

-
Join 933 other subscribers
-
“He may be just a tramp, a guy that likes to roam about this great country without any special aim, just to thank the Lord for these beautiful mountains.”
-B. Traven, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre

-
“. . .here, where there are still the silences and the loneliness of the earth before man, . . .”

Search Jack’s Blog


Recently Read
- Eating Poison Oak
- Mark of Conquest II: Benchmark and Mortar
- Parks Management Company's Red Rock Racket
- Indian Head Test Pattern (1939)
- Barger Canyon Arch
- Slippery Rock Stagecoach Road (19th Century)
- John Muir Writes of Davy Brown
- The Intelligence of Coyote Tobacco (Nicotiana attenuata)
- Painted Rock Camp, Montgomery Potrero, Sierra Madre Mountains
- 'Akaka Falls, Hawaii & Cliff Climbing Goby
Photos from the blog
This slideshow requires JavaScript.
-
Latest Dispatches
- Mark of Conquest II: Benchmark and Mortar
- Save Old Mission Sycamore … __ __ __ …
- Raking the Forest: Anderson, Trump, Kuyper
- Initials of J.D. Reyes (1907)
- Last California Grizzlies Seen In Santa Barbara National Forest? (1926)
- Eccentric Artifact, San Marcos Foothills Preserve
- Fog Drip Morels
- Naming Santa Barbara’s Modoc Road
- Mark of Conquest: Benchmark and Mortar
- Hat Tip to the Selfless Samaritans In Service to Others
- The Intelligence of Coyote Tobacco (Nicotiana attenuata)
- The Journey of a Root (1907) and Plant Intelligence
- Santa Barbara County Morels
- Hollyleaf Cherries Golden Morph
- Barefoot Prints In Volcanic Ash, Hawaii (1790)
Lunar Phase

Tag Archives: Portola
Oil Seeps at Carpinteria, California
Oil seep at Carpinteria State Beach. “Cabrillo’s description of the Chumash of the Santa Barbara mainland is the oldest ethnohistoric document concerning California Indians.” —The Natural World of the California Indian, Robert F. Heizer & Albert B. Elsasser, University of … Continue reading →
Posted in Santa Barbara County
|
Tagged Cabrillo, Carpinteria, Chumash, de Anza, History, Indians, Native Americans, Oil, Petroleum, Photos, Pics, Portola, Tar Pits
|
2 Comments













