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It is approximately 15 miles (24 km) east of Temecula. [1] Vail Lake covers approximately 1,100 acres (4.5 km 2) and has a storage capacity of 51,000 acre-feet (63,000,000 m 3), [2] although it currently contains about 34,000 acre-feet (42,000,000 m 3) of water. [3] Vail Lake is supplied by storm water runoff from Kolb, Temecula, and Wilson ...
Butterfield Valley is a valley along the course of Temecula Creek, in Riverside County, California. Its lower end is now filled by Vail Lake . It heads at 33°27′39″N 116°55′34″W / 33.46083°N 116.92611°W / 33.46083; -116.92611 and its mouth is at the site of the Vail Lake Dam at the head of the deep canyon Temecula Creek ...
California's 48th congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of California that covers East County, San Diego as well as the Temecula Valley. Major cities in the district include Temecula, Murrieta, and portions of Escondido. It is currently represented by Republican Darrell Issa.
The village of Temecula originated on a bluff on the south bank of Temecula Creek opposite the old Wolf's Store according to an 1853 survey. [7] In 1948, the owners of the Vail Ranch built a 132-foot-high (40 m) dam on Temecula Creek, Vail Lake Dam, approximately 10 miles (16 km) above the confluence with the Santa Margarita River. Today the ...
Oak Mountain is a mountain in the northern Peninsular Ranges System, in Riverside County, in southern California. [1] [4]Oak Mountain consists of a mountain with two peaks, the northern at 2,706 feet (825 m), taller than the southern at 2,126 feet (648 m), which is located east of the city of Temecula, dividing Pauba Valley from Butterfield Valley.
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A breakthrough has been made in the search for a hiker who vanished without a trace on a Colorado mountain almost 20 years ago. Michelle Vanek, 35, a mother of four, was last seen two decades ago ...
In 1914, financed by Mahlon Vail and local ranchers, the First National Bank of Temecula opened on Front Street. In 1915, the first paved, two-lane county road was built through Temecula. By 1947, the Vail Ranch contained over 87,500 acres (354 km 2). In 1948, the Vail family built a dam to catch the Temecula Creek water and created Vail Lake ...