Sunday, April 30, 2006

Congressman Miller visits John Swett High School's "Student Creek Restoration Project"


January 3, 2006

Even the biggest storm to hit California in 20 years could not stop Congressman Miller and students from the “Water and Environment” class at John Swett High School in Crockett from their plans to restore Edward Creek located directly behind their school. On January 3, 2006, George joined the team of ten students, and their teacher, Ms. Meilin Duncan, to get the densely wooded area ready for habitat restoration. George and the students worked diligently in the rain clearing the riparian zone (the area around the creek) by identifying, collecting and removing invasive non-native plants and replacing them with native coast live oak trees. The class hopes that their efforts will eventually bring back endangered Monarch butterflies and become a sanctuary for other native California wildlife.
The team was led by Sandra Dare and Karina Korde of the Carquinez Regional Environmental Education Center (CREEC). CREEC is a nonprofit that educates students about the environment and encourages communities to volunteer in creek restoration along the Carquinez Strait. CREEC has worked with the class for over a month on the restoration project.

South Vallejo View toward Crockett 1868-1869


Strait of Carquennes, from South Vallejo, 1868–69Carleton E. Watkins (American, 1829–1916)Albumen silver print from glass negative; 15 7/8 x 20 11/16 in. (40.3 x 52.5 cm)Gilman Paper Company Collection (L.1995.2.160)





When Watkins exhibited his mammoth prints in 1869, a critic remarked, "They justly deserve the encomiums passed upon them. For clearness, strength, and softness of tone, these picturesque views are unexcelled; and while they present truthful representations of the scene chosen, they are an earnest of the artistic skill of the photographer." The site of this photograph (known today as the Carquinez Strait) is a narrow, tidal body of water twenty miles inland from the mouth of San Francisco Bay. Part of a busy, deep-water shipping channel to Sacramento, the strait (and the surrounding shoreland) is still beloved for its extraordinary beauty and diversity of wildlife and flora. The Star Flour Mills (center) is featured by Robert Louis Stevenson in The Silverado Squatters (1883), his prescient travelogue about the California wine country of Napa Valley. Stevenson's account of his 1880 honeymoon discusses his journey from San Francisco to Calistoga and Mount Saint Helena, where he and his new wife and stepson lived for two months as "squatters" in the bunkhouse of an abandoned mining camp.

C&H From the WSW


When crossing the Carquinez, this is the sign seen from the bridge. Since the new owners took over, the sign has been turned on.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

World's largest cruise ship in Oslo

I'd like to see this ship sail into the Carquinez! At least it stopped in Norway - never to see it again.

There are 1,800 double rooms on the ship, and space for 4,370 passengers. A
crew of 1,360 are ready around the clock for their guests, and the vessel
includes a 136-meter long shopping avenue on board.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

More Bridge Pictures


The Museum now has complete pictorial documentation of the lowering of the first section of the 1927 bridge from the time it began to being floated away on the barges. Anyone who wants to view them can drop by on Wednesday or Saturday.

Monday, April 24, 2006

The Crockett Bridge is Coming Down

Today, April 24, dismantling of the steel structure began. The first section is being lowered to a barge. So far they are a bit ahead of schedule in a job expected to take until September 2007.

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Crockett's Weatherpeople

After many years Crockett may again have an official weather station. This article was in this morning's West County Times.

Weather watcher revives tradition Crockett's official weather watcher waits for a record-breaking drizzle By Tom Lochner CONTRA COSTA TIMES

Karen "Dejah" Dorantes was set to post Crockett's all-time record for rainfall in a season when wet winter turned to sunny spring this past week, leaving her a fraction of an inch short.
"We just barely missed during this past rainstorm" over Easter weekend, said Dorantes, the official KTVU-TV weather watcher for Crockett since last year. "I thought we'd see the record fall." She's confident it will happen yet -- after all, the 2005-06 rainfall year ends June 30.
But after a record March, which saw 25 days of measurable precipitation in Crockett, and 10 rainy days out of 17 to start April, the climate has taken a turn for the better -- or worse, if you're chasing bad-weather records. A low-pressure system over the Pacific that appeared headed for a weekend Northern California landfall a week ago was falling apart by Friday, making a new record iffy -- for now.

Dorantes is undaunted.
"We will break the record; we're not done with the rain," she said. "We're at 30.26 (inches). We're very close. A quarter of an inch, that's all it's going to take, and the record falls."
"Come on, heavy weather," she coaxed. The record in Crockett's recorded history -- the qualifier is crucial -- is 30.51 inches, set in 1957.

Dorantes' husband, Rick, gave her a weather kit for her 50th birthday last year, rekindling a girlhood passion. "I've always enjoyed meteorology," she said. "It was one of my favorite sciences in high school and junior high school." The gift also revived a lost Crockett weather-watching tradition. From 1918 to 1977, Crockett was an official weather observation station for the U.S. government, said Keith Olsen, historian at the Crockett Historical Museum.
In those days, the official observation station was at C&H Sugar Co. In 1977, the National Weather Service determined the Crockett weather station needed new equipment. Instead of having it replaced, the government designated other stations in the area. The loss was not only Crockett's but science's. "The weather right here is a little different because of the location," Olsen said.

Dorantes agrees. "Crockett's a perfect observation post because it's at the mouth of the Carquinez Strait, just uphill from the Dead Fish (restaurant)" near the shore, she said. "Vallejo's weather station is way over the hills somewhere, in downtown. I'm closer to the water than they are." Soon after she got her weather kit, she called up KTVU Channel 2 and offered to become the Crockett weather-watcher. "They said, 'Sure.'" Her equipment includes a rain gauge and devices to measure wind direction, speed, humidity, air pressure and temperature. She does "Mornings on 2," rising at 4:30 every weekday morning to check her readings and her software, she said. "I e-mail my data in a few times during the broadcast, every few minutes if the weather's changing." She does it in part, she said, because "I felt Crockett was getting kind of ignored. Now, I get my shout out. Now, people know there is a Crockett."

In some future Crockett Meteorology Hall of Fame, Dorantes would stand shoulder-to-shoulder with a giant: the late, aptly-named Charlie Wind, who combined weather science with poetry. An instrument technician who retired from C&H Sugar Co. in the 1960s, Wind was Crockett's weatherman for about 30 years, Olsen said. "In the spring, when the swallows came back to the warehouse, Charlie would go through the whole plant and announce, 'Spring has arrived. The swallows have returned,'" Olsen said. "It would be like 'The Swallows of Capistrano,' Olsen said, alluding to the famous 1940 composition by songwriter Leon Rene. Like Capistrano's swallows, Crockett's would return on March 19 -- or around that date, Olsen said.

In an era when records are increasingly accompanied by asterisks, Crockett's, when it finally falls, will come with one, too. "The qualifier is 'recorded' history," Dorantes said.
That excludes 1977 to 2005. There were some wet spells in that span, notably 1981 to 1983, when rains washed out the Carquinez Scenic Drive east of Port Costa, cutting Crockett's direct road link to Martinez. National Weather Service statistics for Martinez show 32.94 inches of rain in the 1981-82 season; 36.28 in 1982-83; 33.85 in 1994-95; and 35.66 in 1997-98.
Could Crockett's 1956-57 total of 30.51 have been beaten in any of those years?
"Since there wasn't any weather observation," Dorantes said, "we'll never know."

Park Dedication

Sunday, April 23, will be the dedication of the changes to Alexander Park. For those of you who haven't visited the town recently, come see. The Generation Gap Band will play for a couple of hours. Visit the new restroom. The new wall is attractive and the garbage cans are in an enclosure.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

The Nation Newspaper | Minister: Sugar here to stay

The Nation Newspaper Minister: Sugar here to stay

"That [closing the sugar industry] is not our mandate. Our mandate is to transform the industry through diversifying it into a viable operation, maintain as many jobs as we can, and add some new jobs because there will be new skills required," he told the Press following the opening yesterday of a regional sugar seminar organised by the Caribbean Renewable Energy Development Programme and the Barbados Agricultural Management Company. "

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Rising Cost of Sugar

My relatives in North Dakota expect that sugar beets will be more profitable than ever this year. The largest sugar refinery in the world (Al Khaleej Sugar Company) has experienced an increase in the cost of their raw. They atribute much of the increase to Brazil.

"Shakir Husain, Gulf News Dubai Dubai: With the world's dominant sugar producer
and exporter Brazil diverting its sugarcane crops to produce ethanol to provide
cheaper fuel for motorists, sugar prices may be turning sour for
consumers.Coupled with a general rise in sugar consumption, the energy factor in
sugarcane use is affecting supplies of sugar, an industry expert said. Sugar
prices have risen from $270 per tonne at the start of 2005 to above $400 per
tonne this week.In the UAE, a kg bag that used to cost about Dh50 is now priced
above Dh80. "We expect high sugar prices to prevail in the short term," said
Somit Banerjee, an assistant general manager for trading at Al Khaleej Sugar.
The UAE company sources its raw sugar from Brazil. There is a "perceived
shortage" of sugar in the market and prices are volatile," Banerjee said. This
year Brazil is expected to divert 54 per cent of sugarcane yield towards
producing biofuels. ...(25 January 2006)"

Welcome to Al Khaleej Sugar

Strange place, I believe, for the worlds largest refiner. Twice the capacity of C&H Inc and still growing.

Al Khaleej Sugar Company (L.L.C) (Authorised and Paid-up Capital AED 50,000,000: Commercial Registration No. 53836), Dubai was established in 1992 to set up a sugar refinery to cater to the ever growing needs of high quality refined sugar for the domestic and the international markets. Engineering design of the sugar refinery located at Jebel Ali Port, Dubai was started in 1992 and construction of the refinery was completed in 1994. Commercial Production of the refinery commenced in July 1995 with an installed capacity of 2,400 tons per day of Refined Crystal Sugar. Being located in a country devoid of sugar cane production, the refinery was designed to process available raw sugar of different qualities from different sugar cane growing regions of the world. The company added substantial capacity for raw sugar storage in 2004. A dome shaped store with a diameter of 176 metres and a height of 84 metres, installed for the purpose, is the largest such structure in the world. With the addition of this new raw sugar store, the total storage capacity of raw sugar has increased to about one million tons. A team of qualified technical professionals have developed innovative means to achieve production capacity exceeding the installed capacity. The refinery has already achieved a capacity of over 5,000 tons per day (as of July 2005), which incidentally is the largest sugar refining capacity in the world.

Norway tops in coffee drinking

Norway tops in coffee drinkingPerhaps it's the cold winters, or simply tradition in a country where it's common to invite people over simply for cake and coffee. The brew is a fixture at dinner parties, where it's common for dinner guests to leave the table after dessert and adjourn to another room for coffee, cake and often a cognac around smaller tables.

Right After North Dakota!!!!

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Concentration of Cane Sugar Refining

At the present time, there are but three cane refiners in the United State since American Sugar acquired C & H in California.

The most
recent move came in August, when the American Sugar Refining
Corporation purchased C&H Sugar, leaving only three cane sugar refiners in the country. American Sugar Refining's output is marketed by Domino Foods, which also markets production from the Florida Crystals refinery.

What this means to US growers remains to be seen. Some North Dakota beet growers are looking forwar to a better year in 2006.

Wyoming Sugar Beet Projection 2006

"Wyoming producers intend to plant around 39,000 acres of sugar beets, which would be 2,800 acres more than last year and 2,600 acres more than in 2004, Thorson said.
If the weather cooperates, Wyoming could see one of the largest sugar beet crops in recent memory.
Mark Bjornestad, senior agriculturalist with Western Sugar Cooperative in Lovell, said his company earlier this year extended an option allowing for producers to plant more beets."

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

North Dakota Sugar Beet History

The earliest record of sugarbeets being produced in North Dakota indicates that they were first planted in1890. While sugarbeet trials were conducted over the next 30 years, there was no amount of commercial production until the first sugar factory was completed at East Grand Forks, Minnesota in 1926. The first record of sugarbeet production is for 1924 when 2,600 acres were harvested in North Dakota. The total value of this crop was $194,000.
In 1953 there were 34,800 acres of sugarbeets harvested in North Dakota with a value of $3,729,000. By 1977 sugarbeet production had reached a peak of 155,200 acres harvested in North Dakota with a total crop value of $ 59,257,000. Sugarbeets have played an important role in the developing economy of the Red River Valley.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Wet Beet Fields in North Dakota


Again the Red River Valley is being soaked. Is this good or bad for the 2006 crop?


Walsh County Road 15 west going to Warsaw, N.D., had white caps on the water. The road more than three miles west of the Red River.

HOOVER Summary of C & H

This thumbnail appears on the Hoover Business report:

C&H Sugar's products go hand-in-hand with baked sweets and candy
treats. The company processes about 700,000 tons of cane sugar per year. It
makes such sugar products as baker's, dark brown, golden brown, powdered,
superfine, washed raw, and white granulated. C&H Sugar serves consumer, food
service, and industrial customers. Its products are processed, packaged (in various
sizes and forms including bulk and liquid), and shipped from its refinery in
Crockett, California. Formed in 1906 as California and Hawaiian Sugar Refining,
the privately held company was acquired by American Sugar Refining in
2005.

Boston Business Journal: Boston Beer mulls Freetown brewery - 2006-04-06

Boston Business Journal: Boston Beer mulls Freetown brewery - 2006-04-06

Beer may be as great a topic as sugar. The Mayflower loaded more beer than water on its trip to Plymouth Rock!

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

The Voice Of The Northern Plains

What is "Flodding?" Maybe Minnesota speak.

"Flodding; Manvel
Tuesday, April 4, 2006
MANVEL, N.D. (AP) _ The Manvel Fire chief says the town is safe from flooding.
But Fire Chief Steve Schumer says some homesteads in the rural areas are still at risk of flooding. He says volunteers will continue to put out sandbags wherever they are needed.
Grand Forks County Extension Agent Ken Nichols says some fields in the Manvel area are saturated and have standing water. He expects a slight delay in starting planting dates because of the flooding. Nichols says farmers are trying to protect buildings and machinery from floodwaters. Schumer says emergency responders evacuated a woman from her home about three miles east of Manvel yesterday. The home was surrounded by water."

Rain won't be going away

"The Bay Area's nearly relentless run of wet weather is expected to keep drenching the region for the next couple of weeks."

If this keeps up we may find ourselves in a rainforest.

Sunday, April 02, 2006

Truth About Trade & Technology - Commentary: Sweet Opportunity

One can't help but wonder what would happen if the US abandoned sugar supports.

Commentary: Sweet The U.S. price of sugar has been two to three times higher than the world price for the past 25 years. The longer that imbalance has persisted, the more inefficient U.S. sugar producers have become. And, paradoxically, the more powerful they have become as a special
interest blocking U.S. trade expansion. Now that a spike in world prices has put the U.S. on par with foreign producers, there is a window of opportunity to do away with a sugar program that costs American jobs and has become a source of
trade friction around the world.