limited to the first 30 rigs.  

For registration and more information go to www.lakecountyhorsecouncil.com and click on “Old Toll Road Horseback Poker Run” or call Kim Riley at 707-245-7468.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Due to being rained out, the University of California Master Gardeners of Lake County have rescheduled and relocated their rose pruning workshop to Wednesday, Jan. 30.

The workshop will begin at 10 a.m. at 10011 Sam Alley Ridge Road in Upper Lake – weather permitting.

If it is raining heavily on Jan. 30, the workshop will be canceled. Master Gardener Jim Harrell will discuss and demonstrate pruning and other cultural practices that help produce large, healthy rose displays.

Although not a planned portion of the workshop, participants should bring heavy gloves and pruning shears in case hands-on practice is available.

A $5 donation is encouraged to help defray expenses for handouts that will be available.

The meeting site is not wheelchair accessible, call the UC Cooperative Extension at 707-263-6838 for special accommodations.

Please RSVP for this workshop by calling 707-263-6838. For directions to the workshop site, please call 707-263-6838.

Master Gardeners are a group of selected, trained residents who work as volunteer staff for the U.C. Cooperative Extension.

Master Gardeners provide accurate horticultural information on vegetable gardening, trees, soils, lawns, ornamental horticulture, insects, diseases, use of pesticides, and other related topics based on research of the University of California and other recognized research institutions.

Information about the rose pruning workshop can be obtained by calling UC Cooperative Extension at 707-263-6838, or on the Web at http://celake.ucdavis.edu .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Entries will be accepted from Feb. 1, to May 1, 2013 for the inaugural Martha Webster Journalism Internship Award, offered by the Middletown Luncheon Club.

The competition is open to all previously unpublished writers living within the boundaries of the Middletown Unified School District.

Each entry should include pertinent personal data and an original column of 500-600 words written in journalistic style on a subject believed to be of general interest to readers in the Middletown area.

The winner will be paid $25 each for similar columns to be produced once each month for the following year and published in the Middletown Times Star.

The winning entry will be announced on May 28, in observance of the birthday of the late Martha Webster, whose contributions to the area – even beyond her journalism – were many.

Entries should be mailed to: Middletown Luncheon Club, P. O. Box 74, Middletown, CA 95461. The applicant’s name, address, phone number or email address, and age must be included with each entry. Extra credit will be given to students enrolled in Middletown High School or the Clearlake Campus of Yuba Community College.

Established in 1943, the Middletown Luncheon Club meets on the third Wednesday of each month in the community room at the Methodist Church.

Each meeting offers lunch at $ 5 per person with a speaker or presentation of importance to the Middletown area.

Thanks to interest-bearing bequests, the club has a long history of donating to service organizations for preparing the monthly meals offered and contributing to scholarships and various community projects.

The Feb. 20 meeting will feature poetry by local authors; the March 20 luncheon will feature a presentation on Middletown’s history.

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KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The sixth annual Venetian Masquerade will take place Friday, Feb. 8, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rosa d’Oro Vineyards Tasting Room, located at 3915 Main Street in Kelseyville.

Attendees will enjoy a sampling of Italian-varietal wines produced by Rosa d’Oro Vineyards paired with a selection of Venetian-inspired appetizers prepared by Chef Pietro Buttitta.

A mask contest will be held with prizes awarded. Featured wines will include recent San Francisco Chronicle award winners and a new release, “Carmen” Dessert Wine.”

Pietro Buttitta, son of owner Nick Buttitta, is a certified sommelier and graduate of Western Culinary Institute, with five years of restaurant cooking under his belt.

He currently works in all aspects of viticulture and winemaking at Rosa d’Oro Vineyards.

Tickets are $10 for nonmembers. Masks are optional.

For more information or to purchase tickets call Rosa d’Oro Vineyards at 707-279-0483, or visit the tasting room at 3915 Main St, Kelseyville.

Motorists who use cell phones while driving are more likely to engage in additional dangerous behaviors such as speeding, driving drowsy, driving without a seatbelt and sending texts or emails, according to a survey conducted by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.

Additionally, more than two-thirds (69 percent) of licensed drivers reported talking on a cell phone while driving within the last month despite the fact that nearly nine-in-ten respondents (89 percent) believe other drivers using cell phones are a threat to their personal safety.

“What concerns AAA is this pattern of risky behavior that even goes beyond cell phone use,” said Cynthia Harris, AAA Northern California spokesperson. “These same cell phone-using drivers clearly understand the risk of distraction, yet are still likely to engage in a wide range of dangerous driving activities.”                                

Motorists who fairly often or regularly used their cell phones over the last month also reported that they engaged in additional risky behaviors. The research shows:

  • 65 percent also reported speeding;
  • 44 percent also reported driving while drowsy;
  • 53 percent also reported sending a text or email;
  • 29 percent also drove without a seatbelt.

Drivers that reported never using a cell phone were much less likely to report additional risky behaviors:

  • 31 percent reported speeding;
  • 14 percent reported driving drowsy;
  • 03 percent reported sending a text or email;
  • 16 percent reported driving without a seatbelt.

Despite the near-universal disapproval of texting and emailing while driving (95%), more than one-in-four licensed drivers (27%) reported sending a text or email at least once in the past 30 days, and more than one-third (35 %) said they read a text or email while driving.

Young drivers age 16-24 were even more likely with more than half (61 %) reporting having read a text or email while driving in the past month, while more than one-in-four (26 %) reported checking or updating social media while driving.

Driver use of cell phones impairs reaction times and roughly quadruples crash risk. Additionally, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that more than 3,000 people are killed and nearly half a million are injured each year in crashes involving distraction.

This is likely an underestimate given the challenges associated with determining the role of distraction in crashes.

AAA and the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety have long been leading advocates in educating motorists about the risks of distracted driving. AAA recommends that motorists turn off their phone before driving or pulling over to a safe place to talk, send texts or use email. AAA also has launched a legislative campaign to advocate for a text messaging ban in all 50 states. To date, 39 states and the District of Columbia have adopted this key traffic safety measure and AAA expects all 11 remaining states to consider this legislation in 2013.

Established in 1947 by AAA, the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety is an independent, publicly funded, 501(c)(3) charitable research and educational organization. The AAA Foundation’s mission is to prevent traffic deaths and injuries by conducting research into their causes and by educating the public about strategies to prevent crashes and reduce injuries when they do occur.

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The monthly meeting of the Lake County Flying Saucer Club will take place on Sunday, Jan. 27.

It will be held from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. in the meeting room at McDonald's on Todd Road in Lakeport.

Stop by and discuss your UFO experiences or any other unexplained sightings.

Meetings are free and open to the public.

The group’s new Web site is www.lakecountyflyingsaucerclub.yolasite.com ; there is a place to contact members on the site.

The email is the same, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , or call 707-263-3391 for more information.

LCNews

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