Photo of the Week: "Fire from a Confederate army canon" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Camera 7DMKII, manual mode, ISO 250, Tamron 16-300mm lens @57mm, f/11 aperture, shutter speed 1/400th second.
Photo of the Week: "Fire from a Confederate army canon" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Camera 7DMKII, manual mode, ISO 250, Tamron 16-300mm lens @57mm, f/11 aperture, shutter speed 1/400th second.
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History reenacted
Bob Crum
Bob Crum

The Rotary Club of Moorpark presented a Civil War reenactment of the following historic battle.
Location: Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
Dates: July 1-3, 1863
Union General: George G. Meade | Confederate General: Robert E. Lee

The Union Army took a primary defensive position on Cemetery Ridge to the north & east around Cemetery Hill. The ridge only 40 feet above the surrounding terrain but two miles long, rising to the north roughly 80 feet above the surroundings to form Cemetery Hill descending on the south end into low, wooded, somewhat marshy ground.

The first day of battle saw considerable fighting. Many Union soldiers used newly issued Spencer repeating carbines causing heavy casualties. Using rifles of the day, the Confederates still caused heavy casualties. Gettysburg became the killing field.

The second day involved many desperate attacks and counterattacks in an attempt to gain control of Cemetery Hill. Again heavy losses on both sides.

General Lee attacked on the third day. Known as “Pickett’s Charge,” some 15,000 Confederate troops, led by Gen. George Edward Pickett, assaulted Cemetery Ridge, held by about 10,000 Federal infantrymen. The Southern spearhead broke through and penetrated the ridge.

Critically weakened by artillery and lacking reinforcement while under savage attack from three sides, the Southerners retreated, leaving hundreds of prisoners. On July 4 Lee waited to meet an attack that never came. That night, taking advantage of heavy rain he retreated toward Virginia. Meade stopped the Confederate invasion and won a critical three-day battle.

At battles end, president Abraham Lincoln gave his infamous Gettysburg Address. He extolled the sacrifices of those who died at Gettysburg – urging resolve "that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."

The exciting event is touted as the largest Civil War battle reenactment west of the Mississippi. Hundreds of reenactors come from all over the country converge on the Hitch Ranch in Moorpark, CA. Advertised as the event that will make history come to life right before your eyes is an understatement.

However, photographing such events is extremely challenging. Naturally, it's important not to miss anything significant but too often too many significant events (action) occurred simultaneously. In a word: Consternation.

A Canon 7D Mark II is my main camera with a Tamron 16-300mm lens mounted. I also had my older Canon 7D onto which I mounted a Tamron 70-300mm lens with a 1.4X teleconverter for extended range. BTW, that's the same combo used for photoing mermaids on Anacapa Island. I should have left the 7D home. By the time I put down one camera and picked up the other I missed a shot. Ugh!

Kudos to the Moorpark Rotary for presenting an outstanding event. Besides the battlefield action, many Civil War era tents were pitched on the grounds. Uniformed Union and Confederate personnel at various camps. Old potbelly stoves heated coffee. Bacon cooked over fire pits. At one tent I stumbled upon a clandestine battle strategy meeting.

A canon firing is the photo of the week. Catching the exact moment of the brief flash was extremely vexing. Not knowing the exact moment the canon fires, I put the camera on burst mode. Even so, it took many attempts to get the ultimate image I wanted. Check fillmoregazette.com for the color version. Next exciting photo op: L. A. Air Show, 3/24, 3/25 at Wm. J. Fox Airfield, 4555 W. Ave G, Lancaster. See you there?

Happy photoing.

Email your suggestions, questions or comments to bob@fillmoregazette.com

 


 
Pictured above are the Lady Flashes posing for a picture with John Holladay (pictured top row center) for his support and contribution to assist the team with their purchase of CIF Championship rings. Fillmore competed in the State Championships on Saturday, March 10th and fell to San Gabriel Mission by the score of 2-1.  The Lady Flashes came out strong and missed on a couple of early opportunities.  San Gabriel Mission was up 1-0 at half time.  Mid way through the second half they got a goal and went up 2-0.  Fillmore battled back, Ana Covarrubias headed in a cross to put the team on the score board.  As Fillmore was gaining momentum the time ran out. Being able to compete in the State Championship was icing on the cake for the Lady Flashes.  I would like to thank the community for all your good thoughts and prayers for the team as they embarked in this amazing & memorable journey.  The Lady Flashes were honored on Tuesday, March 13th at the Board of Supervisors with a Resolution for their CIF Southern Section Division 7 2018 Championship. Submitted by Coach Omero.
Pictured above are the Lady Flashes posing for a picture with John Holladay (pictured top row center) for his support and contribution to assist the team with their purchase of CIF Championship rings. Fillmore competed in the State Championships on Saturday, March 10th and fell to San Gabriel Mission by the score of 2-1. The Lady Flashes came out strong and missed on a couple of early opportunities. San Gabriel Mission was up 1-0 at half time. Mid way through the second half they got a goal and went up 2-0. Fillmore battled back, Ana Covarrubias headed in a cross to put the team on the score board. As Fillmore was gaining momentum the time ran out. Being able to compete in the State Championship was icing on the cake for the Lady Flashes. I would like to thank the community for all your good thoughts and prayers for the team as they embarked in this amazing & memorable journey. The Lady Flashes were honored on Tuesday, March 13th at the Board of Supervisors with a Resolution for their CIF Southern Section Division 7 2018 Championship. Submitted by Coach Omero.
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I don’t remember when I first noticed it, but I have lived on Grand Avenue for thirty years and it seems like it has been there at least that long. I do remember wondering why it had been placed there. And at some point the words to a song I had heard at some time in my life became associated with it each time I looked to the ridge of the mountain peak known as Nellie’s Peak, as I drove up the canyon; “On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross...” is the first line of a song written by George Bennard, 1913, The Old Rugged Cross, and the only words I know.

A few months ago while I was on a walk on Grand Avenue, longtime Grand Avenue resident Regina Stehly stopped to visit. Since we were standing below the location where the cross was stationed high above us, approximately 900’ in elevation west and above 2213 Grand Avenue, I asked Regina if she knew anything about the cross placement. Regina said she did and that her brother Vince Stehly and her father Jim Stehly had placed the cross there many years ago as an expression of their strong Catholic faith. I contacted Vince and he said that in the early 1970’s, when he was about 10 or 12 years old, his family, including cousins, all drove up with their dad to the location where the cross now stands. They placed the approximate eight foot tall white cross made out of wood into the hole they had prepared for it. All the family had carved their names into the cross to memorialize their involvement.

Vince said he replaced the cross about ten years ago because of damage it sustained from another fire that burnt from Piru to Grand Ave. As I recall that fire was named “The Grand Fire” and that fire happened sometime in the late 1990’s. Vince said he will soon replace the cross standing there now because of the damage from the Thomas Fire.

Well there you go. I now knew something about that often viewed cross. But, I believe there is more to wonder about that cross and it has to do with another fire--the Thomas Fire, and the loss of the life of a 32-year old CalFire Firefighter/Engineer from San Diego.

The Thomas Fire began on December 4, 2017 at 6:28 PM, 281,893 acres consumed, 1,063 structures destroyed, 280 structures damaged. It began west of Fillmore and near Santa Paula. The Thomas Fire has been recorded as the largest fire in California History! Not including the 21 lives lost, and the two additional persons that are still missing, from the devastating floods in Santa Barbara after the fire, there were two lives lost as a direct result of the fire. One of those was 32-year-old Cory Iverson, who died in Fillmore in the hills to the west and above Grand Avenue on the morning of Dec. 14, 2017. The other was 70 year old Virginia Pesola a Wheeler Canyon resident who died in a car crash in Wheeler Canyon fleeing the fire on December 6, 2017. The Thomas Fire was officially 100% contained on December 27, 2017 according to CalFire.

Firefighter Iverson was married with a 2-year-old daughter. His wife, Ashley, is pregnant with their second child, due this spring. From the findings of an official CalFire Report, Cory Iverson and four other firefighters were laying hose along a bulldozer-created fire break. All five wore packs, each containing 300 feet of 1.5-inch hose, the report states. Iverson also was carrying a scraping tool. Iverson was attempting to put out a spot fire, which was on the edge of the fire line, with his hand tool. A second fire flared up about 20 feet deep in an unburned area. Iverson, with 200 feet of hose remaining on his back, headed toward it. "As [Iverson] reached the second spot and began to take action, it erupted," the preliminary report states.

At the same time, more spot fires broke out along the fire line west of the original spot fire. Those fires grew quickly and could not be doused by the water one of the firefighters sprayed on them. “Iverson's escape route was cut off,” the report states. He started moving southwest, parallel to the fire break. Faced with the intense fire, he turned and headed south down the slope. He requested air support. It was his last confirmed radio transmission.

Whether you are a person of faith, or not, you do have to consider how that old wooden cross, now scorched and leaning at about a 45 degree angle, could have survived such intense heat and flame of the Thomas Fire? I say this because since the Thomas Fire came over the mountain moving eastward towards Grand Avenue, on the morning December 14, 2017, taking the life of CalFire Engineer Cory Iverson, that old rugged cross now leans a little to the southwest.

I would like to think that the cross survived with now an added duty! Although I don’t know the exact location of where CalFire Firefighter/Engineer Cory Iverson spent his last moments of life fighting the Thomas Fire, I do know where all the after activity and removal of his body occurred. That Old Rugged Cross is now pointing towards the approximate location where Firefighter Iverson lost his life that day, protecting the homes of those of us living on Grand Avenue. I would like to think that the Old Rugged Cross has accepted the duty of forever keeping the sacrifice of his life and his bravery in the consciousness of all that experienced the Thomas Fire by pointing towards the last location Cory walked on this earth doing what he was born to do and loved--being a firefighter!

CalFire Firefighter/Engineer Cory Iverson is truly an American Hero who sacrificed all. Thank you Firefighter/Engineer Cory Iverson for your, and your family’s, sacrifice! “On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross...”

 
(l-r) Sheriff Geoff Dean presenting Fillmore Police Chief Dave Wareham with a retirement badge for his 32 years of service to the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department. A standing room only full house enjoyed the retirement party for Fillmore Police Chief Dave Wareham. The function occurred at the Fillmore Memorial Building Saturday. Dave spoke movingly of his 32 years on the Ventura County Sheriff's Department. Our County Sheriff Geoff Dean attended with a crowd of former and active deputies who worked closely with Wareham over the years. Also attending, special note, was our legendary former Ventura County Sheriff, Larry "Carp" Carpenter. Everyone enjoyed a great steak dinner.
(l-r) Sheriff Geoff Dean presenting Fillmore Police Chief Dave Wareham with a retirement badge for his 32 years of service to the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department. A standing room only full house enjoyed the retirement party for Fillmore Police Chief Dave Wareham. The function occurred at the Fillmore Memorial Building Saturday. Dave spoke movingly of his 32 years on the Ventura County Sheriff's Department. Our County Sheriff Geoff Dean attended with a crowd of former and active deputies who worked closely with Wareham over the years. Also attending, special note, was our legendary former Ventura County Sheriff, Larry "Carp" Carpenter. Everyone enjoyed a great steak dinner.
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Former Fillmore City Manager Roy Payne spoke at last night’s City Council meeting to give information as well as concern for the proposed Business Park Master Plan.
Former Fillmore City Manager Roy Payne spoke at last night’s City Council meeting to give information as well as concern for the proposed Business Park Master Plan.

During Tuesday's regular Fillmore City Council meeting the filling actions were taken:

Ordinance No. 18-888 granting a non-exclusive franchise to Seneca Resources Corporation to maintain, use, and operate pipelines for the transmission of oil or gas was unanimously approved by Council.

Staff reviewed several models of landscape maintenance contracts and prepared a Request for Proposals for Landscape Maintenance Services. Council unanimously approved a contract with Mariposa Landscape Inc. in the amount of $690,785for the Citywide Landscape Maintenance Services.

Council approved Resolution No. 18-3629 increasing potable water rates and sewer rates. See City of Fillmore website for details.

Former Fillmore City Manager Roy Payne provided information concerning a proposed amendment to the Business Park Master Plan, Appendix B, to modify the common area infrastructure fee. No action was taken.

 
Lions Club members Bill Dewey and Brian Wilson with Lions contest winner Alina Herrera.
Lions Club members Bill Dewey and Brian Wilson with Lions contest winner Alina Herrera.
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Lions International Student Speaker Contest is an annual event allowing high school students the opportunity to showcase their public speaking talents and knowledge. This year’s contest topic is “Integrity and Civility in Today’s Society.”

Fillmore Lions Club is proud to announce that Fillmore High School senior Alina Herrera has advanced to the Region Competition after winning both the Club and Zone levels.

The Fillmore Lions Club wants to congratulate Alina as well as send positive thoughts her was as she competes in the Region Competition to be held on March 27th. The public is invited. Contact Lion Scott Lee for details. If Alina advances from Region to the prestigious “District Level” she will compete for a $4,000.00 award.

 
Make way! Here comes the Class of 1963! The FHS Class of 1963 will be celebrating their 55th class reunion on Friday, June 8th at Wm. L. Morris Chevrolet in Fillmore. The reunion starts at 5:00pm and ends at 10:00pm. Please contact Kurt and Sue Adams at 805-524-3511 for details. Special Note: The class of '63 has many good friends in the class of '62 and '64 and want to invite those two classes to join their reunion for some fun, laughter, good food, and friendship. It all happens on June 8th, 2018. Call Sue and Kurt today to confirm this good time. Hip Hip Hooray! for the FHS Class of 1963! And don’t forget, all FHS alumni are invited to this year’s annual Alumni Dinner/Dance on June 9th, 2018. For more information and tickets, visit www.fillmorehighalumni.com and click on the Events link at the top of the website.
Make way! Here comes the Class of 1963! The FHS Class of 1963 will be celebrating their 55th class reunion on Friday, June 8th at Wm. L. Morris Chevrolet in Fillmore. The reunion starts at 5:00pm and ends at 10:00pm. Please contact Kurt and Sue Adams at 805-524-3511 for details. Special Note: The class of '63 has many good friends in the class of '62 and '64 and want to invite those two classes to join their reunion for some fun, laughter, good food, and friendship. It all happens on June 8th, 2018. Call Sue and Kurt today to confirm this good time. Hip Hip Hooray! for the FHS Class of 1963! And don’t forget, all FHS alumni are invited to this year’s annual Alumni Dinner/Dance on June 9th, 2018. For more information and tickets, visit www.fillmorehighalumni.com and click on the Events link at the top of the website.
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Photo of the Week: "Super Mouse of Mugu attacking" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DII, ISO 1000, 1/800 seconds, Tamron 16-300mm lens @300mm.
Photo of the Week: "Super Mouse of Mugu attacking" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DII, ISO 1000, 1/800 seconds, Tamron 16-300mm lens @300mm.
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Harrowing experiences
Bob Crum
Bob Crum

First, portrait photography is not my favorite genre--especially of teenagers. But “no” was not an option. A friend of a friend. You know how that is.

Mother wants a portrait of her son for relatives back east. Must be natural light, I'm not loving flash photography much. To impress the relatives back east, mom selects Mugu rock on the PCH, background the ocean. Works for me.

When they arrived, the afternoon light was delicious. No sooner had John, not his real name, and I met it was obvious he was no more happy sitting for his portrait than I was shooting it.

Let's go over here I suggested. John agreed, mom objected. “I want the rock and the ocean,” she said. Fine, I said, move the rock and it'll work. She didn't appreciate my humor. I wasn't kidding.

I knew the perfect place for John to perch. It meant some rock climbing. Fine with John. Mom stayed up top. With John sitting on a boulder with the ocean background, I urged John to smile. Wasn't happening. Mom noted and yelled: “Smile John!” John remained stone faced.

John, I said, smile and we can both go home. John was obstinate. So was I. OK, John, here's how it is: You either smile or you are going to sit on that rock until you become one with it and seagulls poop all over you. He finally smiled, just long enough for me to capture a couple photos. Not enough. One more time John. Nothing doing. Mom, I yelled, bribe your son! “New cell phone John!” mom yelled. John's smile was ear to ear wide. “Did he smile?” yelled Mom. Yes! a lot, I replied! Mom loved the photos and wrote the check with a smile. I smiled too. Smiling is good! Well folks, that's it, done with portrait work for the rest of the year. Well, maybe. If you want to pay a $50,000 sitting fee then I'm your guy.

Afterward, I had time to stroll around and perhaps come upon a photo op or two. A few pelicans flew by but I forgot to reinstall the telephoto lens. OK, forget the pelicans. After changing lenses, maybe shoot some explosive waves. Nah, wasn't happening. Calm ocean, slack tide. Boring. It's like that sometimes. Worse, no mermaids!

Whoa, out of the corner of my eye, the left one of course, I glimpsed a hairy animal. Then it disappeared. I moved to get a better view of where the animal emerged. I shouldn't have. It suddenly reappeared and began to move towards me. Frightened, I froze. It moved slowly at first oblivious of my presence. As I raised the camera it saw me and instantly began to rapidly charge at me. Escape options were limited with the ocean on one side, a cliff on the other. Difficult as it might be, my only escape was to scramble up a nearby boulder. Mmmm. But even as the shrieking hairy monster with its glaring beady eyes got closer, you know I have to capture at least one photo. Thankfully it finally moved on, disappearing into the rocks. I quickly returned to the safety of my truck. Whew! Of the two: The tortuous portrait shoot or confronting a hairy monster; which would I prefer? HA! That's easy. I'll take my chances photographing ferocious wildlife any day! That said, I'm thrilled to have escaped this harrowing experience to bring you the photo of the week: The menacing Super Mouse of Mugu!

Happy photoing.

Send your suggestions, comments and questions to bob@fillmoregazette.com

 

The Fillmore Flower Show will be here before you know it! This year it will be April 14 and 15 at the Active Adult Center. The theme is “Fillmore Blooms”. We hope to see many of you bring your garden treasures to share with the community.
These are the competitive divisions:
- Single stem cut roses
- Single stem cut iris
- Other single stem cut flowers
- Bouquets
- Arrangements
- Miniature arrangements and bouquets
- Potted plants
- Dish gardens
- Youth arrangements
- Youth composition
- Youth art
Choose your division. Or enter something in each division. Our gardens make Fillmore beautiful. Our people make their gardens and our community beautiful. Fillmore is full of blooms! Plan to enter or visit the flower show this April.
For more information go to fillmoreflowershow.com

 

Ventura County Clerk-Recorder, Registrar of Voters Mark Lunn announced the extension of the nomination period to 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 14, 2018, for two offices that are scheduled to be voted upon at the June 5, 2018 Statewide Direct Primary Election. The extension applies to the offices of Ventura County Supervisor, 4th District, and Ventura County Sheriff.

The extension is only applicable to persons other than the incumbent. Nomination documents for persons interested in the offices may be obtained at the Ventura County Elections Division, Hall of Administration, Lower Plaza, 800 South Victoria Avenue, Ventura.

Additional information regarding candidate qualifications and filing procedures may be obtained from the Ventura County Elections Division by calling (805) 654-2664, or by visiting the Ventura County Elections Division website: www.venturavote.org.