Archive for » December, 2010 «

Big Bear CA Road and Weather Conditions

State Highway 330 is completely CLOSED due to storm damage.

State Highway 18: IS CLOSED TO TRACTOR-TRAILER SEMIS & BUSES ONLY FROM 2.2 MI NORTH OF THE JCT OF SR 330 TO BIG BEAR DAM (SAN BERNARDINO CO) – DUE TO A ROCK SLIDE -MOTORISTS ARE ADVISED TO USE AN ALTERNATE ROUTE – PASSENGER VEHICLES ARE ALLOWED THROUGH.

State Highway 38: Is open without restrictions. Watch for chain controls during the storm on Wednesday.

It look like a half a foot of snow will add to the fun at the Resort Level. This is the forecast for the San Bernardino Mountains from the National Weather Service:

…WINTER STORM TO AFFECT SOUTHWEST CALIFORNIA LATE TUESDAY NIGHT AND WEDNESDAY FOLLOWED BY VERY COLD WEATHER…

A STRONG STORM APPROACHING FROM THE NORTHWEST WILL MOVE THROUGH LATE TUESDAY NIGHT AND WEDNESDAY MORNING.

THE SNOW LEVEL WILL BE NEAR 6000 FEET IN THE NORTHERN AREAS TO 6500 FEET FARTHER SOUTH…THEN LOWER RAPIDLY BEHIND THE COLD FRONT TO ABOUT 4000 FEET. HOWEVER…MOST OF THE WIDESPREAD SIGNIFICANT PRECIPITATION WILL BE OVER BY THE TIME THE SNOW LEVEL LOWERS.

SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY MOUNTAIN RESORT LEVELS AND THE HIGHER RIVERSIDE COUNTY MOUNTAINS SHOULD RECEIVE ABOUT 3 TO 8 INCHES OF SNOW. HOWEVER…THERE COULD BE LOCALLY NEAR A FOOT OF SNOW ON THE HIGHEST PEAKS. THE HIGHER SAN DIEGO COUNTY MOUNTAINS COULD GET AN INCH OR TWO OF SNOW. COLD AIR DAMMING ON THE NORTH SIDE OF THE SAN BERNARDINO MOUNTAINS COULD RESULT IN SNOW FLURRIES IN THE HIGH DESERTS AS WELL.

STRONG GUSTY WEST TO NORTHWEST WINDS WILL ACCOMPANY THIS SYSTEM…BECOMING EVEN STRONGER BEHIND THE FRONT WEDNESDAY NIGHT. THE STRONGEST WINDS WILL BE IN THE MOUNTAINS AND HIGH DESERTS WHERE THERE COULD BE WIND GUSTS OVER 60 MPH. THESE WINDS COULD CAUSE BROKEN TREE LIMBS…DOWNED TREES AND DOWNED POWER LINES. NEAR ZERO VISIBILITY WILL BE POSSIBLE AT TIMES DUE TO SNOW AND BLOWING SNOW.

DRY COLD NORTHWEST FLOW ALOFT WILL BRING TEMPERATURES ABOUT 10 TO 20 DEGREES BELOW SEASONAL AVERAGES THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. THERE WILL LIKELY BE WIDESPREAD FROST IN THE INLAND VALLEYS THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
NIGHTS.

PEOPLE TRAVELING LATE TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SHOULD CLOSELY MONITOR THE LATEST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS AND STATEMENTS AND PLAN ACCORDINGLY. THE RAIN WILL CAUSE SLICK ROADS AND MOTORISTS SHOULD USE EXTRA CAUTION. DO NOT DRIVE THROUGH FLOODED AREAS OR
AROUND BARRICADES. IF TRAVELING INTO THE MOUNTAINS…BE PREPARED FOR THE POSSIBILITY OF WINTER STORM CONDITIONS WITH VERY LOW WIND CHILL TEMPERATURES.

View

Big Bear CA Restaurants  map
More Big Bear CA Restaurants


Related Blogs

East Big Bear CA Pinon Nuts


We gathered these nuts in the Baldwin Lake Area -East of Big Bear Lake

We live in Baldwin Lake, east of Big Bear Lake. The area is surrounded with beautiful Pinon Trees. The pinon tree is known for it’s pine nuts, a key ingredient in Pesto. We went out and were pleasantly surprised by just how easy it is to collect pine nuts.

According to Wikipedia “The pinyon (or piñon) pine group grows in the southwestern United States and in Mexico. The trees yield edible pinyon nuts, which were a staple of the Native Americans, and are still widely eaten. The fragrance of the wood, especially when burned, is unmistakable.

Here is an article about pine nut collecting from 1960.

The little white pinon nut runs the culinary gamut from being a food staple of the Native Americans, to a delicacy for the gourmet. It is cooperative in its profusion as the pinon trees range through parts of all the western states and are usually masses of little green cones in the fall.

It is only when you go pine nutting yourself and follow the entire process from cone to nut that you really appreciate the little white pine nuts and condone a gourmet store’s high price for the finished product.

About ten miles north of Bishop California and up to 6000 feet in altitude we discovered a veritable forest of the scrubby looking little trees. Spreading tarps beneath them, the men whacked at the branches with long poles having hooks at the ends. Soon there were more little green cones falling down than we could ever use. We packed several burlap bags full, getting ourselves well covered with pitch. Even The Native Americans couldn’t escape. They use grease to get it off. Once home we resorted to dry cleaner.

The cones we collected on that particular day had not been ready to drop so consequently it took more than a week in the sun for them to open up. Once green, fat and sticky, they were now brown with open petals. At the base of each wing of the flat rosettes, there were two brown pine nuts that fell out easily. These were now ready for roasting which we did in a shallow pan in a slow oven. Roasting turns the shell a bit softer so you can crack it in your teeth.

If you really want to be fancy, lay some of the nuts on a soft cloth, cover with another and then The little white pinon nut runs the culinary gamut from being a food staple of the Native Americans, to a delicacy for the gourmet. It is cooperative in its profusion as the pinon trees range through parts of all the western states and are usually masses of little green cones in the fall.

The Paiute Indians follow the procedure with more finesse. They wait until the cones are dropping before they harvest them from the trees. Filling burlap bags, they beat the bags with stout sticks so, when shaken, nuts fall out with opened rosettes. The Indians then roast the entire mass in a charcoal pit with a charcoal fire on top and allow the nuts to roast slowly. When removed and cooled, the mass is put into a winnowing basket, where it is stirred and windblown until nothing is left but the clean brown nuts.

Depending on the pine nuts as a staple food, the Native Americans use them in many ways. Easiest is the soup they make by simply boiling the nuts in water. A popular dish is the pine nut mush made from ground nut meats. The Paiutes have two methods of making this. One is to take a large flat rock and cover it with nuts. Then they grind over them with a smaller flat rock till the nuts are quite fine. The other method was to take a round stone bowl with a very small hole in the bottom. Then with a small pointed rock called “tusu” work the latter around and around through the small bottom hole. In either case before starting the procedure, the tip of each nut has to be broken off because, being of a brownish tinge it colors the resulting mush.


Look for Pinon Trees with pine cones at the top.

After grinding the nut particles are put through a very finely meshed winnowing basket so the final result is like fine flour. This is now mixed with water, the amount used conforming to the consistency desired and the whole kneaded, much like bread dough. The mixture is now ready for consumption. It is often eaten as is. Some however, put it in a bowl, sprinkle with sugar and eat with a spoon.

Other Tribes than the Paiutes probably have their own ways of treating the pine nuts. There is plenty of chance for diversification as the pinon tree is in no danger of dying out. It is the only single leaf pine known and is never knowingly planted. It is too slow a grower to attract gardeners and is not even a very handsome tree. Hardy to many altitudes and types of soil, some trees have been known to live 300 years.

To treat yourself to a delicacy follow in the footsteps of the Native Americans and go on a nutting expedition. It’s fun, good exercise- and cheaper than buying pinon nuts in a gourmet store.

The military inserts a quick commerical and then gives us an amazing video about traditional pine nut gathering.


Related Blogs

Legend of the Arrowhead

Residents of both the San Bernardino Mountains and the city of San Bernardino California are familar with the Arrowhead on the south facing side of the mountains. Lake Arrowhead CA, formerly Little Bear Lake, took their name from the legendary icon.  Most of us are familar with the Mormon stories surrounding the Arrowhead, but I found this Cahuilla Indian legend printed on a 1908 postcard for the San Bernardino Festival of the Arrowhead. Below is a reprint of what the card said.

A Legend of the Arrowhead

In the days of long ago, the Cohuillas dwelt across the mountains to the southward near the San Luis Rey Misson. They were continually harassed by their warlike neighbors, who stole their ponies, devastated their fields and burned their jacales. For many years they lived unhappy and in constant fear, until at last the persecutions could no longer be endured, and at the command of their chief, the tribesman gathered in council for the purpose of calling upon the God of Peace to assist and direct them to another country, where they might acquire a quiet home land. Now being a gentle people, so the tale runs, they found special favor with the Great Spirit by whom they were directed to travel northward, and instructed that they would be guided to their new home by a fiery arrow, for which they must be constantly watching. Accordingly the tribe started upon the journey, and one moonless night when the camp sentries had be posted with usual injunctions to be watchful, there appeared across the vault of heaven, a blazing arrow, which took a course northward, settling upon the mountain side where the shaft was consumed in flame, but the head embedded itself, clear cut, into the mountain side. The camp was aroused, and while yet the morning star (Venus) hung jewel-like in the sky, and a faint gleam of light in the east heralded the approach of day, they resumed their journey to the promised land, under the shadow of the mountain, where they located and lived in peaceful contentment until the coming of the white settler.

The Arrowhead

By actual measurement, the Arrowhead is 1375 feet long, and 449 feet wide, comprising an area of 7 ½ acres, and the material of which it is composed is different in formation from adjacent parts of the mountain, consisting chiefly of disintegrated white quartz, and light gray granite, and supporting a growth of short white sage and weeds. The lighter vegetation shows in sharp contrast to the dark green growth of surrounding chaparral, and greasewood. The wonderfully formed symbol, so distinctive a feature of our city (San Bernardino), is plainly visible for many miles.

Big Bear Lake CA White Christmas

Stormy Weather Expected to Bring Snow for the Holidays

Big Bear Lake CA -Rain storms have pelted Southern California for the last four days. A Pacific low pressure system, fed by tropical moisture, will continue to effect us until Christmas Eve.

Tuesday night into Wednesday will see colder temperatures. Significant accumulations are expected. Holiday travelers may be greeted with two to three feet of fresh snow!

Here is a special weather statement issues through the National Weather Service:

THE MOUNTAINS…PARTICULARLY THE SAN BERNARDINO MOUNTAINS…COULD SEE HUGE RAINFALL TOTALS AND AREAS OF FLASH FLOODING AND DEBRIS FLOWS. RUNOFF COMING OUT OF THE MOUNTAINS WILL FILL AND COULD OVERFLOW STREAMS ON BOTH THE WEST FACING AND DESERT SLOPES OF THE MOUNTAINS. MOUNTAIN CREEKS LIKE LYTLE…MILL AND WATERMAN CANYON WILL BE SUBJECT TO FLASH FLOODING AND MUDSLIDES. OUR USUALLY LOW VOLUME RIVERS LIKE MOJAVE…WHITEWATER…SAN DIEGO…SANTA MARGARITA AND THE SAN LUIS REY COULD BE FLOWING UNUSUALLY HIGH BY TUESDAY OR WEDNESDAY. URBAN AREAS WILL SEE AREAS OF PONDING WHICH WILL CAUSE LOTS OF TRAFFIC PROBLEMS.

THE SAN BERNARDINO AND RIVERSIDE COUNTY MOUNTAINS COULD GET HEAVY SNOW DOWN TO 6000 FEET TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY AS THE COLD FRONT COMES IN…AND A WINTER STORM WARNING MAY BE NEEDED THEN.

MODELS ALSO INDICATE THAT STRONG THUNDERSTORMS AND WATERSPOUTS COULD ACCOMPANY THE COLD FRONT ON WEDNESDAY. STRONG SOUTH WINDS ARE EXPECTED IN ADVANCE OF THE FRONT SO WIND ADVISORIES IN THE COASTS AND VALLEYS MAY BE REQUIRED ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY.

FLASH FLOOD WATCH FOR APPLE AND LUCERNE VALLEYS, THE SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY MOUNTAINS, AND ALL OF THE INLAND EMPIRE.


Related Blogs

Big Bear Lake Christmas

We decided to walk around the Village on Monday. The skies were blue and the temperatures were wonderful. We stopped in to Himalayan Restaurant and enjoyed three different entrees. Their prices are reasonable.

After lunch we stolled around looking for chocolate. Instead, we discovered Der Weihnacht’s Markt. They are located on Pine Knot, in the heart of Big Bear Lake Village. Here is the video we shot of their fabulous Christmas displays.


Related Blogs