By Anonymous — Wednesday, September 18th, 2019
Saturday, September 28th, 2019
To encourage an increase in bicycle safety in our communities, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office and the Fillmore Police Department’s Citizen Patrol will be holding a bicycle safety rodeo from 8:30 AM to 11:30 AM on Saturday, September 28th. The event will be held in the parking lot of the San Salvador Mission in Piru and will feature a safety course, bike tune-ups, free helmets and fitting assistance, bicycle registration and raffle prizes. The event will also feature displays from the Sheriff’s Bomb Squad, Sheriff’s Mounted Patrol, SWAT team, K9 Unit, Sheriff’s Search and Rescue, and Ventura County Fire Department. The event is sponsored by Piru Pizza, California Resources Corporation, the Sheriff’s Foundation and the Ventura County Deputy Sheriffs Association. According to the Centers for Disease Control, each year, nearly 1,000 persons die from injuries caused by bicycle crashes, and 550,000 persons are treated in emergency rooms for injuries related to bicycle riding. Head injuries account for 62% of bicycle-related deaths and for 33% of bicycle-related emergency room visits. A helmet is the single most effective way to prevent head injury resulting from a bicycle crash, however, only about 15% of riders under the age of 15 wear helmets. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00036941.htm The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office and the Fillmore Police Department’s Citizen Patrol encourages all riders, regardless of age, to take advantage of modern safety equipment, and for parents to ensure their children are wearing helmets while riding bicycles and skateboards. The safety of our children is a top priority, and we encourage parents to attend this event with their children. |
By Mark Ortega — Wednesday, September 18th, 2019
The Fillmore High Alumni Association will be hosting their annual Blue & White night on Thursday, September 26th. There will be food vendors from southern BBQ to street hot dogs! Plenty of tables and chairs for you to take in the 2019 Fillmore High Homecoming Parade. Food vendors start selling their delicious meals at 5:30 p.m. Parade starts at 6:30 p.m. from the corner of 2nd Street and Central Avenue to the end of Main Street. This has been a tradition in Fillmore dating back to the 1940’s. Make your plans now to not cook on the 26th and come on down to our beautiful downtown and eat something good from the many food vendors who will be in town for this special event. It’s Blue & White Night 2019! Courtesy Mark Ortega, FHS Alumni President Enlarge Photo |
By Nick Johnson — Wednesday, September 18th, 2019
The Fillmore Gazette’s staff was pleasantly surprised by a visit from Nick Johnson last week. Nick’s cartoon “Life of Lulu” ran with the paper for several years, all through Nick’s high school years. Now graduated from college, it’s been a long time since his mischievous little friend amused us. Thanks for bringing Lulu by, Nick. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, September 18th, 2019
Over the past few years we (Fillmore Historical Museum) have documented the Fillmore men and women who served in World War II including photographs and stories. Now we would like to do the same thing for Fillmore residents (past and present) who served in Korea and Vietnam. If you or your family members have pictures (we will scan them and return them) or stories to tell, please contact us. To start with, can anyone help us identify this person? On the back of the photo is written: “Taken in Korea, 1951. My Herbie”. Courtesy Fillmore Historical Museum. Enlarge Photo |
Photo of the Week: "Brush Creek lower falls, north of Kernville, CA" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMKII camera, manual mode. Tamron 16-300mm lens with polarizing filter @77mm. Exposure: ISO 125, aperture f/10, 1/200 second shutter speed. Enlarge Photo By Bob Crum — Wednesday, September 18th, 2019
Avoidance is futile
Photo editing? Ugh! Forget it! I'd rather be fishing, or playing Bunco, is a refrain I often hear. Besides, some say, I get it right in the camera. HA! Photos don't go straight through the lens directly to the memory card. A camera is a computer upon which you mount a lens. From the solid-state sensor, pixels are processed by the camera's computer run by program algorithms installed by the camera's engineers. Hence, no image straight out of the camera (SOOC) is as good as it can be. Photographer Rick Berk wrote: "Post-processing is not a crutch. If I look at an image on the back of my camera and say "I'll fix it later," then it's already a bad image, and no amount of processing is going to correct it. I am a staunch proponent of shooting RAW, for many reasons. I know full well that the camera can have problems handling a scene with a lot of dynamic range, such as a sunset. I use optical filters on my lens to help with that, but there are still times when the image out of the camera fails to capture the image I saw with my eyes." Amen! Post-Processing is an essential part of digital photography. Avoidance is futile! Internet search engines will present several 'free' photo editors. GIMP leads the pack. Though free often means editing limitations and skimpy options, most may be sufficient for "basic" photo editing. Compare features and check reviews! Depending on your budget, several robust photo editing programs are available. Adobe Lightroom (LR) and Photoshop (PS) are the predominate photo editors but available only by a $9.99 a month subscription. Other editors include DxO Optics Pro 10, On1 Photo RAW, Capture One, Corel PaintShop Pro, Topaz Studio 2, Skylum Luminar and ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate to mention a few. Best one? Up to you. Select a program with preferred features and tickles your toes. I subscribe to Adobe's Lightroom Classic and Photoshop, also have Photoshop Elements 14 (PSE), DxO Optics Pro 10, Topaz Studio 2 and On1 Photo RAW installed on my photo editing computer. I also have DxO NIK plugins installed in LR, PSE 14, and PS. Each program has distinctive attributes & benefits. After a shoot, photos are uploaded on the computer. I then import to LR to begin post-processing. Remember, RAW editing is non-destructive-doesn't harm the original. Don't like how it's going, click reset and restart. From LR, I transfer the photos as a tiff image to PSE14 where Imagenomic Noiseware and NIK plugins reside. The first step, if necessary, is reduce image noise. Then I initiate the NIK magic sauce. Wonderful for my specialty: Mermaid boudoir photography. Color Efex Pro 4 (with custom recipes) and Viveza 2 are two plugins used extensively. NIK's UK-Lead technology rocks! Note, unless images are imported in PSE14 as a "smart object," editing alters pixels. Can't reset and begin anew. Resizing the photo according to the client's requirements is the last step. Remember, RAW files are large. At a recent private event, I shot 576 RAW images which equals 13.9 gigabytes of data. Hence, a capable computer is essential. My custom-built dedicated editing computer has a 1TB SSD "C" drive, 32GBs of RAM and a 500MB SSD scratch drive. Less RAM and smaller "C" drive will suffice, it'll just make photo editing somewhat slower. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the dreaded learning curve that accompanies any new computer program. Did I hear a groan? Persevere! You'll relish the glorious rewards. Photo of the week is Brush Creek's lower falls, north of Kernville. Send comments, suggestions or questions to: focusonphotography@earthlink.net |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, September 11th, 2019
On Wednesday, September 11th at 6:45 a.m., The City of Fillmore Fire Department held a 9/11 Memorial ceremony at Fillmore Fire Station located at 711 Landeros Lane (Sespe Ave.) to remember those whose lives were lost in the 9/11 attack 18 years ago. First responders line up along engine 91 as Fire Chief Keith Gurrola addresses the crowd in honor of our fallen heroes. After the ceremony refreshments were served. Photos courtesy of Fillmore FD and Manuel Minjares. Enlarge Photo |
By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Wednesday, September 11th, 2019
A Fillmore man was arrested after threatening his girlfriend with a firearm. The investigation led to the recovery a loaded handgun and narcotics. On 08/30/19, the victim reported she was being threatened by her ex-boyfriend via text messages and through phone calls. The suspect, Eduardo Morales, harassed her by showing her images of a handgun and ammunition. He also stated that he would go to her place of employment, located in Fillmore, and do harm. The dispute was over alleged money the victim paid to Morales. Once the threats were reported to Fillmore patrol deputies, station detectives immediately conducted follow up investigation and contacted Morales at the Fillmore Police Station. Investigators also conducted a search of his residence and located suspected cocaine, Xanax and a loaded 9mm semi-automatic firearm. The serial number on the handgun was illegally altered. Morales was arrested and booked at the Pre-Trail Detention Facility for the following charges: Nature of Incident:Threats and Firearm Arrest |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, September 11th, 2019
On Saturday, September 7th, the City of Fillmore hosted an Emergency Preparedness Day in Central Park from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. They had emergency personnel and their vehicles on hand, and visitors could talk to real life heroes who respond to emergencies throughout Ventura County. In attendance were the US National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard, United Water Conservation District, Fillmore City Fire Department, Tupperware, Pampered Chef, Damsel in Defense, Fillmore Volunteer Fire Departments Kids Safehouse, U.S. Forest Service, VC Fire Department, Pierce Brothers Santa Paula Cemetery, Anthem Blue Cross, SWAT, VC Sheriffs office , Bomb Squad, Lake Piru Rangers, VC OES, CA Department of Fish & Wildlife, Fillmore Citizens Patrol, Perez Family Funeral Home, AT&T, and more. Pictured above are some kids having fun sitting in an armored police vehicle at the Emergency Preparedness event this past Saturday, held in Central Park. Enlarge Photo |
At last Tuesday’s school board meeting the room was filled with a sea of red shirts in support of Fillmore Unified teachers and their fight for fair wages. Pictured is retired FUSD teacher Mary Ford voicing the FUTA’s concerns. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, September 11th, 2019
Board meeting highlights for the Fillmore Unified School District 2018-2019 Unaudited Actuals Approve Change Order #I for Fillmore High School Electrical Yard Upgrade at Fillmore High School. 555 Central Avenue. Fillmore. CA 93015. Project 2019-035 Approve Change Order #3 for Gymnasium Roof Restoration Project at Fillmore High School, 555 Central Avenue, Fillmore, CA 93015, Project 2019-025 Personnel Recommendations |