Tule Lake: What Can Be
National Park Service Pacific West Regional Director Jonathan Jarvis lends his advise as what can happen at the now Tule Lake National Historic Landmark. During his 2006 Tule Lake Pilgrimage speech at the Ross Ragland Theater in Klamath Falls, Oregon he mentions options, partnerships and studies. He recommends folks to visit Manzanar and see what they did to interpret the World War II Manzanar Relocation Center.
Filmed and edited by Anders Tomlinson. Music by Denver Clay. Produced by Anders Tomlinson and Tule Lake Committee. ©2013 Anders Tomlinson and Tule Lake Committee, all rights reserved.
American Bald Eagle (Tule Lake National WIldlife Refuge)
Filmed at Tule Lake National WIldlife Refuge, California, March 2014.
This footage is the same eagle, throughout; Probably a male, mature but possibly relatively young (my guess). It would be leaving even as soon as the day this was filmed, to head back north. The weather had been warming lately, and most of the eagles had already left to fly back north for the summer, having flown out days previous to this warming mid-March day.
American Bald Eagles at Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge, Feb 2015
American Bald Eagles filmed at Tule Lake, in February 2015. The large snow-covered mountain you will see behind an eagle is the northeastern slope of Mount Shasta, California.
This video was filmed in 1080 HD but is presented here in 720 HD.
Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair 2018
heraldandnews.com
Experience the food, fun, livestock, exhibits and much more from the 2018 Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair in Tulelake, Calif., Sept. 6-9, 2018.
Music courtesy of Wampus Cat.
Video by Kurt Liedtke
heraldandnews.com
A Duck and Goose Hunting Adventure at Tule Lake on the Pacific Flyway
This was filmed in 1967 on 16mm film.. It shows a typical outing in the fall when millions of birds migrate South -- some near the Pacific Coastline in the states of Oregon and California on the Pacific Flyway. Hunting is permitted for a very limited time period by international treaty. Ducks and geese are shown here being hunted as they fly down through the Klamath Basin Waterwatrerwfowl hunters know this region as Tule Lake. To view other videos produced by Franklin Clay Films go to wxyzvideos.com
114sabducksmp4.mp4
Wigeon were everywhere during a duck hunt up at Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge during the fall of 2010.
Bitter Memories: History of The Tule Lake Japanese Relocation Center #233 #146
Juanita Lake Visit | Views from Above | 4K!
Family trek to Juanita Lake located in Siskiyou County. Glad I could share with you this cool little lake. I grew up camping here in the summer with my parents, lots of fond memories of the place.
Equipment used: Phantom 4, iPhone 6s Plus
Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge ↔ Klamath Basin Complex
Besides the gorgeous scenery, we spotted dozens of bald eagles, a blue heron rookery and lots of hawks on the auto tour of the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge in northern California near the Oregon border. For more video of the birds in the area, please visit my birding channel:
↔
When I'm not writing romance novels, I'm living life by the mile and hitting the open road to photograph the beauty of nature. Join me on my adventures as I post about beautiful locations, wildlife and photos from my travels.
Here's to creating miles of memories!
Rachelle Vaughn
For info about my books and my life as a romance author, go to:
~ SHOP & SUPPORT VAUGHN THE ROAD AGAIN FOR FREE
Shopping with my Amazon link is a free way to help support my blog:
~ SOCIAL MEDIA
↔ INSTAGRAM:
↔ TWITTER:
↔ WEBSITE:
~ FILMING GEAR
↔ MAIN CAMERA:
↔ CAMCORDER:
↔ TRIPOD:
↔ CAMERA BAG:
~ HIKING GEAR
↔ INSULATED BACKPACK:
↔ HIKING SHOES:
* Vaughn the Road Again is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.
Tule Lake: Dust
The site of Tule Lake Internment - Segregation Center was a recently reclaimed Tule Lake by the Klamath Reclamation Project starting in the 1900's. Jimi Yamaichi accepted dust as a way as life. There was little that internees could do about the dust. It was everywhere, no crack was too small, no clothes were too clean. Today the winds still blow and dust can fly but not like it was in the Tule Lake Interment - Segregation Center back when.
Filmed and edited by Anders Tomlinson. Music by Denver Clay. Produced by Anders Tomlinson and Jimi Yamaichi. ©2013 Anders Tomlinson and Jimi Yamaichi, all rights reserved.
[Wikipedia] Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex
The Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex is a wildlife preserve operated by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in the Klamath Basin of southern Oregon and northern California near Klamath Falls, Oregon. It consists of Bear Valley, Klamath Marsh and Upper Klamath National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in southern Oregon and Lower Klamath, Tule Lake, and Clear Lake NWR in northern California.
Lower Klamath NWR, established in 1908, was the first waterfowl refuge in the United States. Consisting of 46,900 acre (190 km2), it includes shallow freshwater marshes, open water, grassy uplands, and croplands that are intensively managed to provide feeding, resting, nesting, and brood rearing habitat for waterfowl and other water birds.
Clear Lake NWR, established in 1911, has an area of 46,460 acres (188.0 km2). About 20,000 acres (81 km2) is open water. The balance is the surrounding upland habitat of bunchgrass, low sagebrush, and juniper.
Upper Klamath NWR, established in 1928, is composed of 15,000 acres (61 km2) of mostly freshwater marsh and open water.
Tule Lake NWR, established in 1928, encompasses 39,116 acres (158.30 km2) of mostly open water and croplands.
Klamath Marsh NWR, established in 1958, consists of 40,646 acres (164.49 km2) of freshwater marsh and adjacent meadows.
Bear Valley NWR, established in 1978, protects a vital night roost site for wintering bald eagles. It consists of 4,200 acres (17 km2) of largely old growth ponderosa pine, incense-cedar, white fir and Douglas-fir forest.
Historically, the Klamath Basin was dominated by approximately 185,000 acres (749 km2) of shallow lakes and freshwater marshes. these extensive wetlands attracted peak fall concentrations of over 6 million waterfowl and supported abundant populations of other water birds including American white pelican, double-crested cormorant, and several heron species.
In 1905, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation initiated the Klamath Reclamation Project to convert the lakes and marshes of the Lower Klamath Lake and Tule Lake areas to agricultural lands. As these wetlands receded, the reclaimed lands were opened to agricultural development and settlement. Today, less than 25% of the historic wetlands remain.
To conserve much of the Basin's remaining wetland habitat, the six National Wildlife Refuges have been established. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages these Refuges to enhance wildlife and benefit the American people. Agricultural and water programs are coordinated under an agreement between the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Reclamation.
Klamath Basin Refuges consist of a variety of habitats including freshwater marshes, open water, grassy meadows, coniferous forests, sagebrush and juniper grasslands, agricultural lands, and rocky cliffs and slopes. These habitats support diverse and abundant populations of resident and migratory wildlife with 433 species having been observed on or near the Refuges. In addition, each year the Refuges serve as a migratory stopover for about three-quarters of the Pacific Flyway waterfowl, with peak fall concentrations of over 1 million birds.
Please support this channel and help me upload more videos. Become one of my Patreons at
2012 Manzanar Pilgrimage (43rd Annual) - Part 2
Part 2 of the 43rd Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage. Features keynote address by Mitchell T. Maki, Author, Achieving The Impossible Dream: How Japanese Americans Obtained Redress, along with a musical performance by Mary Kageyama Nomura, the Songbird of Manzanar.
This event was held at the Manzanar National Historic Site, located between the towns of Lone Pine and Independence, in California's Owens Valley.
Tule river late summer
via YouTube Capture
WORLD WAR II--TULE LAKE INTERNMENT CAMP AND POW CAMP
Tule Lake Internment Camp
Two months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on December 7,1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order No. 9066, a proclamation that ultimately consigned 110,000 Japanese Americans to ten internment camps scattered throughout the United States.
Tule Lake was the largest of the internment camps with a peak population of 18,789 persons of Japanese descent. Tule Lake was the only camp turned into a high-security segregation center, ruled by martial law and occupied by the United States Army.
Stripped of their constitutional rights, Japanese American men, women and children were allowed one trunk per person and sent to camps around the country - leaving behind their homes, businesses and personal belongings built over a lifetime.
Tule Lake Prisoner of War Camp
Just a few miles north of the ancient lava flows of Lava Beds National Monument - nestled next to a high bluff -- lies a group of buildings weathered by more than sixty-years of extreme temperatures and the dry dust-filled winds of the Modoc Plateau.
These rustic buildings, scattered like unwanted tumbleweeds in the wind, once housed Japanese American internees, and both Italian and German prisoners-of-war.
The Tule Lake Branch Prisoner of War Camp (Camp Tulelake) was originally used as a Civilian Conservation Corps camp in the 1930's. (This camp should not be confused with the nearby Tule Lake War Relocation Center.) The camp, built between 1935 and 1938, contained some thirty structures - including administration, barracks, mess hall and hospital -- all grouped around a central courtyard.
Japanese Americans who were interned at the Tule Lake Relocation Center (five miles to the east) who refused to answer the WRA's loyalty questionnaire were arrested and temporarily held at the CCC camp. A second group of Japanese Americans arrived in October of 1943 when evacuee farm workers at the Tule Lake Relocation (Segregation) Center went on strike. To break the strike, 234 Japanese Americans from other relocation centers were brought in to harvest crops in the area. For their protection, the Japanese Americans were housed at the CCC camp.
As the war intensified in Europe, modifications were made to the CCC camp. A double fence was erected to form a compound around the barracks and mess hall. Four guard towers with searchlights were built at the corners; a patrol road, gate and sentry post were added as well.
Italian POWs lived at the camp first and then were replaced by German POWs in late 1944, after the Allied invasion of Normandy, France. The Italian and German POWs were brought in to help local farmers clear canals of moss and algae and to help in harvesting their crops. The Italian and German POWs were often paid more than the Japanese American internees to do the same type of work. Camp Tulelake reached its peak population of more than 800 POWs by the end of October 1944.
Today, only five of the original CCC buildings remain. The buildings, which include the mess hall and kitchen, a barracks, garage, paint shop, and pump house, are presently abandoned and in poor condition.
Camp Tulelake now resides on land within the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge. A barbed wire fence prevents public access to the buildings and no signs are posted to indicate the structures' historical significance. The current plan for the CCC/World War II POW camp is the demolition and destruction of the remaining buildings.
Huntsmen shoot wild geese and duck as they fly to migrate in Tule Lake, Californi...HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
Link to order this clip:
Historic Stock Footage Archival and Vintage Video Clips in HD.
Huntsmen shoot wild geese and duck as they fly to migrate in Tule Lake, California.
Hunting birds in United States. Wild geese and ducks in flight while they migrate. Huntsmen shoot down the birds at Tule Lake. Men hold shot down birds. Location: Tule Lake California. Date: November 9, 1933.
Visit us at CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.
Hunter's Paradise (1933)
Titles read: Come with us now to CALIFORNIA - to A Hunter's Paradise.
Tule Lake, California, United States of America.
Various shots of huge flocks of wild ducks and geese taking off from their swampy feeding ground. Good shot of birds flying in a 'V' formation.
FILM ID:1620.23
A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES.
FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT
British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website.
NCA DH71
At A Glance
Citius. Alturas. Fortius. The Olympic motto could well apply to this little Via Destinatum that takes you fast and high into the paralympic Warner Mountains and then finishes strong with a sweeping descent down to the quiet, quaint village of Cedarville in the Surprise Valley, close by the Nevada border. It may be a couple of miles short of a marathon but it will still appeal to some competitors. Modern bi-wheeled athletes will find it a little narrower, rougher and not too curvy when they cross-country the portions where CR 56 skirts the edge of the Modoc National Wildlife Refuge and CR 58 bisects a sloped foothill plain. But the Hwy 299 sprint track has moderate, sweeping Twistius and better Pavementus that allows you to ride faster, higher and stronger while striving for a personal best. Just remember: this is a state sanctioned venue, so you do have to watch for those pesky Accelero Tributum Exactors eager to javelin a ticket into you. If they do, take heart from your own motto: Illegitimus non carborundum.
Klamath Falls Goose Hunt 75
Old family movies finally converted to digital. not my soundtrack, hah.
Tulelake Drought Assistance 2001
Drought is nothing new in northern California. The small town of Tule Lake received help from the Office of Emergency Services after the governor declared an economic emergency in April of 2001, easing the impact on Siskiyou county agriculture. The 2014 Drought Task Force meets in Siskiyou county on June 13.
Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge