TemporaryKubotaOwnerMark
Veteran Member
Spoils: I don't know the specifics for this but in general: in the 1800's, Hydraulic Mining was used all along the Sierras.
It's Sierra. No "s". The word is already plural.
Spoils: I don't know the specifics for this but in general: in the 1800's, Hydraulic Mining was used all along the Sierras.
In proper Spanish, yes.It's Sierra. No "s". The word is already plural.
In proper Spanish, yes.
In California vernacular, the eastern border of the great Central Valley is the 'Sierras'. (Basis: Entire family 150+ years west of the Sierras. Among grandparents and their descendants more than half are UC Berkeley graduates. We're real Californians).
Similarly, the 'g' in Los Angeles isn't silent like it should be in Spanish. San Franceesco sounds foreign. I'll bet half the residents of Vacaville (population 100,000) don't know that it translates as 'cowtown' and fewer still know it was named for an early settler Manuel Cabeza Vaca (That translates as cow-head), not for cows. There are lots more examples here of original Spanish names appropriated with no regard for the original meaning.
On the other hand 'NorCal' is a recent invention. The first thing I think of when I hear that is gangs, but this would never occur to younger Californians.
Yes... My Grandmother used to like telling stories of pronunciation when they moved to California from South Dakota back in the 1930's.
Like "San Joe See"...
I can't stand when people refer to Silicon Valley. It's Santa Clara valley.Worse flight of my life was from Paris to SF back in the 90's. It was full of French exchange students going to San Jose. Every single one of them kept calling it San Josey as loudly as they could in the state of teenage excitement, over and over again!!!!
Yes... My Grandmother used to like telling stories of pronunciation when they moved to California from South Dakota back in the 1930's.
Like "San Joe See"...
... we crossed into California and the Eastern Sierra region ... White Mountains rising starkly to our left, and jagged gleaming white peaks of the Sierras growing closer on our right. ...
Are you going to be mining culverts for nuggets?
In proper Spanish, yes.
In California vernacular, the eastern border of the great Central Valley is the 'Sierras'. (Basis: Entire family 150+ years west of the Sierras. Among grandparents and their descendants more than half are UC Berkeley graduates. We're real Californians).
Similarly, the 'g' in Los Angeles isn't silent like it should be in Spanish. San Franceesco sounds foreign. I'll bet half the residents of Vacaville (population 100,000) don't know that it translates as 'cowtown' and fewer still know it was named for an early settler Manuel Cabeza Vaca (That translates as cow-head), not for cows. There are lots more examples here of original Spanish names appropriated with no regard for the original meaning.
On the other hand 'NorCal' is a recent invention. The first thing I think of when I hear that is gangs, but this would never occur to younger Californians.
I looked on Google/News for recent examples of 'Sierras'. Here's a current (3/2017) quote from a Reno newspaper columnist describing her trip to go see the record snowpack:
I can't stand when people refer to Silicon Valley. It's Santa Clara valley.
How about a recent report on the Sierra conditions? My oldest is a bit of an extreme mountain climber/skier (He summitted Denali and ski'd down last year.) Just a few days ago, he and his gal got caught in a Sierra blizzard. (Note, they have the skills and gear to survive such encounters. The tent in the video is gosh awful expensive.) Anyway, after the blizzard ended, they encounter a snow survey crew. The survey crew's cabin was so buried that entrance was through a shaft in the snow and a ladder had to be used to go in and out. The survey crew said that in 40 years of doing the surveys, this was the first time they had ever seen anybody up there.
The snow report? The pack right now is the second deepest on record and is very close to becoming the record. Sounds like the streams will be very full shortly. Hope the video link works.
I don't understand your need to run down California in this thread and others. FYI 7 of 8 in my parent's generation (from whom I learned my sense of local grammar) graduated UCB in the 1930's, the youngest got recruited into working in the UCB Rad Lab on the Manhattan Project (atomic bomb) so didn't graduate. Grandfather (Class of 1906, Mining) came out of retirement to work on that too. Grandmother on the other side of my family was also Class of 1906 (Pharmacy), withdrew to run her father's pharmacy when his health failed. More recently my two daughters and several others are graduates long after the events of the 60's you probably think define 'Berkeley' forever. Come out of that bubble you live in, your prejudices are a reflection of what you projected onto the inside of that bubble.Graduating from Berkeley doesn't really mean much, not since the 60's anyway and even less today. LOL
Just Wow.no more silicon in Silicon Valley. overrun with mostly software pukes and dayum few round eyes... no shortage of Mexican, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Thai
How about a recent report on the Sierra conditions? My oldest is a bit of an extreme mountain climber/skier (He summitted Denali and ski'd down last year.) Just a few days ago, he and his gal got caught in a Sierra blizzard. (Note, they have the skills and gear to survive such encounters. The tent in the video is gosh awful expensive.) Anyway, after the blizzard ended, they encounter a snow survey crew. The survey crew's cabin was so buried that entrance was through a shaft in the snow and a ladder had to be used to go in and out. The survey crew said that in 40 years of doing the surveys, this was the first time they had ever seen anybody up there.
The snow report? The pack right now is the second deepest on record and is very close to becoming the record. Sounds like the streams will be very full shortly. Hope the video link works.
Remember the Donner Party!As a kid it was common to see the Sierra mountain cabins with ladders to a higher floor... always thought it odd and my Grandfather said it often snows so much that a ladder is needed.
I vividly remember being snowed in back in 1969... the snow just kept a coming
Remember the Donner Party!What got them was an unexpected early winter then continual severe snowfall - that I think still ranks among the top years since records have been available.
A few dozen miles south of that -- I've read that South Lake Tahoe has the most snowfall of any place that USPS delivers mail.
The highway to South Lake Tahoe. Going down Myers Grade on US 50, one of the few 'all weather'Yep South Lake Tahoe... can't find the mail box when the snow is higher than the roof...
I remember the seasonal closure, not the freezing. 89 was closed at Emerald Bay a month ago, and again yesterday before Caltrans cleared a down tree and large boulder.When you look up from the valley floor it makes you wonder just how solid parts of the road are...
Have friends that will not drive 50 because of fear of looking over the edge.
Mom would like me to take her up to the Lake one more time... but will need to check in with the neighbor when the time comes as I have no interest in making an endurance run for fun.
Remember when the road around Emerald Bay was closed in winter or when the Emerald Bay froze?
They're saying the snowpack is the deepest recorded over the last century. So where's all that global warming? I'm sure some folks in the Northeast are looking for some of it about now.
BTW I hope they are equipped with a Spot GPS emergency beacon or something equivalent. At current prices, there really is no excuse for anyone being out there without one.