Here is a group based around Redding for kayaking and “the paddling lifestyle,” Shasta Paddlers.
I see here they have a paddling meet-up posted for February 6 in Redding. They’ll be practicing in heated pool, so that sounds pretty good.There’s no shortage of places to paddle in the northstate. It’s Really Redding.
I was one of about 120 people who volunteered for the once-a-year homeless count and survey in Redding this year. Hopefully an accurate count will bring more resources to our community. Some volunteered at specific locations like the Mission. I volunteered to search for people in camps and on the streets. I wanted to help, and figured I’d learn a few things. Indeed so.
Looking for camps with Ed Brewer, Peggy Filaski, and Team leader Jamie Butcher.
My line of work is all about homes, so those without homes seemed alien to me. We humans are tribal beings, and I notice a tendency to lump together “the homeless” like they were some homogenous tribe of humans. That is far from true. I saw old people and kids, drugged and sober, men and women, sane and certifiable. No rhyme or reason, or pattern. Just unsheltered humans trying to make their way through life.
“Anyone home?” You realize this is home for somebody.
A few observations:
Some scary looking people are themselves very scared.
Recent heavy rains made outdoor camping impossible. Many obvious camps were empty.
Air dusting cans. Presumably it’s dusty out here.
Most people I met were more than happy to talk about themselves. But not all.
Ed Brewer interviews behind a big box store in Redding.
Most of the people I interviewed had solid connection to Redding and Shasta County. They weren’t transient. Several had lived here all their lives. If you put them on a bus out of town, they’d come back.
You can’t tell who is homeless just by looking at how they are dressed.
Jamie and Peggy interview a fairly well dressed homeless man.
I now realize I have underestimated how many homeless live in cars in Redding. A vehicle is a better option for the unsheltered than a campsite in winter. They are sprinkled in parking lots and less-traveled locations.
That realization led to another conclusion. I understand the idea of a homeless day center is controversial. I myself have always favored the “housing first” approach. But a day center would serve the homeless in cars and others in an immediately useful way.
Consider this: If you don’t actually have a homeless day center, then your whole fucking city is a shitty version of a homeless day center. And we all live with the consequences.
They are rousted out of the canyons and riverbanks. So how can we be surprised to find them on our streets and entryways. It’s illogical at best.
A couple of poignant moments:
A reticent young man in Caldwell Park looked me clearly in the eyes and told me he’d been clean and sober from meth for 33 days. I don’t exactly know why that choked me up, but it did. Still does. Whilst this man was homeless, a lot of other people use meth too. So many people in America use meth and other drugs to help themselves cope, however, these people don’t realize the long-term consequences of using meth. These drugs are known to become addictive, so it’s important that family members or healthcare workers are keeping an eye out for these people who may be using meth. To check whether someone has been using that drug, tests from Countrywide Testing could be used to detect any traces of this substance. Hopefully, that would be the first step to helping more people recover from this addiction. However, this homeless man in the park has sobered himself up on his own. He hadn’t touched the drug in 33 days, which is such a big step.
I also interviewed an elderly gentleman who called himself Bo on the lawn in front of Taco Bell. He looked like hell. He told me that he’d been living under the bridge at Cypress Street and some of the younger homeless were beating up the older homeless and taking their meager belongings. He said, ” I don’t know if I’ll last another week out here.”
When I asked “elderly” Bo his birthdate as part of the questionnaire, I realized he and I were the same age.
Take the questionnaire for yourself. Click below to enlarge. Where are you sleeping tonight?
You can catch up with the Firechief of Redding at his blog: From the Firehouse. Be sure to read his review of 2015 at the Redding Fire Department and the record 12,856 calls for service. Chief Gerry Gray is also quite active on twitter @ggfire343 and well worth following for the up-to-the-minute fire coverage in our very flammable region.
Fire is a concern everywhere, and especially with our warm Summers. But I saw two homes burned in town just this week, so dangerous in Winter as well. I have never required the department’s services, but I am reassured that we have these professionals on whom we can rely for emergency help.
Lego Robotics
Scratch Computer Programming
Arduino and Electronics
Javascript and HTML
Stop-Motion Animation
As a child, I would have absolutely eaten this stuff up. How terrific that we have this available to today’s Redding youth. Even though I’m in real estate, barely a day goes by that I don’t need to code something in HTML or CSS. It would have been a lot easier to learn as a kid!
Build It’s Core Values from their About page:
We believe
Education is fun
When there is passion, there is education
Freedom is one of most empowering vehicle of education
Creativity is more important than knowledge
Generosity multiplies open mind and effortless learning
Therefore we
make it fun for everyone come in contact with Build It: paid or non-paid students, parents, social workers, staff, classes, camps, birthday parties, charity events,…
recognize the spark, and light it on fire!
give staff the freedom to run
staff give students as much freedom as possible
the goal is not to obtain knowledge, but to promote creativity
give generously, time, resource, knowledge, and ideas
Even if you’re not Eddy Money, you can get two tickets to the paradise we have here in Shasta County… for not very much money at all. RABA stands for Redding Area Busing Authority, and offers rides around Redding for a base fare of $1.50. Recently, they launched a new online interactive map for Redding area bus riders.
Getting around without spending much money. That’s Really Redding.
Here’s a sweet little video put together by Rocky Slaughter of of Sugar Pine Media. Featuring music by Redding artist Tracy Manuel from Miracle Mile Records.
There are two popular spots in the mountains surrounding Redding for casual snowplay, Eskimo Hill and Snowman Summit. Eskimo Hill is near Lassen Peak on Hwy 44, and Snowman is on the way to McCloud on Hwy 89. Recently, I took some images of our family outing to Snowman Summit, below.
Snowman Summit is about an hour’s drive from Redding. It has the added advantage of having a Snowman Summit webcam, courtesy of CalTrans, so you can see snow conditions in real time.
[edit] Tickets taken! That was quick. Thanks, readers.
Redding friends, I have 2 tickets to the afternoon performance of the band Decades at the Cascade today, a benefit for the Sheriff’s Assoc. A $40 value, free for the asking. So ask! (530) 356 4500.
Well technically called a UAV for Unmanned Aerial Vehicle. Drone imagery of Redding’s Sundial Bridge is presented here as captured by imaging. The use of drones like the DJI are so important when trying to get amazing footage like this. Amateur and professional photographers/ videographers have been in awe of their capabilities for some time and this video vindicates their endorsement. Beautiful Redding.
Side note: It’s regrettable that use of drones to shoot real estate videos (or any commercial video) remains illegal in the U.S. except in rare cases. Meanwhile, you can use “hobbiest” UAVs for unpaid imagery like this. The photographic quality has come so far. I would love to use this tool for my home seller clients.