The Rose Parade began as a warm weather postcard to the shivering East

In the late 19th century, Pasadena was a sleepy town of citrus growers and wealthy vacationers. It was a local fox-hunting club, whose members hailed from parts east, that had the idea to showcase the area’s mild Mediterranean climate. “In New York, people are buried in the snow,” the Massachusetts-born writer Charles Frederick Holder declared.…

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A birder’s paradise on California’s Central Coast

Morro Bay, perched midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco, is a sleepy fishing village, popular with city folk looking to get away from it all. But each winter, the place is overtaken by a rumpus of life. Located along the north-south Pacific Flyway, Morro Bay is among the country’s most important bird areas. Between…

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A holiday tradition born of loss in rural California

There’s a little almond tree at the edge of an orchard outside Modesto that’s festooned with decorations on holidays throughout the year. For passing motorists, the display is a bit of random cheer and also a mystery: Why this tree along this lonely stretch of road? The story, first reported in the Modesto Bee, begins…

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The surprise reincarnation of Owens Lake

A century ago, Los Angeles pulled a sensational swindle. Agents from the city posed as farmers and ranchers and strategically bought up land in the lush Owens Valley, 200 miles to the north. Water rights in hand, the thirsty metropolis proceeded to drain the region via a great canal. If the deception weren’t bad enough,…

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How Tippi Hedren became the godmother of the Vietnamese nail industry

The Vietnamese-American nail industry originated with an act of kindness by a Hollywood actress in 1975. After the fall of Saigon, tens of thousands of Vietnamese refugees arrived in California. Tippi Hedren, the star of Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds,” volunteered to help at a refugee camp outside Sacramento. The immigrant women, Hedren told Nails Magazine…

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The abundant mushrooms of California’s northern forests

Among those welcoming the predicted rainfall this week will be California’s mushroom hunters. During the wet winter months, the state’s northern forests erupt with some of the most abundant wild mushrooms in the country — golden chanterelles, porcinis, Russulas, and other specimens free for the taking. The antithesis of industrial farming, foraging for food has…

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Gorgeous tintypes of California surfers conjure another era

The figures could belong to a lost tribe, discovered by a wayfaring anthropologist and preserved in photographs through the ages. But the images are no more than 12 years old. Joni Sternbach has made a unique art form of surfing photography using the primitive process known as wet plate collodion. The idea originated as she…

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Labyrinths of leaves signal the fall at Sacramento university

In the fall of 2013, Joanna Hedrick was photographing her kids near a ginkgo tree and thought it would be a fun touch to sculpt patterns in the fallen yellow leaves. That was the moment she unwittingly stumbled upon a new calling in life. Joanna Hedrick’s leaf designs have been embraced as a campus tradition.…

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Costumes were creepier in Halloweens of old

Halloween fashions aren’t what they used to be. In bygone California, costumes were often homemade, creepier, and highly politically incorrect. Here’s a photographic tour drawn from the state’s various archives. Siblings — Aiko, left, and Isamu — showed off their Halloween masks in their yard in Los Angeles in 1925. Los Angeles Public Library The…

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Will San Francisco vote for a YIMBY?

This interview by reporter Patrick Sisson is published in partnership with Curbed, in advance of a special project launching this Wednesday that explores four themes affecting California and Texas residents in the places they live. Housing advocate Sonja Trauss first learned about expensive San Francisco living in the mid-1990s. A phone call between her mother…

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