Agriculture

CLEARLAKE – The Friday Night Farmers' Market opens Friday, June 4.


The market will take place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Redbud Park in Clearlake.


In its third season, the certified farmers' market offers fresh local and regional produce, freshly prepared foods, live music and cottage industry arts and crafts from local and regional artisans, all on the grassy shores of Clear Lake.


This year's market manager, Hileri Shand, promises a fun, family-oriented affair with an emphasis on local community and some new surprises for the market.


“We're looking to have events like raffles and treasure hunts that give more opportunities for our residents and visitors to connect and have fun,” she said.


The first market will prove to be special as opening band, Blue Moon, featuring David and Sarah Ryan, brings a blue-grassy, Grateful Dead-like flavor to the shores of Clearlake.


Market attendees will also be greeted by Roberto and Amy Reyes, owners of Cactus Grill in Clearlake, who have been with vendors since the opening market in 2008 and offer up some of their best fresh Mex cuisine right from the barbecue including beef, chicken or veggie tacos, rice, beans, horchata and more.


The market, a collaboration of the Lake County Community Co-op, the Clear Lake Chamber of Commerce and the city of Clearlake, runs June through August, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and September, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.


Producers and other vendors are encouraged to join in the market season and can apply for the market by downloading the application at the co-op's Web site, www.lakeco-op.org, or by calling Hileri Shand at 707-483-0785.

HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE – The Hidden Valley Lake Coyote Valley Plaza Tuesday Night Farmers' Market is seeking vendors.


The markets will take place from June 1 through Aug. 31, from 3:45 p.m. to 8 p.m.

 

Vendors must have their own covers.


The spaces cost $20 per week or $200 paid in advance for the season, an $80 savings.


Interested parties are asked to please call Star at 707-694-8584.

CLEARLAKE – The Friday Night Farmers' Market opens Friday, June 4.


It will be held from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Redbud Park in Clearlake.


In its third season, the certified farmers' market offers fresh local and regional produce, freshly prepared foods, live music, and cottage industry arts and crafts from local and regional artisans, all on the grass at the shores of Clear Lake.


Market Manager Hileri Shand promises a fun, family-oriented affair with an emphasis on local community.


“We're looking to have events like raffles and treasure hunts that give more opportunities for our residents and visitors to connect,” Shand noted.


The market, a collaboration of the Lake County Community Co-op, the Clear Lake Chamber of Commerce and the city of Clearlake, runs June through August, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and September, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.


Producers and other vendors are encouraged to join in the market season and can apply for the market by downloading the application at the co-op's Web site: www.lakeco-op.org, or by calling Hileri Shand at 707-483-0785.


Certified farmers' markets are a fast-growing segment of food supply and offer attendees some of the freshest food to be had directly from the producers.


The Lake County Community Co-op, since its inception in 2008, has advocated and facilitated opportunities for local food connections in Lake County.


For more information on local food opportunities, go to the co-op's Web site at www.lakeco-op.org.

LAKEPORT – The Lake County Farm Bureau (LCFB) will host a Certified CPR/first aid training in Spanish on Tuesday, June 8.


Upon completion of the four-hour course, participants will receive a two-year certification sponsored by the American Heart Association Heartsaver Program.


There will be morning and afternoon sessions. The cost is $65.


There are discounts available for Farm Bureau members. You must call and make a reservation to attend as space is limited.


LCFB is a nonprofit association of local farmers and ranchers that work together to promote and protect local family farmers. LCFB was founded in 1924 and is a part of a nationwide Farm Bureau network of 6.2 million members that are organized on a county, state and national level.


For more information about this program or to become a FB member, please call or stop by Lake County Farm Bureau, 65 Soda Bay Road, Lakeport, 707-263-0911.

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Starr Hill was reportedly last seen in Middletown, Calif., on May 18, 2005. Her family and the authorities hope to find clues to her disappearances. Photo courtesy of April Robinson Lazzari.







MIDDLETOWN – In May of 2005, a woman was reported to have left her home on Western Mine Road in Middletown following an argument with her husband, walking off into a rainy afternoon.


That woman, Starr Hill, was never seen again.


Since her disappearance on May 18, 2005, little trace has ever been found of Hill, a 46-year-old mother of two daughters as well as a grandmother.


Dealing with her mother's disappearance has been a tortuous process for Hill's oldest daughter, April Robinson Lazzari, now 30.


The pain of not knowing what happened to her mother is “always with you, it's always there, but it seems to mend itself sometimes,” Lazzari said.


Although the case is currently at a dead end, Sheriff Rod Mitchell said this week, “We have the interest and desire to bring either Starr back home or to bring the person responsible for her disappearance to justice.”


Starr Hill's husband, Curtis Hill, told this reporter in 2005 that his wife left their home after an argument, walking off during a rainstorm.


He said that she was wearing blue jeans, a green sweater and a black leather jacket, but didn't have her purse or any other personal items with her.


Curtis Hill – who in 2005 was a firefighter in Contra Costa County – later stated that he came home from a shift to find his wife's purse, makeup bag and some duffel bags missing, with an angry note from her left for him. A friend of the couple also had reportedly seen Starr Hill walking along Highway 29 toward Twin Pine Casino, as Lake County News has reported.


Lazzari said she never saw that note, and didn't believe her mother would have left without contacting someone.


Starr Hill had been known to leave home for days at a time before, but Lazzari said she always called family to let them know she was OK.


Family members traveled around the region, posting fliers about the missing woman. Sheriff's investigators found no sign that her credit cards or cell phones had been used since her disappearance.


The sheriff's office searched the Western Mine Road property on May 24, 2005, but found no signs of Starr Hill.


Not long after her disappearance, Curtis Hill stopped cooperating with authorities, refusing to be interviewed, according to Mitchell.


In August 2005, Rod Mitchell held a press conference to draw attention to the case, but the effort didn't yield the hoped-for break in the case.


One clue appeared in October of 2005 when a vineyard worker found Hill's cell phone along Highway 29 near Lower Lake. However, investigators said it yielded no forensic evidence. The phone, they concluded, had last been used before Starr Hill's disappearance.


In May of 2007, the sheriff's office arranged for another search of the Western Mine Road property with a noted cadaver dog handler, but again no clues were found.


Starr Hill's disappearance is, essentially, a cold case, Mitchell said this week.


“It's not being actively investigated because everything in this case revolves around the need to interview Curtis,” Mitchell said.


The case continues to be discussed within the sheriff's investigations unit, where Mitchell said there remains a desire to bring it to a conclusion.


Curtis Hill, who had left for Hawaii for a time and is reportedly back living in Middletown, continues to refuse to speak to investigators or the press; he did not respond to a Lake County News request for comment.


Lazzari said she hasn't spoken to him since 2007, when he came into her place of work in Clearlake and tried to get her fired because he was angry about her statements about the case.


At first, many people who heard about the case believed that Starr Hill left on her own. Lazzari said she never thought that was the situation.


“Five years later, I still don't believe that to be true,” she said.


But, as for what became of Starr Hill, her daughter has no explanations.


“What happened, I honestly don't know,” Lazzari said.


She added, “I know she didn't go on her own.”

 

 

 

 

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Starr Hill and her youngest daughter, Terra, at Christmas several years ago. Hill disappeared from her Western Mine Road home in Middletown, Calif., on May 18, 2005. Photo courtesy of April Robinson Lazzari.
 

 

 


A family waits


Since her mother disappeared, Lazzari has moved out of state, had another child and gotten married, all without her mother by her side.


She insists that her mother wouldn't have missed important family events such as birthdays or weddings. “Those are all events that, under no circumstances, would she ever have missed on her own,” Lazzari said.


In her mother's stead, Lazzari said she has had strong women who have acted as mother figures to support her. “I've been very grateful for them,” she said.


The case was hard for the entire family, including Leona Schneider, Starr Hill's elderly mother.


Schneider died in June of 2009 without ever knowing what became of her daughter.


The longterm effect of having no answers or closure has been devastating for Starr Hill's family, her daughter said.


“It has definitely changed our lives in ways that I can't explain,” Lazzari said.


“The hard part is not knowing – is she going to show up at my door one day and be standing there? That thought's always there,” she said.


Outside of law enforcement, Lazzari said she hasn't been able to get much help with the search for her mother. She said there are only a few support groups for missing adults.


One group, the Modesto-based Carole Sund-Carrington Memorial Reward Foundation, had offered a $5,000 reward in 2006 for information about Hill. However, that reward was only offered for six months before being withdrawn to be used on another case.


A call to the foundation on Tuesday was met with a message noting that that the advocate and reward program has been suspended.


The fifth anniversary of the disappearance has reopened old wounds. “Looking five years back, the pain is just as much as on the first day,” said Lazzari, who added that her family has become reconciled to not knowing what happened to Starr Hill.


“I think you come to a point where you say, 'we're never going to have the answers,' but you always hope for them,” she said.


Lazzari said she talks about her mother everyday, and missing her never stops.


“The tears don't run down my face everyday, but the pain's always in my heart and my soul,” she said.


She said she wants people to know that her mother – who would have been 51 this past January – was a young woman who still had a lot to look forward to in her life, with a loving family and plans for the future.


“She was active and enjoying her life to the fullest,” said Lazzari.


Starr Hill had quit smoking so she could get a scuba diving certification as part of the business she and her husband were opening in Hawaii.


“She was really just out there living the dream, and it was cut so short,” said Lazzari.


Mitchell said his investigators – who still receive occasional pieces of information about the case – want to find answers for Starr Hill's family, noting the “immeasurable” toll on families in such circumstances.


“The people who actively worked the case still have a strong interest in resolving the case,” Mitchell said.


He said he also feels admiration and affection for Lazzari for the grace and composure she's showed in facing her mother's disappearance.”


“She's a remarkable young woman,” he said, adding, “You develop a unique bond with people who go through those experiences of losing loved ones.”


The multitude of the missing


The California Department of Justice (DOJ) reports that the state's number of active missing person cases averages around 25,000 each year.


In 2005, the year Hill went missing, she was among approximately 40,715 adults reported missing in one way or another across the state, the DOJ reported. That year, a total of 74 missing persons reports were made across Lake County.


Statewide missing persons statistics for 2009 show that just over 35,000 people were reported missing last year in California.


Hill is one of seven people listed as missing from Lake County in the DOJ database of missing people. She also is the most recently reported missing person of the group.


Other Lake County residents listed in the database are Richard Floyd Atkins, last seen in Clearlake, who disappeared in 1980 days before his 22 birthday; Stella Vera Gies, last seen in September of 1981 in Lakeport, two months before her 52nd birthday; Robert Blair Sturgill, last seen in Lucerne in June of 1990, age 30; David Preston Hinds, last seen in January of 1995, age 41; Steven William Branston, last seen in August of 1996 in Lakeport, age 20; and Victoria Lee Specials, last seen in Clearlake in December of 2001, age 44.


Lazzari asked community members to search their memories for anything unusual that they saw or heard in May of 2005 that might prove valuable in her mother's case; she encouraged anyone with such information to take it to the sheriff's office.


The hope, she said,is that eventually her family will have answers and some semblance of peace.


Starr Maurie Hill was described as 5 feet 4 inches tall, 143 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. She was reportedly last seen on May 18, 2005, near Middletown.


Anyone with information is asked to call the Lake County Sheriff's Office, 707-262-4200.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

California's winegrape growers have voted to extend a winegrape assessment that is aiding in the fight against Pierce's Disease and the glassy-winged sharpshooter that spreads it.


The vote will extend the assessment for another five years, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture's (CDFA) Pierce's Disease Control Program.


Last fall, the state Legislature passed SB 2, a bill to extend the control program, which was due to sunset in 2011.


The bill was authored by Sen. Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa), with Assemblyman Wes Chesbro (D-Arcata) and Assembly member Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) as principal co-authors. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the bill last October.


SB 2 extends the Pierce's Disease Control Program from 2011 to 2016, and expands the program’s research component to include designated new pests and diseases affecting grapes grown in California, Wiggins' office reported.


It also called for a referendum of the state’s winegrape growers in order to continue an industry assessment, paid for by winegrape growers, that funds the program's research.


In the recent vote of the state's winegrape growers, a total of 2,792 valid ballots were received, representing 45 percent of eligible voters, CDFA reported.


Of those voting, 84 percent favored continuing the assessment. Those voting in favor of continuation represented 84 percent of the assessment paid by all those who voted, according to officials.

 

In the late 1990s, Pierce's Disease – which the CDFA reported has been present in California for more than 100 years – threatened to cause sizable damage to grapes due to the arrival of the glassy-winged sharpshooter.


The glassy-winged sharpshooter carries the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa, which causes Pierce's Disease in grapes, almonds, oleander and citrus fruits, according to the CDFA.


Agriculture officials explained that the insect feeds on a plant's water producing elements. When a plant develops Pierce's Disease, its ability to draw in moisture is hindered and the plant will either die or become unproductive.


In response to this threat to the grape industry, the Legislature passed bills that led to the creation of an advisory task force on the Pierce's Disease issue in 1999.


In 2000, the Pierce's Disease Control Program was created as a partnership between the CDFA, county agriculture commissioners, United States Department of Agriculture, University of California, local agencies, industry and agriculture organizations. Its purpose was to combat the spread and find solutions for Pierce's Disease and the glassy-winged sharpshooter.


For more on the program visit www.cdfa.ca.gov/pdcp/.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

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