header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
May 18
1978 - Concert scene for "KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park" filmed at Magic Mountain [story]
KISS


Now and Then in the SCV | Commentary by Darryl Manzer
| Sunday, Feb 23, 2014

darrylmanzer021014We have been blessed with perfect Chamber of Commerce weather: mild, warm temperatures during the day, cooling off at night. I like to think we have had some evenings perfect for holding a special someone close. We have also had good temps for hiking our many trails and pathways of the SCV.

Looking ahead, the weather forecasters are calling for lots of rain in the later days of the month. At least two days of rain – and for us, that would be a lot of rain. It will take many inches of rain to get some water into the ground. When the ground is saturated, we get those all-too-familiar mud slides and such.

Back in my old hometown of Mentryville, mudslides and flooding have been common. I was visiting the old place during the week just passed, and I still have to laugh at some of the efforts to bridge and channel the creek in Pico Canyon. Once again I say to those who have attempted to build those bridges: Every bridge ever built over Pico Creek in Mentryville has failed.

The little creek that never seems to have much water has many times found a new direction over, under and around the bridges. Even the largest culvert-bridge, located about 1.7 miles from the schoolhouse, has washed out. I watched it one time. Glad I was on a horse. I would have been stuck up the canyon, had I been in the old 1960 Chevy pickup truck we had.

It was the winter of 1962-63 when the flooding happened – the winter after the 1962 fire that hadn’t even gone up the canyon past Minnie-Lotta Canyon where the old bakery sits. The year prior to the fire had been wet, too.

The water level in Pico Creek can rise quickly in a good rain. Click image to read about it.

The water level in Pico Creek can rise quickly in a good rain. Click image to read about it.

As I often do, I was talking with a visitor to Pico Canyon and Mentryville who had no idea the place existed. He said he was a civil engineer. We talked about the hill that has been cut away behind Pico Cottage (wrongly called “the Big House,” but it is a big house). We both remarked that the nearly vertical cut into the hill was only going to result in a near catastrophic failure of the bank, should it ever rain.

Then we talked of the brush abatement program on Mustard Hill. It really looks like some weed killer was used on the hillside. Can we say more erosion and mud? Can we say, dumb?

If you’ve hiked up Pico Canyon or Towsley Canyon or even taken a stroll around the St. Francis Dam site, you might not even realize that if it weren’t for the roads and trails, you might not know mankind was ever there.

The Earth is quickly moving to erase the tiny little efforts by man to change it. Places where hundreds of people lived and worked are now just about as natural as they were when first found. You’d never know there were houses and barns, workshops and wells and tanks and … you get the idea.

Every time I hear someone moan about the cattle causing erosion in the creeks and rivers of Colorado, Wyoming, Montana and the other northern states west of Wisconsin, I have to laugh out loud. In an area that once had maybe 30 million North American bison, we are worried about how a few thousand domestic cattle might cause damage. These same folks also say the cows are emitting gasses that add to the greenhouse effect. Did they forget the bison? Bet they didn’t know they were there at one time.

I have to laugh when I hear or read that climate change is manmade. We aren’t helping it not happen, but we aren’t the cause. I doubt we can even think of a solution.

Some of us remember when you could drive over the hill to that lesser valley south of us and see a blanket of smog covering the area from Chatsworth to Sunland. Sometimes that smog would make its way into the SCV.

Our eyes burnt and our lungs did, too. We soon enacted measures to reduce emissions from automobiles and other motor vehicles. Smog Alert days seem to be rare now. One would think that since we have cleaned up the air of the most industrialized nation, our climate would change, too.

Maybe it has changed. Just maybe. For the better, it seems.

The coaches at Hart High in the 1960s didn’t keep us from going outside just because of a little smog. We went out to run laps, with smog or without it. It was the price we paid for our high-compression engines on our cars that had to have gasoline with lead additives mixed into it.

Over the years, the sky has cleared and the smog has lessened. Of course we have a lot fewer cattle here now, too. Maybe that is what changed the weather here.

Do you think that smog might have been the result of all those cattle? Horses, too? Goats and other domesticated critters, too.

I don’t know. The answer is elusive. “The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind…”

Maybe the song was right after all.

 

Darryl Manzer grew up in the Pico Canyon oil town of Mentryville in the 1960s and attended Hart High School. After a career in the U.S. Navy he returned to live in the Santa Clarita Valley. He can be reached at dmanzer@scvhistory.com and his commentaries, published on Tuesdays and Sundays, are archived at DManzer.com. Watch his walking tour of Mentryville [here].

 

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

0 Comments

You can be the first one to leave a comment.

Leave a Comment


Opinion Section Policy
All opinions and ideas are welcome. Factually inaccurate, libelous, defamatory, profane or hateful statements are not. Your words must be your own. All commentary is subject to editing for legibility. There is no length limit, but the shorter, the better the odds of people reading it. "Local" SCV-related topics are preferred. Send commentary to: LETTERS (at) SCVNEWS.COM. Author's full name, community name, phone number and e-mail address are required. Phone numbers and e-mail addresses are not published except at author's request. Acknowledgment of submission does not guarantee publication.
Read More From...
RECENT COMMENTARY
Thursday, May 16, 2024
April has always been one of my favorite months because year after year, it’s the sign that baseball is officially back. As a longtime Dodger fan, I have fond memories of piling into the family Volkswagen with my brothers and parents for a day spent at Dodger Stadium.
Monday, May 13, 2024
May is National Foster Youth Month! It was an honor to coauthor a motion at this week's Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors meeting to celebrate. 
Monday, May 13, 2024
There is no better time to pump up your tires and take your bicycle for a spin.
Thursday, May 9, 2024
As spring blooms, it brings with it a renewed sense of opportunity to embrace the fresh air and physical activity that comes with the season.
Monday, May 6, 2024
Warmer weather, longer days and the sound of baseball is officially back!
Monday, May 6, 2024
In an effort to bolster local businesses, Los Angeles County just launched the Entertainment Business Interruption Fund, a $4.1 million grant program aimed to serve businesses that were impacted by the Hollywood strikes and the pandemic.

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
1978 - Concert scene for "KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park" filmed at Magic Mountain [story]
KISS
College of the Canyons baseball saw eight players recognized with All-Western State Conference (WSC), South Division honors. 
Eight COC Baseball Players Named to All-WSC Team
College of the Canyons softball was represented with four selections to the 2024 All-Western State Conference (WSC), South Division Team. 
Four Lady Cougs Earn All-WSC Softball Honors
The city of Santa Clarita Planning Commission is holding its regular meeting in City Hall's Council Chambers Tuesday, May 21 at 6 p.m.
May 21: Planning Commission Continues Town Center Public Hearings
The city of Santa Clarita’s Communications division was recently recognized by the California Association of Public Information Officials (CAPIO) for their outreach efforts and impactful campaigns across special events, branding and social media presence in 2023.
City Earns State Communications, Outreach Awards
The Memorial Torch Relay Run was established in 1975 to honor the memory of the brave and dedicated peace officers in Los Angeles County who sacrificed their lives in the performance of their duties.
LASD Torch Relay Honors Ryan Clinkunbroomer, Fallen Heroes
Join ARTree Community Arts Center in building a cleaner, greener community by creating a mural made from thousands of recycled bottle caps!
June 1: ARTree Community Arts Center Bottle Cap Mural Project
The California Association of Public Information Officials recognized Kevin Strauss, Communications Manager for the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency with one of CAPIO's highest honors - the 2024 Communicator of the Year - during the 2024 awards dinner on May 14 in Indian Wells.
SCV Water’s Kevin Strauss Named CAPIO’s Communicator of the Year
Santa Clarita-based Lief Labs, a premier formulation and product development innovator and manufacturer of dietary supplements, is pleased to announced that the company's Lief Cares Donation Program donated 400 jars of Lief Cares Protein Powder nutritional supplements to the Valley Oasis Shelter, which provides services to men, women and children of all ages who are survivors of domestic violence.
Lief Labs’ Nonprofit Program Donates to Domestic Violence Survivors
Get ready Santa Clarita for an unforgettable morning of shopping, entertainment and support!
June 8: Saugus High School Music Program Rummage, Bake Sale
College of the Canyons football student-athlete Joshua Clark knows a thing or two about stepping up.
COC Grad Steps Up After Redshirt Year
The Samuel Dixon Family Health Center is excited to host its second annual Cornhole Tournament Saturday, May 18, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Lucky Luke Brewery.
May 18: Cornhole Tourney Benefiting Samuel Dixon Health Center
Palmdale Detectives from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department are asking for the public’s help locating at-risk, missing juvenile, Brianna Covert.
LASD Seeking Help Locating At-Risk, Missing Agua Dulce Teen
The California Department of Transportation has scheduled lane closures on the northbound and southbound State Route 14 between Technology Drive in Palmdale and Avenue A in Lancaster, closing up to three lanes.
Caltrans Announces SR-14 Lane Closures
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is closely monitoring the ongoing multi-state outbreak of ­­H5N1 bird flu in wild birds, poultry and U.S. dairy cows.
L.A. County Monitoring Nationwide Bird Flu Outbreak
The California Department of Motor Vehicles now offers an improved online customer experience that is faster, easier and can be personalized.
DMV Simplifies Online Customer Services
1993 - Dale Poe, 61, developer of Stevenson Ranch, killed in car crash [story]
Stevenson Ranch fountain
The annual Summer Reading Program is back at the Santa Clarita Public Library. This year's theme is "Read, Renew, Repeat." During the seven-week summer program, residents are encouraged to read a variety of books and/or participate in crafts or activities.
Santa Clarita Summer Library Reading Program Seeks Volunteers
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health has been notified of one case of measles in a non-Los Angeles County resident who traveled to Los Angeles International airport while infectious on May 9.
Public Health Confirms Measles Case in Los Angeles County
Mission Opera is looking for volunteers for front of the house at the performances of the "Merry Widow: Madonna" June 6-8.
Ushers Needed for Mission Opera’s ‘Merry Widow: Madonna’
The Old West Masonic Lodge #813 19310 Avenue of The Oaks, Newhall, CA 91321 will host dinner and meeting for those interested in learning about freemasonry and the history of the lodge.
June 4: Old West Masonic Lodge #813 Dinner Meeting
The Santa Clarita Master Chorale, under the direction of Musical Director Allan Robert Petker, will present "Seasons of Song" on Saturday, June 1 at 7 p.m.
June 1: Santa Clarita Master Chorale Presents ‘Seasons of Song’
Online registration will begin May 21-22 for classes offered by the city of Santa Clarita Parks and Recreation Department.
May 21-22: Registration for City Seasons Summer Programs Begins
SCVNews.com