Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The true meaning of "Putah" in Putah Creek has been the subject of discussion and speculation. It was originally called "Arroyo de los Putos" (1844) and "Puta Creek" (1845), but the "Puta" form was rejected by the United States Board on Geographic Names, likely because of the resemblance to the Spanish word puta (lit. "whore"). [6]
The well-engineered bridge survived the swollen flood of Putah Creek every winter thenceforward. [2] As early as 1906, proposals were put forward to dam Putah Creek to form a reservoir. In 1907, the Mulholland-Goethals-Davis plan proposed a dam at Devil's Gate, the southeastern limit of the valley. Other plans were formulated.
Pinnacles rise above the Putah Creek State Wildlife Area. Putah Creek Wildlife Area is a state wildlife area of Solano County, California. The 670 acre reserve lies to the southeast of Lake Berryessa, to the south of Monticello Dam and the confluence of Putah Creek and Cold Creek. [1] Trees found here include cottonwood, blue oak and chaparral.
The top of the glory hole, 2017. Monticello Dam is a 304-foot (93 m) high concrete arch dam in Napa County, California, United States, constructed between 1953 and 1957.The dam impounded Putah Creek to create Lake Berryessa in the Vaca Mountains.
The lake is fed by the headwaters to the 576-square-mile (1,490 km 2) Putah Creek watershed. It has a storage capacity of 1,602,000 acre-feet (1.976 × 10 9 m 3), making it one of the larger reservoirs in California. Besides Putah Creek there are three other major tributaries that contribute to the lake: Capell Creek, Pope Creek, and Eticuera ...
The grant extended along both banks of Putah Creek (formerly Rio Los Putos) and encompassed present day Winters. [2] [3] On current maps, the four leagues include 10,750 acres (43.5 km 2) on the south side of Putah Creek in Solano County, and 7,005 acres (28.3 km 2) on the north side of Putah Creek in Yolo County.
The Los Putos grant of 10 square leagues was made in 1843 by Governor Micheltorena. The grant was originally called Rancho Lihuaytos - which was the name of Putah Creek at that time. The grant overlapped the Rancho Rio de los Putos grant of William Wolfskill, and in 1845, Governor Pio Pico made a correcting grant 10 square leagues. [2]
Eel River empties into the Pacific, while Cache Creek and Putah Creek flow into the Sacramento River valley. Lake County has warm, dry summers, and cool, moist winters. In the summer, a continual tropical air mass typically creates high daytime temperatures and cool evening temperatures.