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  • Horace, Augusta and Leverne Parker

    The friendship of Parkie and Aunt Bessie grows

    Rebecca Marshall Farnbach, Special to Village News|Updated Mar 10, 2021

    In April 1879, a weary doctor delivered Ysabel Grace Gonzalez, the first non-Native female born in Temecula. Her new life and the blossoming of spring infused him with much needed hope. He had just passed through a worrisome winter recovering from tuberculosis and had just buried his precious 1-year-old daughter on a hillside overlooking Temecula. Attending the birth of the healthy baby Ysabel encouraged him. He wrote euphorically to relatives in New York State, saying he had...

  • house with landscape

    Successful sustainable landscaping is a click away for Fallbrook, Rainbow customers

    Updated Mar 10, 2021

    SAN DIEGO – No matter whether their landscaping is just a few square feet alongside a front porch or estate acreage, thousands of San Diego County residents have learned to embrace sustainability as a central principle for creating and renovating their landscapes. The San Diego County Water Authority offers financial incentives and educational resources to customers in Fallbrook and Rainbow to improve their landscaping. In fact, since 2010, the Water Authority has secured m...

  • cat

    March is National Pet Poison Prevention Month

    Updated Mar 10, 2021

    LOS ANGELES – Watching your dog or cat get sick from toxic items or poison is a nightmare for any pet owner. Symptoms of poisoning can be especially traumatic, ranging from seizures and vomiting to nosebleeds and diarrhea. "Nobody wants to see their pets suffer in such a painful way or, worst-case scenario, have a fatal incident. That's why it's important to make sure your home environment keeps dogs and cats as safe as possible," Dr. Erin Katribe, veterinarian and medical d...

  • bird houses

    Managing a backyard bird habitat

    Updated Mar 10, 2021

    FALLBROOK – For many nature enthusiasts, there's nothing more rewarding than seeing wildlife right in their own backyard. Providing several different types of foods can be the first step to welcoming a variety of birds to one's yard. Bill Askenburg, a backyard birding enthusiast and maker of custom birdhouses, says he offers thistle seed to attract finches and chickadees. A nut and berry mix is set out for woodpeckers and a sunflower/safflower mix attracts cardinals, wrens, d...

  • Top at home-repair blunders to avoid

    Updated Mar 3, 2021

    FALLBROOK – Home improvement projects should be exciting as they progress, with a positive outcome upon completion. However, some home repairs end up turning into an unorganized mess or a homeowner being taken advantage of by an unscrupulous worker. By avoiding some common mistakes and taking common-sense precautions, you can end up with renovations that ‘wow.’ Do not accept the lowest bid just because it is the cheapest on paper Smart homeowners shop around for everything – including work done on their home. But accepti...

  • rose

    Food and water produce the best rose blooms

    Frank Brines, Master Consulting Rosarian|Updated Mar 3, 2021

    Location, location, location! Depending on your location – or more specifically, that of your garden – you may have experienced frost damage to your roses and tender young plants recently. Even gardens in the same general vicinity may have different effects due to their prevailing micro-climates. Lately the temperatures have risen in the Temecula Valley which encourages roses to jump into life. They enjoy this weather. A regular schedule for irrigating should already have beg...

  • sprinkler

    Innovations in irrigation help homeowners to reduce water usage

    Debbie Ramsey, Special to Village News|Updated Mar 3, 2021

    Under a past 'Drought Alert,' San Diego County residents had to adhere to usage restrictions associated with that status by irrigating their landscape before 10 a.m. and after 6 p.m., eliminating water waste from inefficient irrigation from runoff or overspray, not washing down paved surfaces and more. Those regulations had most home and business owners taking a hard look at their watering habits. Kyle Hawkins, commercial/wholesale sales manager for Grangetto's Farm & Garden...

  • 3 pandemic travel trends may stick around for 2021

    Family Features, Special to Village News|Updated Feb 24, 2021

    COVID-19 has challenged families in different ways, and many had to cancel or reschedule trips during the pandemic due to travel restrictions, which meant missing out on quality time with loved ones and the mental health and self-care benefits of going on vacation. Although 61% of families had a trip canceled due to the pandemic in 2020, travel is still top of mind as 82% of families already have travel plans in mind for 2021, according to the 2021 VRBO Trend Report. The...

  • Planning group supports additional Campus Park homes

    Joe Naiman, Village News Reporter|Updated Feb 24, 2021

    Passerelle LLC, which owns the land where the Campus Park development is planned, will be undergoing the process to convert some land designated as office professional into residential lots. The Fallbrook Community Planning Group provided guidance to Chris Brown, representative of Passerelle, during the Feb. 15 planning group meeting. Because Brown sought guidance and the final project is still to be developed, the planning group did not take a vote on the Passerelle plans but rather provided the individual members’ d...

  • Get rid of pests in the garden

    Andrea Verdin, Special to Village News|Updated Feb 24, 2021

    Spring is just around the corner. Plants and flowers are budding, and gardens will begin to bear fruits and vegetables for the family to enjoy. Gardeners aren't alone in their plans to feast on the outcome of their hard work, however. Pests, such as aphids, ants, squirrels and snails are as commonplace as weeds in a garden and can destroy the plans a gardener may have to enjoy the fruits of their hard labor. For agriculturists who want to fight their gardens' saboteurs, it is...

  • cattle

    Bees and beasts in Temecula Valley, circa 1910-1945

    Rebecca Marshall Farnbach, Special to Village News|Updated Feb 17, 2021

    Ranches dominated almost all of the Temecula Valley in 1910. The Vail Ranch owned 87,500-acres spreading from south of today's Temecula Parkway to Clinton Keith Road, west to U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton and east to past Vail Lake. The two small villages of Temecula and Murrieta were sandwiched between ranch lands of the Vails and other ranchers, including the Roripaughs and Barnetts. The entire area was known as a cattle-grazing empire. The Vail Company purchased...

  • RWQCB amends Las Pulgas Landfill waste discharge requirements

    Joe Naiman, Village News Reporter|Updated Feb 17, 2021

    The Regional Water Quality Control Board amended U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton’s waste discharge requirements for the Las Pulgas Landfill. The 7-0 RWQCB vote Wednesday, Feb. 10, established procedures and technical specifications to remove the existing Phase I unit side slope liner system and to construct the engineered alternative Phase I unit side slope liner system. The revised waste discharge order recognized Marine Corps efforts to implement corrective actions at the landfill and resume waste disposal operations...

  • Palomar College

    Palomar earns SDG&E energy award for net-zero M&O Building

    Updated Feb 17, 2021

    SAN MARCOS – Palomar College has won an Excellence in Energy Leadership Award from San Diego Gas & Electric for its maintenance and operations building, a "net-zero" project that opened in April 2019. Maintenance and operations has received national recognition since its grand opening for a variety of "passive" design features that reduce the need for heating and cooling, while utilizing daylight throughout to reduce artificial lighting. Combined with a 180-kilowatt solar a...

  • Jennifer Ibaven, Roger Boddaert, Darcy Cook and Stephanie Ortiz

    Fallbrook Community Garden sees improvements

    Christal Gaines-Emory, Intern|Updated Feb 17, 2021

    The Fallbrook Community Garden, located at 1717 Alturas Road, has been providing residents of Fallbrook, Bonsall, and Rainbow an area to grow various crops and meet with other gardening lovers since 2007. The Fallbrook Community Garden was initiated in 2007 by Mission Resource Conservation District District Manager Judy Mitchell and Roger Boddaert, a local award-winning arborist and landscape designer. This property was donated by the Fallbrook Public Utility District, and...

  • Lance Andersen

    Water Authority helps farmers boost water efficiency

    Updated Feb 10, 2021

    San Diego – Agriculture is a rich part of San Diego County's heritage and a foundational piece of the region's economy, but it's not easy to make a go of farming here given the hilly terrain, uneven soils and limited natural water supplies. That's where the San Diego County Water Authority comes in. The region's wholesale water agency has funded more than 2,300 free irrigation system evaluations for farmers on more than 35,000 acres of avocados, citrus, field flowers, and othe...

  • Rainbow MWD approves lift station replacement MND

    Joe Naiman, Village News Reporter|Updated Feb 10, 2021

    The work which includes the replacement of the Rainbow Municipal Water District’s Lift Station No. 1 will have an environmental Mitigated Negative Declaration along with a Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Program. Rainbow’s board voted 5-0, Tuesday, Jan. 26, to approve the environmental analysis prepared by Kennedy/Jenks. The motion also formally approved the project, which is already in the district’s five-year capital plan, although the approval of the project does not include the approval of any designs or other plans...

  • examples of pruning styles

    February is time to prune rose bushes

    Frank Brines, Master Consulting Rosarian|Updated Feb 10, 2021

    In Southern California, winter is usually short and sometimes confusing. Winter for some plant life is a time of withdrawal that precedes renewal. For roses, it is necessary to help them in that process. Now is the time to perform a few procedures to help reset the hormonal clock and get them ready for a great year of rose blooms. That's the main purpose for pruning. According to all accounts and experienced rosarians, the proper time is "late winter." This designation has...

  • butterfly

    Attract Painted Lady butterflies with lupine

    Updated Feb 3, 2021

    FALLBROOK – The Painted Lady, Vanessa cardui, is the most widespread butterfly on the planet, occupying all continents except Australia and Antarctica. Its name means "Butterfly of Thistle" and its global abundance is most likely due to its larvae feeding on such a wide variety of plants. The Painted Lady feeds on over three hundred different host plants. The Painted Lady is one of the types of butterflies that does not follow a seasonal migration pattern; some scientific evid...

  • Lantana

    Grow these 5 easy-to-grow plants in Fallbrook area

    Debbie Ramsey, Special to the Village News|Updated Feb 3, 2021

    With its mild Mediterranean climate, Fallbrook provides favorable weather conditions for growing a wide host of trees, plants, fruits, vegetables and ornamentals. For those that may not possess the world's greenest thumb, the following five selections might be worth considering, as many residents have experienced success with them. Lantana, (Lantana camara) Lantana is a hardy, colorful, drought-tolerant plant that trails attractively and can be used in myriad locations within...

  • COVID-19 hospitalizations still at very high levels

    Will Fritz, Associate Editor|Updated Jan 27, 2021

    As the current wave of the coronavirus pandemic drags on, hospitals are still seeing markedly high levels of COVID-19-infected patients. At all southwest Riverside County hospitals and Fallbrook’s nearest San Diego County hospital, a majority of hospitalized patients were coronavirus-positive, according to data released by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Sunday, Jan. 17; per that data, 55% of patients at Temecula Valley Hospital; 59% of patients at Southwest Healthcare System, which includes Inland Valley a...

  • woman at computer

    Improve Wi-Fi signals around the house

    Updated Jan 27, 2021

    FALLBROOK – Speedy, reliable internet is something people have quickly grown accustomed to. That's no doubt why dropped Wi-Fi signals can be so frustrating. Various things can contribute to slow or interrupted Wi-Fi. As a result, there's no one-size-fits-all solution to address underperforming Wi-Fi. But that's good news, as it means there's an assortment of strategies that consumers can try to improve the Wi-Fi in their homes. Upgrade your router. Many people rent their r...

  • NFPA urges added caution when using home heating equipment

    Updated Jan 27, 2021

    QUINCY, Mass. – The National Fire Protection Association is urging the public to use added caution when heating their homes this winter. Home heating equipment is the leading cause of U.S. home fires during the months of December, January and February, when nearly half (48%) of all U.S. home heating equipment fires occur. January is the leading month for home heating fires. “Clearly, the coldest months of the year is when we see the largest share of home heating fires,” Lorraine Carli, vice president of outreach and advoc...

  • walking bridge

    Art bench installed at Live Oak Park

    Nancy Heins-Glaser, Special to Village News|Updated Jan 27, 2021

    When Jim Lyle purchased one of the art benches at the Save Our Forest auction November 2020, he had Live Oak Park in his mind. Lyle has dedicated several volunteer years to clearing poison plant species, cleaning out weed overgrowth and repairing the footbridge to welcome visitors to the cool and natural spot. Because the bench he bought was painted by recognized natural world artist Neill Ketchum – replete with flora and fauna – the park was a perfect spot for it. The Fal...

  • caterpillar

    Mourning Cloaks can be found in Fallbrook

    Updated Jan 20, 2021

    FALLBROOK – The Mourning Cloak, Nymphalis antiopa, is one of the most widespread butterflies in the world, found from Alaska to Venezuela, and all throughout Europe and Asia. It also lives in Southern California. The adult butterfly's wingspan reaches about 3 inches with a unique color scheme on the wings. The outside of the butterfly's wings are black, resembling charred wood, with a white marginal band. The inside of the wings are mainly a deep maroon-brown color, with a b...

  • Jackie Heyneman and Tim O’Leary

    Individuals can help cut carbon by planting a tree

    Updated Jan 20, 2021

    FALLBROOK – Climate change, a worldwide problem, is such a big, complex problem that an individual may wonder, "Is there anything I can do to make a difference?" A resounding "Yes!" is the answer. If every property owner could find a place to add even one tree to offset pollution through the miraculous process of photosynthesis, which gobbles up pollution every day, it would make a difference. Trees hugely provide shade that can break up a "heat island" created by the vast a...

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