2015 January Rockonteur - Santa Lucia Rockhounds

S a n ta L uc i a R o c k h o u n d s
Rockonteur
January 2015
Volume 25, Issue 1
Page 1
Words From the President
The Holiday Party at the Culinary Academy last
month was spectacular! The Culinary Academy
furnished a large decorated room – with additional
decorational enhancements by Mary Caparone - and
prepared a delicious turkey dinner for our party. With
live holiday music performed by Rachael Denny, we
had our dinner and dessert, then a very short meeting,
followed by a fun filled gift exchange.
The Gift Exchange was a hoot!! Over 40 Santa Lucia
Rockhound members joined in on the gift exchanging
fun. The most memorable gift was the famous Pickle,
received by Doren Strane. And we can all rest
assured that Chris Driesbach has very smooth hands
after receiving the “Anti Monkey Butt
Hand Lotion”! We don’t know whose
lips are on the receiving end of the
“Chicken Poop Lip Balm”, but I’m sure
they have a beautiful smile. The gifts
were awesome this year! Thank you
everyone; great job!
I really enjoyed seeing everyone in the whole room
talking and laughing the whole evening. There were
several people with holiday hats and ugly holiday
sweaters that also came to the party. Talking to
several participants after the party, it was suggested
that we could possibly have a “Holiday Hat and Ugly
Holiday Sweater” competition at next year’s party.
Keep this in mind, and keep your eyes peeled for
accessories for your next SLRockhound Christmas
Party outfit. Thank you to everyone for making this a
wonderful, fun-filled holiday party.
Can you believe that 2015 is already here? Were there
really 365 days in 2014, because it seemed that the
year just flew by. 2015 is going to be a great year for
the Santa Lucia RockHounds. We will be starting
Geology classes in February at Ruby Dragon in Morro
Bay. Also, there may be a field trip in our future to
Ralph Bishop’s Museum in February – the date is still
to be set. Our Rock & Gem Show in May will be held
at the Paso Robles Event Center – Bigger & Better!
We have a lot planned for this year, and it’s only
January!
Quartzsite is here! This event starts in January and
ends at the end of February. I know there are more
than a few club members going to Quartzsite in
January. I hope we can schedule a club get together in
Quartzsite. Please contact me if you are
going so we can get together while we are
there.
Our January general meeting will be a
club Show and Tell program, with John
McCabe in charge. Club members are
encouraged to bring a rock specimen to
show and tell. Also, if you have a rock and you have
no idea what it is, bring it as well. There will be plenty
of geology-minded people there to help with rock
identification. At the end of the show and tell, the club
will vote on the best specimen and presentation. The
winner will receive a $25 gift certificate from Ancient
Earth in Cambria.
I am hopeful that everyone had a wonderful
Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Hanukkah, and
welcomed in the New Year with confetti and laughter.
Now, hold on to your hats, because I am sure that 2015
will be a fun-filled, Rockin’ Year!
Happy New Year, Rockhounds!~~~~~~~~Mike Judy
This Month’s Program
Refreshments
Open club Show & Tell
Last names beginning with A through D, please bring
refreshments to share at the upcoming meeting.
Next Board Meeting:
12 January 2015
Next General Meeting:
19 January 2015
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
ROCKONTEUR
January 2015
You Crack Me Up!
What happened when the rockhound bit
into a rotten apple?
He lost his APATITE!!!
Address or Email Changed?
Remember, it is up to you to notify the club if your
mailing or email address changes. We wouldn’t want
you to miss any of these informative newsletters.
Could this be your last newsletter??
2015 DUES ARE NOW DUE
This is also your last chance to be in the
2015 directory
The Rockonteur is the official monthly newsletter of
the Santa Lucia Rockhounds. It is an independent publication containing news
and information consistent with the mission of SLR and of interest to its
members.
Circulation is approximately 90 copies per
issue.
Publisher: James King
8745 Martinez Drive
San Miguel, CA 93451
[email protected]
(805) 975-2740 (Please leave message)
Member submissions are encouraged
and may be made by email or snail mail. We reserve the right to accept or
refuse submissions and advertising that, in our opinion, do not reflect the
standards of this newsletter, or are inconsistent with the objectives and purpose
of the Santa Lucia Rockhounds. Submissions may be edited for content,
grammar, spelling, punctuation and length without consent.
Rockonteur is not a creative writing outlet. However, all submissions that may be
of interest to its readers and reflect the standards of the newsletter, will be
considered for publication at the discretion of the editor or publisher.
Deadline: All submissions are due by midnight of the last day of the month but
early submissions are highly appreciated and strongly encouraged. The publisher
reserves the right to accept, reject or hold-over late submissions.
Santa Lucia Rockhounds Website: www.slrockhounds.org
Webmaster - Vince Pelerin, (831) 594-1381 [email protected]
Santa Lucia Rockhounds, Inc.
is a charitable group organized as a California non-profit
public benefit corporation. The specific purpose of the
group is to promote the study of mineralogy, including (but
not limited to) the fields of lapidary, metal working, jewelry
design & fabrication, geology and field trips for collecting and
related history. We encourage learning and good citizenship
in a congenial atmosphere. We respect both private and
public property and we strive to protect natural resources.
Annual Dues are $20 for the first adult and $8 each for
every additional member in the same household. Dues are
payable between 1 September and 31 December, in person
at the meetings or by mail. Members in good standing
receive the Rockonteur by mail or email.
We are a member of the California Federation of
Mineralogical Societies (CFMS) and affiliated with the
American Federation of Mineralogical Societies
(AFMS). Santa Lucia Rockhounds, Inc. is also a member of
the American Lands Access Association (ALAA).
PAGE 2
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
ROCKONTEUR
Did you know?
A look at earth science odds and ends by a
geology geek (Jim Mills)
I’ve been thinking about some trick questions that might be posed
in a game of “Geology Trivia” or perhaps even “Geology
Jeopardy.” How about this for starters?
What is the world’s longest mountain chain?
Did you guess Rockies or Alps? Himalayas or The Hindu Kush?
Those are not even close to correct. To find the world's longest
mountain range you'd have to look down -- way down -- not up.
And, it would have to be out of a window in a deep ocean
submersible because the longest mountain chain is completely
under water. It is formally called the mid-ocean ridge, an
underwater chain of volcanoes that spans some 40,389 miles
(65,000 km). Check out the map here from Oregon State
University.
January 2015
chain. More importantly, it also forms the edges of the tectonic
plates which are being pushed aside and ultimately provide the
forces that make the faraway other edge of the oceanic plate dive
under the continental plate which is above sea level (the technical
geology word, as John McCabe pointed out in his excellent
November club meeting program, is subduction). Those stresses
from the pressure of subduction are the forces that cause
movement along the San Andreas Fault (as in: Are you ready for
the ‘”Big One”?)
This naturally leads to the next trivia question:
Just how low can you go on our earth?
The deepest point on the ocean floor is 35,813 feet (10,916
meters) below sea level in the Mariana Trench. But, what is the
lowest point on Earth not covered by ocean? It is 8,382 feet
(2,555) meters below sea level, but good luck walking there. That
spot is in the Bentley Subglacial Trench in Antarctica, buried
under lots and lots of ice. Not only is it buried under lots of ice –
the ice continues to grind away at the Antarctic continental rock
and make the trench even deeper (not on a daily basis but in
relatively short lengths of geologic time it would become
noticeable). If the climate change scientists are right and our
ocean levels are rising, that situation will make the Bentley
Subglacial Trench even deeper below mean sea level. Of course, I
am just playing with words here. If the ice melts because of
climate change, the Bentley Trench will simply fill with ocean
water and it will no longer be the lowest point on earth not
covered by ocean. Indeed, compared to the Mariana Trench, it
would become only a minor submarine canyon.
Just thought you would like to know…
Map of the mid-ocean ridge
Courtesy of Oregon State University
As lava erupts from the mid-ocean cracks, it cools and creates
more crust of the Earth, thereby adding to the mountain chain,
which stretches around the entire globe.
Plate 1 & plate 2 move apart. Magma rises, cools and
solidifies forming new igneous rock. This is sea-floor
spreading and is a constructive plate boundary.
I particularly like this simplified diagram from Ms. Kaiter’s
Science Class at mail.colonial.net which I’ve included here; it
shows exactly how the enormous cracks in the middle of the ocean
allow magma to well up from great depths and form the mountain
Alfred Wegener,
The Father of Continental Drift
1880 - 1930
Wegener, a meteorologist, advanced the theory of continental
drift in 1912 based on his observation of the apparent “fit” of
the continents (including the continental shelves) into one giant
landmass. The theory was controversial and was met with
skepticism from geologists
that were unwilling to
change (the science was
settled, after all) and who
viewed Wegener as an
outsider.
In the 1950s, other
discoveries, such as
paleomagnetism, provided
support for the theory and
in 1953 rock samples from
India indicated that it had
once been in the southern
hemisphere, just as
Wegener predicted.
In the 1960s seafloor
spreading and other developments in geology brought a fresh
look at the theory of continental drift and led to the theory of
plate tectonics. Alfred Wegener was finally recognized for his
revolutionary discovery.
PAGE 3
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
January 2015
ROCKONTEUR
We Love Petrified Wood!
Photos and article by Barbara Bilyeu
It may not seem that close, but our show is coming up sooner
than we realize, and it's time to start giving it some thought!
We are featuring petrified wood as our show theme this year
and we are looking forward to some wonderful programs and
exhibits. Just to get you thinking....you may know that one of
the most spectacular petrified wood locations in the United
States is the Petrified Forest located in Arizona, where you can
drive through the park in your vehicle and get out and walk
through acres and acres of beautiful petrified logs in glowing
rainbow colors. If you have never visited the Petrified Forest,
Jim Gray’s petrified wood museum
Petrified wood can be appreciated for the miracle of the
fossilization process, the story it tells of life in our world long
ago and the incredible details that can emerge in the telling, the
multitude of places it is found throughout the world, the type of
wood it was as indicated by the cellular structure, the colors, or
just because it's beautiful! This will be a good year to focus on
this amazing "rock" which is loved by so many rockhounds!
Petrified logs at Petrified Forest National Park
Cords of petrified wood
Petrified logs at Petrified Forest National Park
you definitely need to put it on your list of "cool rockhound
places to go"!
No, you cannot collect any of the specimens in the park, but
there are still collecting opportunities available on nearby
ranches outside the park boundaries by arrangement. Or you
can stop by Jim Gray's rock shop just outside Holbrook,
southwest of the southern park entrance where petrified wood
in all sizes (and prices) is available for purchase. Whether or
not you are interested in buying, it's worthwhile stopping in to
see his museum of petrified wood specimens and other artifacts
he has collected and now has on display.
Holbrook, Arizona is about a 5 hour drive northeast
of Quartzite
PAGE 4
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
January 2015
ROCKONTEUR
Business Meeting Minutes, 8 Dec 2014
Geology 201, Pillow Lava
The meeting opened at 7:01 p.m. with the Pledge of Allegiance.
Present were Mike Judy, Mary Caparone, John McCabe, Rachael
Denny, Laurie and Tom Wylie, David Nelson, Barbara and Gene
Bilyeu, Lisa and James King, Brett Weathersbee, and Denise
Halopoff.
By James King
Laurie Wylie moved to approve the minutes of last month's
meetings, and David Nelson seconded the motion. Mike Judy
thanked the current board for all their work during the past year,
and announced that he and Denise Halopoff will be in Quartzite
at the time of next month's general meeting. John McCabe will
take charge of the meeting, but we still need someone to be in
charge of the refreshments. In correspondence, the club received
the newsletters of three other clubs.
These are lavas that contain
characteristic pillow-shaped
structures created by the
extrusion of the lava under
water, or subaqueous
extrusion, often at spreading
centers (mid-ocean ridges).
Pillow lavas are characterized
Laurie Wylie presented the Treasurer's Report. At the last
meeting, the club made $11 on the silent auction, $51 on the
drawing, $252 in membership fees, $15 on merchandise, and
$2.25 in badge fees.
Owing to a technical glitch, Mike Judy did not receive the
minutes for October's general meeting. Rachael Denny will
make sure that he gets them. Mary Caparone reported that there
are 44 people signed up for the club's annual Christmas party.
John McCabe is planning to send letters about the club
scholarship to the high schools in Paso Robles, Atascadero,
Templeton, and Shandon. At Cliff Brewen's tailgate sale, John
raised $188 for the scholarship fund. Several years ago, the club
lent a display case to the Gomez family, and April Gomez has
asked John if we would like it back. The answer is yes.
Gene Bilyeu reported that efforts are still underway to influence
land-use plans in the Mojave Desert that could seriously restrict
public access to favorite rockhounding sites. Everyone who is
concerned about this issue is encouraged to speak out, and let
their voice be heard. All club members should have received emails on this topic.
Barbara Bilyeu reported that a field trip to Ralph Bishop's
museum is being planned for February, but a date has not yet
been set. There are plans for a geology class in late February, as
well.
Lisa King reported that the club presently has 79 paid members.
The membership applications of Julie and Lyle Leman, and John
Chrisman were approved by the board. It was generally agreed
that the membership list should include contact information,
unless a member specifically requests otherwise.
David Nelson would like some help looking through catalogs,
and selecting new merchandise. Mike Judy announced that the
50/50 drawing will be discontinued, as it is not attracting a great
deal of interest. Vendor contracts for the 2015 show are set to go
out this week.
At this time, the club has received a formal offer to buy the
property on Railroad Street. After some discussion, a majority of
the board voted in favor of making a counter-offer. Allan
McElwain will handle the details. The meeting adjourned at
8:43 p.m.
Respectfully yours,
Rachael Denny,
Secretary.
Pillow lava
Photo courtesy of Colin Vosper via
Creative Commons
Pillow lava off of Hawaii
Public domain photo
by thick sequences of
discontinuous pillowshaped masses. They are
created when magma
reaches the surface and the
surface of the emergent
tongue of lava cools very
quickly, forming a skin.
The tongue lengthens and
inflates with more lava,
forming a pillow, until the
skin ruptures and a new
tongue, or eruption point,
forms nearer the vent.
General Meeting Minutes, 15 Dec 2014
Christmas Party
After a fine dinner and some seasonal music, Mike Judy called
the meeting to order with the Pledge of Allegiance, followed by
the singing of "Happy Birthday" and "Happy Anniversary" to
those club members celebrating those events during the month of
December. Mike thanked the staff of the Culinary Arts Academy
for a job well done, and reminded everyone that dues are due by
the end of this year. Barbara Bilyeu announced that the club
may have a field trip to Ralph Bishop's museum in February-the
date is still to be set.
Mike Judy called up the board members who served during
2014, and thanked them for their service. The list of board
members for 2014 is as follows: Mike Judy, President, Kim
Noyes, Vice-President of Programs, Mary Caparone, VicePresident of Communications, John McCabe, Vice-President of
Education, Laurie Wylie, Treasurer, Rachael Denny, Secretary,
Ralph Lawless, Senior Director, David Nelson, Junior Director,
and Barbara Bilyeu, Past President. As Past President, Barbara
Bilyeu formally installed the Board members who have been
elected to serve in 2015. The list of Board members for 2015 is
as follows: Mike Judy, President, Beverly Brown, VicePresident of Programs, Brett Weathersbee, Vice-President of
Communications, John McCabe, Vice-President of Education,
Rachel Miller, Treasurer, Rachael Denny, Secretary, David
Nelson, Senior Director, James King, Junior Director, and
Barbara Bilyeu, Past President. After the installation of the
officers, the evening's festivities concluded with a lively gift
exchange.
Wishing you a most pleasant holiday season, and the best of
everything in the coming year, I am respectfully yours,
Rachael Denny,
Secretary.
PAGE 5
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
January 2015
ROCKONTEUR
Due to a glitch, the minutes of the October general meeting did not run
in November as they were supposed to. They are included here, now, for
your consideration. - Editor
“…Why you know, I found a
place up north where there was
peetrified trees agrowin’ right up
out o’ the ground; with peetrified
birds in ‘em, singin’ peetrified
songs. Why you could ride
straight across from one mountain
peak to another, without havin’ to
go down into the valleys, ‘cuz
gravity, that was peetrified too.”
- Jim Bridger, Mountain Man
General Meeting Minutes, 20 Oct 2014
The meeting opened at 7:00 p.m. with the Pledge of
Allegiance, after which Faith lead the singing of "Happy
Birthday" and "Happy Anniversary" to those club members
celebrating these events during the month of October. John
McCabe introduced Faith as the newest member of the Junior
Rockhounds, and presented badges to two other Juniors.
Mike Judy thanked Barbara and Gene Bilyeu, David Nelson,
Mary Caparone, and the Rodriguez family for their
participation in Caledonia Days at the Rios-Caledonia
Adobe, and announced that Don Huntington and Don Pierce
have been interviewed in Central Coast Journal Plus
Magazine. Lisa King announced that she has extra ice chests
and cold packs, if anyone needs them, and reminded
everyone that dues are due this month. On the show and tell
table, Don Huntington had free rocks for anyone who would
like them, Wayne Mills had an assortment of rocks and
shells, and other members had thunder eggs, biconoids,
petrified wood, and a fossil.
Newsletter Notes
Consider taking your newsletter by email. Every printed and
mailed 12 page Rockonteur costs about 80¢ or $9.60 per year.
Send a note to [email protected] and ask to receive
your newsletter by email in beautiful living color. If it doesn’t
work out for you, we can always switch you back.
Writers needed - A constant supply of articles is needed to keep
this newsletter interesting and informative...short ones, long ones
and in-between. If you have a special area of interest, in
rockhounding, write an article or two on it. Tell about a recent
field trip or find. Other members would love to read all about it.
Elections are coming up, and Lisa King, Barbara Bilyeu, and
Rachel Miller will serve on the Nominating Committee. At
this time, candidates are still needed for the positions of
Vice-President of Communications, Vice-President in charge
of Programs, Treasurer, and Junior Director. Sign-ups are
starting now for this year's Christmas party. The cost is $10
per person, and we need a minimum of 30 people to sign up.
There is a possibility that the Club will soon be able to have
geology or lapidary classes. Jack Raven and Penny
Harrington, (of the Rudy Dragon in Morro Bay), have been
getting in touch with instructors in these fields. The Board
has been planning to hold the 2015 show at the Mid-State
Fairgrounds, and tonight, that plan was officially approved
by the general membership. Cliff Brewen will be holding his
annual tailgate sale on November 22nd, rain or shine. Set-up
starts at 7:00 a.m., and anyone who has stuff to sell should
get in touch with Cliff.
The featured speaker of the evening was Jim Mills, who gave
us a very interesting virtual tour of the Petrified Forest,
Brown Butte, and several other sites known for petrified
wood, and plant fossils, with some discussion of the past and
present ecology of the different sites. These are all places
that, for various reasons, you would not visit with the idea of
adding to your collection, but, as Jim rightly points out, a trip
to one of these places has its own intangible rewards.
The Wellness Kitchen Calendar
1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton (805) 434-1800
[email protected]
JANUARY 2015
6) Body in Balance - Quigong Part 1 of 3, 6:30 to 8 pm
15) Healthy Cooking for People Touched by a Health Crisis Comfort Foods , 5:30 to 7 pm
13) Body in Balance - Quigong Part 2 of 3, 6:30 to 8 pm
The meeting adjourned at 8:25 p.m. for refreshments, the
drawing, and the silent auction, dispersing between 8:45 and
9:00 p.m.
20) Body in Balance - Quigong Part 3 of 3, 6:30 to 8 pm
Hoping your next outing yields intangible rewards, I am
respectfully yours,
Rachael Denny,
Secretary.
19) Healthy Cooking for People Touched by a Health Crisis Heart Healthy Food , 5:30 to 7 pm
23) Cooking With Fennel, 5:30 to 7 pm
FEBRUARY 2015
25) Intro to Wellness - A Taste of Change , 5:30 to 6:30 pm
23) Cooking With Beets, 5:30 to 7 pm
PAGE 6
January 2015
ROCKONTEUR
V OLUME 2 5, I SSUE 1
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
JANUARY 2015
12) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
19) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
FEBRUARY 2015
9) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
16) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
MARCH 2015
9) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
16) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
APRIL 2015
13) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
20) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
MAY 2015
11) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
18) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
JUNE 2015
8) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
15) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
JULY 2015
13) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
20) SLR General Meeting, 7 pm,
Location: Templeton Community Center at 601 S. Main Street, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
AUGUST 2015
10) SLR Board Meeting, 7 pm
Location: Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
Contact: Michael Judy (805) 238-4469, [email protected]
2014 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
President, Michael Judy
(805) 238-4469 [email protected]
VP Programs, Beverly Brown
(805) 550-9079 [email protected]
VP Education, John McCabe
(805) 464-0528 [email protected]
VP Communications, Brett Weathersbee
(805) 550-2753 [email protected]
Secretary, Rachael Denny
(805) 472-9036 [email protected]
Treasurer, Rachel Miller
(408) 497-0715 [email protected]
Sr. Director, David Nelson
(805) 423-0188 [email protected]
Jr. Director, James King
(805) 975-2740 [email protected]
Past President, Barbara Bilyeu
(805) 434-2708 [email protected]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2014 COMMITTEE CHAIRS
CFMS Director, Gene Bilyeu
(805) 434-2708 [email protected]
CFMS Alternate, Jim Mills
(805) 237-0303 [email protected]
Drawings, Michael Judy
(805) 238-4469 [email protected]
Field Trips, Vacant
Membership, Lisa King
(805) 467-0062 [email protected]
Merchandise, David Nelson
(805) 423-0188 [email protected]
Museum & Library, Barbara Bilyeu
(805) 434-2708 [email protected]
Hospitality, Denise Halopoff
(805) 238-4469 [email protected]
History, Mike Doherty
(805) 466-4061 [email protected]
Pioneer Museum Liaison, Richard Smithen
(805) 467-2966 [email protected]
Rock & Gem Show, Kim Noyes
(805) 610-0603 [email protected]
Silent Auction, Pete Duckworth
(805) 467-3413 [email protected]
Newsletter Publisher, Vacant
Newsletter Publisher, James King,
(805) 975-2740 [email protected]
Meetings
Board meetings - 2nd Monday of the month
at the Wellness Kitchen, 1255 Las Tablas Rd.
Ste. 102, Templeton at 7 p.m.
General meetings - 3rd Monday of every
month except September and December
at the Templeton Community Center,
601 Main St. Templeton at 7 p.m..
PAGE 7
1255 Las Tablas Rd Ste 102, Templeton
(805) 434-1800
Open weekdays 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
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SANTA LUCIA ROCKHOUNDS
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ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED