Daylight Savings Time is here, which means its dark again at 6am, just when we were getting used to waking with the sun.
Some of the things happening around our area today:
Over at the Fairplex in Pomona, the second day of the Irish Fair & Music Festival runs from 10am to 6pm . There's authentic traditional Irish music and food (probably overpriced and a little less authentic than the music). General admission is $16, seniors and students are $14, and children under 11 are free.
The festival's website tells us:
2009 Los Angeles County Irish Fair_________________________
Celebrating its 7th year, The Irish Fair & Music Festival has become the largest festival of its kind in Southern California. With 9 stages featuring true Irish music from the likes of Gaelic Storm, Skelpin', The Mulligans, Diane the Bard, and many more.
Back again this year, we are featuring the Cripple Creek Cloggers and the McCartan School of Dance. Also this year, Sheepherding Demonstrations, an Irish Dog Show, the largest Irish Import Street in the west, Leprechaun Village, Pipers and the Celtic Arts Center with fine Irish dinning.
Over on the Scripps College campus, Michael Deane Lampkin conducts the Claremont Concert Orchestra in a program called "A Russian Concert." Sarah Iker, Scripps '09, will be the piano soloist.
The program consists of works by Russian composers: Khachaturian, Masquerade Suite; Prokofiev, March and Scherzo from The Love for Three Oranges; Rachmaninoff, Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini; and Shostakovich, Festive Overture in A Major.
The orchestra made of student musicians and is part of the Joint Music Program of Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, Pitzer, and Scripps Colleges.
The concert is in the Garrison Theater and begins at 3pm. Admission is free. Attendees are invited to bring canned goods to donate to the West End Hunger Project: SOVA Center.
Garrison Theater_________________________
Scripps College
231 E. 10th Street
Claremont, 91711
(909) 607-3266
Click here for a map.
If you're hankering for some outdoor activity, you can always head for a hike. The Wilderness Park is close, of course, but there are many other local trails you can try all along the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains.
Not too long ago, when there was a little more snow around, we went up to Mt. Baldy and tromped about near the San Antonio Falls trail. Runoff swelled the falls a bit, so that there was a nice rooster tail fanning out off the lower section.
The walk to the falls is easy, just up a paved road to a vista point. The road doubles back and becomes a fire road that heads on up the hill to the Ski Hut trailhead that eventually takes you to the top of Mt. Baldy. Dan's Hiking Pages has a write up of a July, 2007, hike to the summit. It's about 8.4 fairly strenuous miles with a 3,900-foot elevation gain along the way. If you try this, make sure to take along a good topo map because every year we hear about someone getting lost up there. REI has pretty good maps and books showing the the trails.
When we went up recently, we took some snowshoes and hiking sticks and walked up the fire road a mile or two past the falls. It was great day to be out, with the wind occasionally whistling through the canyon and shaking dustings of still fresh snow from the trees.
We took a break for lunch and didn't see many other people, though at one point we were passed by a group of more intrepid hikers fitted out for winter, complete with crampons and ice axes. The combination of crisp, icy air and a thermos of coffee were certainly refreshing after working up a sweat getting up the grade, and the views were well worth the effort.
We went back later in the week when the snow wasn't quite as fresh, but still were able to catch some breathtaking views and snapped some photos of the scenery.
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