Alcove Falls

Alcove Falls, San Rafael Wilderness, Santa Barbara County.

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Nojoqui Falls

Alisal Road near Nojoqui Falls, Santa Barbara County.

I stopped by Nojoqui Falls (pronounced na-hoe-ee) the other day for a looksee, which is located on the north slope of the Santa Ynez Mountains in Santa Barbara County (Jack’s Map). It’s a tall but weak flowing seasonal waterfall with rarely more than a trickle cascading over its precipice except in exceptionally wet seasons or immediately after a heavy rainstorm. The cold air smelled sweet with the fragrance of a rain soaked oak forest.

I was walking back down the trail to get my camera when I passed by a group of several people heading up to the fall. One guy was in a short sleeved t-shirt and shorts and the others in normal street clothes. As I walked by in full rain gear, black pants and olive drab rain coat, I thought, These people are probably wondering who the heck this shady looking character is in full waterproof gear.

It was a day of spotty intermittent showers not really such that called for the type of gear I was wearing, but I wore it all anyway. Just in case. As I retrieved my camera from the truck and turned to start back up the creek the sky unloaded with a barrage of small hailstones that ripped through the forest canopy in sheets. I chuckled out loud thinking of the guy in a t-shirt and appreciated having on what I was wearing.

Looking toward Nojoqui Creek canyon from Alisal Road.

The creekside trail leading to the falls.

A description of the waterfall’s formation:

The waterfall flows into a shallow puddle at its base.

Nojoqui Falls is tall, but flows weakly.

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Bald Eagle Webcams, Santa Barbara Channel Islands

bald eagleIn 2010, thanks to restoration efforts and years of hard work and patience by conservationists, a record 15 bald eaglets hatched on the Santa Barbara Channel Islands. This milestone event included two chicks on Santa Rosa Island which was the first time in 60 years this was known to have happened.

Last year 14 chicks hatched on the islands including the first eaglet born on Anacapa Island in 63 years.

For 2012, the breeding season on the Santa Barbara Channel Islands is proceeding as follows:

Two Harbors nest on Catalina Island: Feb. 19: Laid first egg, Feb. 22: Laid second egg

West End nest on Catalina: Feb. 18: Laid first egg, Feb. 22: Laid second egg, Feb. 26: Laid third egg

Sauces nest on Santa Cruz Island: March 2: First egg laid, March 6: Second egg laid

Pelican Harbor nest on Santa Cruz Island: March 6: First Egg Laid

There are four eagle nest webcams available to the public at the following link:

Institute for Wildlife Studies Eagle Nest Webcams

Frame grab from Pelican Harbor webcam.

Related Post:

Bald Eagle Nests on the Channel Islands: A Short History of Recovery

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Rincon Point Sunset, Slater at Work, Vandenberg Missile Launch?

Sunset at Rincon Point with a line of headlights on the 101 freeway and something unknown in the sky.

Rincon Point State Beach is located on the Santa Barbara and Ventura County line in California. To any surfer worth his salt it needs no introduction and is instantly recognizable even in silhouette.

I snapped the photos featured here on January 3, 2012 and captured above what I assume is a rocket or missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, which is located in northern Santa Barbara County. Although I have not been able to confirm that anything was in fact launched, and whatever it was looks deceptively closer to Rincon Point than Vandenberg, with a smoky plume like that I cannot think of anything else it could have been.

Another day at the office: eleven time world surfing champion, Kelly Slater, working late at Rincon.

Related Post:

Rincon Point Sunset

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McDonald’s Egg McMuffin Born In Santa Barbara

The placard on the wall of McDonald’s on Upper State Street in Santa Barbara commemorating the birth of an American culinary classic.

The Egg McMuffin made its debut at the Upper State Street McDonald’s in Santa Barbara in 1972. The novel breakfast sandwich became the cornerstone of an entirely new menu and expanded set of business hours for the global fast food titan. Prior to its creation, the Golden Arches opened at 11 am and did not serve breakfast.

The ingenious handheld egg sandwich was the creation of Herbert R. Peterson. Peterson grew up poor in Chicago during the lean years of the Great Depression. His father, a U.S. Marine pilot, died from yellow fever while training for World War I when Herb was just three months old. He was raised by his mother, aunt and grandmother. At age 22 Peterson shipped off overseas and served four years “living in muddy fox holes” as a major in the Marine Corps during World War II.

Peterson, a family man and father of four whose relationship with his wife lasted 61 years until death did them part, went on to work in advertising and helped design the first costume for McDonald’s iconic character, Ronald McDonald. But it wasn’t until after he set aside his career as an adman to become a franchise owner of the Golden Arches that he really made his mark in the fast food industry.

“I’ve got something I think you’re going to like,” Herb Peterson told Ray Kroc one sunny Santa Barbara afternoon in 1971 at the McDonald’s on Upper State Street.

Peterson owned the restaurant and Kroc was the company founder who had purchased it from the McDonald brothers in 1961. The “something” in question was an open faced egg, cheese and Canadian bacon breakfast sandwich served on toasted English muffins. The morning equivalent of the afternoon essential, the hamburger.

“I like it!” exclaimed Ray Kroc smacking the countertop with his hand loud enough to turn heads just before scarfing down a second sandwich.

Herb Peterson and his world famous sandwich.

Herb Peterson’s McDonald’s on Upper State had served as the laboratory where he fiddled with and finessed his idea to take his favorite breakfast meal, eggs Benedict, and turn it into a fast food staple. After much experimentation, such as finding a way to fry a round egg to fit the muffin, first a runny yolk then a firm one, first with hollandaise sauce then without, no cheese then cheese, Peterson succeeded in crafting a masterpiece.

What seems all too simple now in fact took a lot of thought and effort. At that time many California grocery stores did not even carry English muffins. Making a sandwich with them, though perhaps done by a few clever folks in some household kitchens, was for the most part unheard of. After refining his tasty creation Peterson then had to convince corporate headquarters, and all other franchise owners, that his nifty new breakfast sandwich would satisfy hungry customers and make money. And that he did! He sold the first egg McMuffins for 55 cents.

I recall in my younger years seeing Herb Peterson in the McDonald’s on Upper State Street. Though I rarely eat at McDonald’s these days, when I do it’s breakfast while on road trips, I used to eat there as a kid and teenager and as a young adult. I had no idea who he was at the time. I frequently wondered why an old man was still working and especially why at a fast food joint. I actually felt sorry for him in some ways, believing that he worked out of necessity for money or perhaps because he was lonely and needed to get out for company. My foolish young mind had never considered that he might actually be the owner, which he was for McDonald’s locations all over Santa Barbara and the neighboring town of Goleta. It wasn’t until many years later that I finally learned just exactly who that impeccably dressed old man was and why he was always there.

The Upper State Street McDonald’s location.

Bibliography:

“The Good Egg: Herb Peterson, the Egg McMuffin and the Secret Ingredients of Innovation” by David Peterson and Ann Marsh (2009)

Related Post:

Hidden Valley Ranch Dressing: A Santa Barbara Original

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