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Rattlesnake vaccine may reduce risk of death in dogs

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Careena Chase almost stepped on this rattlesnake while watering her garden late afternoon Thursday, July 24. “I had turned around and was backing up trying to get my hose loose — thank God the hose stayed stuck,” Chase wrote in an email. The snake was 2 feet away from her. “He did not rattle until he moved up against the house and then rattled for only a moment.” Photo by Careena Chase
Careena Chase almost stepped on this rattlesnake while watering her garden late afternoon Thursday, July 24. “I had turned around and was backing up trying to get my hose loose — thank God the hose stayed stuck,” Chase wrote in an email. The snake was 2 feet away from her. “He did not rattle until he moved up against the house and then rattled for only a moment.”
Photo by Careena Chase

For people concerned about their dogs succumbing to rattlesnake bites, a preventive measure may be Crotalus Atrox Toxoid, a rattlesnake vaccine for canines that Red Rock Biologics in Sacramento developed.

The vaccine “was developed to provide protection for dogs against Western Diamondback Rattlesnake venom,” Red Rock’s website reads. “… this vaccine may also provide protection against the venoms of the Western Rattlesnake (including the Prairie, Great Basin, Northern and Southern Pacific varieties), Sidewinder, Timber Rattlesnake, Massasauga and the Copperhead. Partial protection may be obtained against Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake venom. This vaccine does not provide protection against venom from the Water Moccasin (Cottonmouth), Mojave Rattlesnake or Coral Snake.”

The company claims that in dogs the vaccine generates antibodies that neutralize the venom. And while the vaccine doesn’t prevent a reaction to the venom, canines “experience less pain and have a reduced risk of permanent injury from rattlesnake bite,” according to Red Rock. “Veterinarians typically report that vaccinated dogs bitten by rattlesnakes experience less swelling, less tissue damage and a faster recovery from snakebite than unvaccinated dogs.”

Janice Murasko of Animal Rescue Friends of Idyllwild said, “We give the vaccine at Sadie’s Clinic, and we have had at least two people say their dogs were hit by a rattler, and the only reason they survived was because of it. It gave them the time to get to the vet off the Hill.

“The first year, the dog gets two injections a month apart,” she said. “After that it is once a year.” A shot costs $25 and the supply is unlimited, she said. To make an appointment, call 951-659-1122 and leave a message on number 2.

But the vaccine is controversial. Local resident Kathy Keane’s dog, Lucky, died despite having a vaccination within six months of his death from what she believed was a Southern Pacific rattlesnake along a trail in Idyllwild. He was due to receive the vaccine in June when he was bitten May 30 of this year.

Still, Keane recommends vaccinating but warned, “It’s important to know that the vaccine only protects against venom B, the typical rattlesnake venom, a hemotoxin that causes localized swelling and tissue damage (and later possible neurological damage if treatment is delayed).”

She agrees with Murasko that it gives a person more time to get to the vet for anti-venom administration, if necessary. “The vaccines do not protect at all against venom A, the neurotoxic venom,” said Keane. “Our Southern Pacific rattlesnake has both types of venom.”

The University of California, Davis, Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital goes even further and discourages the vaccine with its canine vaccination guidelines: “The product license is currently conditional as efficacy and potency have not been fully demonstrated. Based on existing evidence, the UC Davis VMTH does not currently recommend routine vaccination of dogs for rattlesnake envenomation, and the vaccine is not stocked by our pharmacy.”

Pets Vet Office Manager Jordan Schrader in Hemet said Dr. Robert Rizon in that office recommends the vaccine, however. “We’ve had a big success rate in dogs bitten by rattlesnakes,” Schrader said. “The share of survivors is greater. It’s not a cure, however, but most dogs survive because it gives the owner time to get to a vet who offers the anti-venom as we do.”

Unfortunately, Lucky did not make it when he was taken to Pets Vet. “We think it was a different type of [venom] strain,” Schrader said.

Schrader said Pets Vet vaccines also are $25 and the vet recommends a booster shot three weeks later, then an annual shot.

Dr. Lindsay Crowley, a mobile vet in Anza, also carries anti-venom for horses, said Murasko. Her phone number is 951-444-1838.

No vaccine has been developed for humans.

Fisher to life

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FISHER TO LIFE: Historical lecturer and Hemet resident Penelope Engard engages the crowd at the Idyllwild Library with stories of late food author MFK Fisher. Fisher once owned 90 acres of land in Hemet with her second husband and authored such books as “How to Cook a Wolf” and “The Art of Eating.” Photo by John Drake
FISHER TO LIFE: Historical lecturer and Hemet resident Penelope Engard engages the crowd at the Idyllwild Library with stories of late food author MFK Fisher. Fisher once owned 90 acres of land in Hemet with her second husband and authored such books as “How to Cook a Wolf” and “The Art of Eating.” Photo by John Drake

Creature Corner: July 31, 2014

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Sadie
Sadie

Little purrs and four paws up to our youngest kitten, Suki. Didn’t take her long to find her forever home.

Miss Sadie is about 3 years old, and is still ready for the old cat-and-mouse game. She loves to gracefully move along, step by step, as you walk. She is not vocal, and is fine with other cats, kittens and small dogs. She has very good eating habits and knows her manners with the litter box. She’s ready to move on to a forever home with her very own bed and dancing partner. Could that be you?

Archie is learning that relaxing is a good thing to do. He is eager to go for walks, loves to be groomed so he can always look so handsome and absolutely lives for his Kong toy with special treats. Archie is very shy at first except with the females. He gets along well with other small, calm dogs and cats, too. If you have a calm environment and like to walk, Archie is your guy.

Introducing the chiweenie sisters Lily and Lulu. They were born in February 2014. They are very smart girls as they are crate-trained, sit for their treats and will look for direction to please you. They’re good with dogs and cats, and just absolutely love bugs. Applications are being accepted now. They may be adopted separately or together. Hurry in to ARF because these girls won’t last long. They will be available to go to their forever homes at the end of July. Call ARF at 951-659-1122.Update: Miss Lily is being seriously considered in
a forever home with her foster. That leaves Lulu.

Archie
Archie
Lily and Lulu
Lily and Lulu

We have several pets on our website in assisted adoption, also. Be sure to look us up on Facebook, too.

ARF has many cats and dogs available for adoption or fostering. Go to www.arfidyllwild.weebly.com and click on Petfinder. There is also a link for Facebook, too. All pets are spayed, neutered and current on shots. ARF is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sundays.

Creature corner is sponsored by Janet McAlpine this week. To sponsor the column, call Lisa Streeter at the Town Crier, 951-659-2145.

Past Tense: July 31, 2014

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Doris Lombard was a study in concentration at bat during a softball game with the Pipe Wenches in July 1975. The Pony Shop won 10-3. File photo
Doris Lombard was a study in concentration at bat during a softball game with the Pipe Wenches in July 1975. The Pony Shop won 10-3.
File photo

65 years ago - 1949
Reginald Pole, distinguished Shakespearean actor, was in Idyllwild for the summer. He was developing a cultural lecture series on the Hill.

60 years ago - 1954
A burn-the-mortgage campaign was underway to wipe out the remaining $1,500 indebtedness on Town Hall.

55 years ago - 1959
Ansel Adams, renowned photographer, was back at ISOMATA to head the staff of the photography workshop.

50 years ago - 1964
Ceremonies and an open house were held for the opening of Idyllwild’s first bank, a branch of Security First National Bank.

45 years ago - 1969
Dr. Timothy Leary was free on bail in connection with a drowning on Fobes Ranch in Garner Valley. An autopsy had revealed LSD in the 17-year-old victim’s body, but Leary denied giving the drug to the girl.

40 years ago - 1974
A Riverside Mountain Rescue Unit practice exercise on Suicide Rock turned into the real thing when a 20-year-old hiker fell 100 feet down the sheer face of the rock. All 16 RMRU members on the training mission helped with the rescue.

35 years ago - 1979
Riverside County Road Department crews were doing extensive repair and maintenance work on Fern Valley and Idyllwild streets.

30 years ago - 1984
A meeting at Town Hall was called by Supervisor Kay Ceniceros to discuss the formation of a local advisory council and plans for the almost-full dump.

25 years ago - 1989
The 50th class of Junior ROTC women graduated from the Idyllwild Institute-Fiesta’s leadership program.

20 years ago - 1994
Alandale Property Owners Association sent a survey to owners of Alandale properties asking if they’d like to see the name of the community changed.

15 years ago - 1999
Idyllwild Water District reported that the 1998-99 weather year had the third-lowest rainfall since 1929.

10 years ago - 2004
In the aftermath of containing the Verbenia Fire came the discovery and eradication of a huge mari-
juana grove in the Black Mountain area. More than 25,000 plants were destroyed by Forest Service and Riverside County Sheriff’s Department personnel.

5 years ago - 2009
Austin, Texas based Guaranty Financial Group, parent company of Idyllwild’s local Guaranty Bank branch, said that it was likely to fail. GFG confirmed that it was in talks with potential buyers and at least one investor group for a possible recapitalization.

1 year ago - 2013
The Mountain Fire posed hardships on people who did not have gas money to evacuate and people who lost wages due to the evacuation. The HELP Center was challenged in giving enough aide to these people.

State parks conducts two rescues Saturday

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The local California Department of Parks and Recreation was busy Saturday, July 26. A ranger and aides from Mt. San Jacinto State Park performed two rescues — a 25-year-old female from Huntington Beach and two juvenile females from Pico Rivera.

The first effort started around 3:30 p.m. when the park office was notified that a hiker was calling for help below Notch Five of the Desert View Trail. A search for this hiker began immediately and she was located before 4 p.m.

“The stranded hiker did not know how to hike back to safety without help. The rescuers assisted the subject through heavy vegetation, on a hillside with larger granite boulders and loose footing, to safety with the use of specialized rescue equipment,” according to the press release from Todd Friedman of the state parks.

By 6:30 p.m. the park’s peace officer was notified that two juveniles were missing. Another search commenced.

According to the mother of one of the kids, “she let her daughter and daughter’s friend walk down the walkway that leads from the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway’s mountain station down into Long Valley (a wilderness area). The mother did not know if the juveniles planned to hike, once in Long Valley, or set up a time when they should return back to the mountain station,” Friedman reported.

Both were found about 8 p.m. on the Desert View Trail still in Long Valley.

Out Loud: The simple life

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out-loudThe idea of living simpler and living closer to nature appeals to many and is making a comeback.

Bill and Edna Price became experts at it when they traveled with burros for 10 years between Death Valley and the Grand Canyon, more so than the movement being explored today among young people.

The Prices hunted and gathered their food, worked at whatever jobs they could find along the way and slept in hideous places.

Unlike the traveling life, living and working more outdoors, being close to the land, keeping chickens for eggs and meat, goats for milk, alpacas for fur, growing a garden for vegetables and herbs, and giving up possessions are conversations I hear more and more from young families.

I, too, experienced that desire in the 1980s along with a movement of young families in Prescott, Arizona.

There, we started food cooperatives, milked cows, raised chickens and settled homesteads. Some of us hauled water into backwoods properties.

I don’t know what happened to those people I once knew — if they, like me, grew tired of the hard work involved in not having conveniences.

But Bill and Edna also went back to civilization, settling in Idyllwild where Bill became the first fire chief and Edna a nurse and probably Idyllwild’s first paramedic. Why did they settle down? Edna was pregnant. That would do it for me, too.

“Burro Bill and Me” is a wonderful read, especially for anyone contemplating a simpler life and doesn’t mind hard work. This week's story talks about the new version of Edna’s adventures with Bill.

Becky Clark
Editor

Reader’s Write: Regarding ‘Idyllwild, don’t be silent’

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I couldn’t agree with you more, Mr. Killingsworth. Idyllwild has to be heard and stand united.

I have the greatest respect and admiration for our brave firefighters. They have protected us here for a long time.

Why try to fix something that isn’t broken?

As for the same people who always have to spew poison and have their name in the paper, why don’t they watch our crew the next time they fight a large fire? They will see then how our wonderful men put their lives on the line for everybody.

Idyllwild is a very beautiful and spiritual mountain community. My heart sings when I see the results of my giving, not taking. I know firsthand what hatred and ill will can do and has done to the world.

I am never silent and will help and stand up to be counted.

I love Idyllwild and love America. I will be forever grateful for all the blessings America has given me.

I am proud of you, Mr. Killingsworth, for speaking up.

We are Idyllwild and want our own Idyllwild Fire Protection District to stay.

Gisela M. Stearns
Idyllwild

New Sensations family dance band next at Summer Concerts

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The New Sensations from Palm Springs will perform at Idyllwild Summer Concert Series on Thursday, Aug. 7. Seen here are Azhia Velasquez, Don Hoeber, Alex Hoeber, Mary Hoeber, Jared Yates, Ariss Janae Lugo Durazo and Jeremiah Van Skike.                    Photo courtesy of Don Hoeber
The New Sensations from Palm Springs will perform at Idyllwild Summer Concert Series on Thursday, Aug. 7. Seen here are Azhia Velasquez, Don Hoeber, Alex Hoeber, Mary Hoeber, Jared Yates, Ariss Janae Lugo Durazo and Jeremiah Van Skike. Photo courtesy of Don Hoeber

“Music for every era” is how New Sensations leader Don Hoeber describes pop music genres his family band will be playing when it makes its first appearance at the Idyllwild Summer Concert Series.

Based in Palm Springs, New Sensations features Don on guitar, wife Mary on keyboards and son Alex on drums. They are joined by two vocalists — Jared Yates, 2005 American Idol top 20 finalist and Azhia Velasquez.

“We’re a variety dance band,” said Hoeber, “playing ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and some newer stuff. We especially like Motown.”

Started in 1987, New Sensations has a cohesive vibe and enjoys playing together — the value, said Hoeber, of being a family band. From ’60s hits “Dance to the Music” by Sly and the Family Stone to ’80s “All Night Long” by Lionel Ritchie to adult contemporary, jazz and ballads, and some tear drops of country twang, New Sensations plans to have something for everyone. Visit www.newsensationsband.com for pictures and videos of the group.

Opening for New Sensations at 6:15 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7, are Sandii Castleberry and Hot Flash. New Sensations takes the stage at 7 p.m.

ISCS producer Ken Dahleen and his board begin this series each year on a wing and a prayer without total funding to bankroll the season. Donations from sponsors and concert attendees each season help Dahleen make budget. So bring chairs for comfort, food for the appetite, wine for the soul and money for the series.

Patrons Dinner mixes informality, barbecue

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The Patrons Dinner is Friday, Aug. 15, in the “French Quarter” at Idyllwild Arts. Photo courtesy of Pam Goldwasser
The Patrons Dinner is Friday, Aug. 15, in the “French Quarter” at Idyllwild Arts. Photo courtesy of Pam Goldwasser

The 21st Jazz in the Pines performances begin Saturday, Aug. 16, but the traditional Patrons Dinner sounds the opening notes Friday evening, Aug. 15.

This year, the Friday soiree will return to the French Quarter where it has been before, said Anne Erikson, one of three co-chairs of the jazz fest.

“It’s been a little bit redesigned this year. After the formal 20th festival last year, for the 21st, we’re going in a different direction,” she stated.

“It’s a rustic chic summer barbecue,” Erikson said. But then her colleagues, Pam Goldwasser and Anne Finch, the other co-chairs this year, emphasized, “We refer to it as ‘Jazz, Jeans and Jewels.’ While there will be plenty of seating for those not dancing, it’s informal with no assigned seats.”

While the venue will be outside, there will be plenty of exquisite food and a band with a dance floor. The menu — from appetizers to desserts — is the creation of Georgie Smith of The Delish Life.

“The main dish will be grilled meat, fish and vegetable on skewers. Gazpacho soup, turkey meatballs, it’s all delicious. The chocolate fondue will be available the whole evening,” Erikson stressed.

“It will be a gorgeous summer evening, beautiful food and beautiful part of campus next to the forest,” Goldwasser said.

Patrons will hear and dance to the rhythms of Ruby and The Redhots. Etoile Ruby Presnell is known as the “first class sultry lady of blues.” She brings her well-known classic jazz and blues back to Idyllwild from San Diego. Ruby and the Redhots have performed several times at the jazz fest. For those who can’t attend the Patrons Dinner, they can see her and the band Saturday in the French Quarter and Ruby Blue, her other band, will be on the main stage Sunday.

“What happens [in Idyllwild] is people take for granted the beautiful setting [we live in], but that is what people want when they come here,” Erikson said with exuberance.

Patrons Package ticket, $250, includes Friday’s dinner and tickets for both days of the festival, Saturday, Aug. 16 and Sunday, Aug. 17, as well as preferred parking and preferred seating in the Holmes Amphitheater for both days.

Vanya and Sonia … opens

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Stratford Players Debbie Overman and Preston Sparks in a scene from the 2013 Tony Award-winning play “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike.” The play runs weekends to Aug. 10.        Photo by John Pacheco
Stratford Players Debbie Overman and Preston Sparks in a scene from the 2013 Tony Award-winning play “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike.” The play runs weekends to Aug. 10. Photo by John Pacheco
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