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08-09-2009, 11:37 AM
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TANSTAAFL!
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: SoCal desert
1,425 posts, read 376,186 times
Reputation: 1559
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Use to water ski on the Salton Sea as a teenager back in the late sixties and early seventies. My sister and her husband had a vacation place at Bombay Beach - her property is underwater now.
Wouldn't go there now, but it sure was fun back then as a teenager :-)
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08-09-2009, 01:34 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Minnesota
161 posts, read 117,322 times
Reputation: 34
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Our family and friends used to go there alot back in the early '60's. We had alot of fun - the water was always a comfortable temperature - a few times it was too warm and we would have to get out to cool off. But we hand the dying fish there also. I would like to find a book or blog about the Salton Sea back "then".
The one memory that stands out in my mind is that it was very warm there and hard to keep things cold, as we needed ice and coolers. And the ice just didn't last very long. Our mom thought that we had to have milk everyday, so she would take powdered milk. Mix that with water that even if "room temperature" makes for some very nasty tasting powdered milk. And if we ran to one of the little stores we would get an ice cream bar and because of the heat it would melt faster than you could eat it.
I have tried to find stories and photo's of when that area was so popular but haven't come across any.
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08-09-2009, 01:51 PM
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TANSTAAFL!
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: SoCal desert
1,425 posts, read 376,186 times
Reputation: 1559
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Well, there's a free Google book called The Salton Sea: an account of Harriman's fight with the Colorado River, by George Kennan.
But it was published 1917, so I think it's a little before our time 
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08-09-2009, 05:29 PM
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Ballroom Diva
Status:
"I'm outta here"
(set 3 days ago)
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Join Date: Aug 2006
11,418 posts, read 6,694,955 times
Reputation: 7615
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Quote:
Originally Posted by IloveOC
Our family and friends used to go there alot back in the early '60's. We had alot of fun - the water was always a comfortable temperature - a few times it was too warm and we would have to get out to cool off. But we hand the dying fish there also. I would like to find a book or blog about the Salton Sea back "then".
The one memory that stands out in my mind is that it was very warm there and hard to keep things cold, as we needed ice and coolers. And the ice just didn't last very long. Our mom thought that we had to have milk everyday, so she would take powdered milk. Mix that with water that even if "room temperature" makes for some very nasty tasting powdered milk. And if we ran to one of the little stores we would get an ice cream bar and because of the heat it would melt faster than you could eat it.
I have tried to find stories and photo's of when that area was so popular but haven't come across any.
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I just bought a book at the Palm Springs Air Museum that is all aerial photos of the Coachella Valley, which includes the Salton Sea and surrounding cities. It is photos and history. The book is called Coachella Valley Above All by Richard J. Soltys. I am not finding a copyright or publish date n the book, but it appears to have been published in 2006, The ISBN is 0-9726856-1-1 and there's an email address to get this book, it is www. rjspub@verizon. net. Hope this helps.
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08-11-2009, 02:29 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Portlandia "burbs"
2,525 posts, read 1,078,648 times
Reputation: 2508
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GoodbyeCalifornia
The Salton Sea's heyday was in the 1950's and 1960's. Developers moved into the area, promoting it as a sort of "Desert Riviera".
Unfortunately the boom never really materialized. By the 1980's, the area was in decline.
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Does this explain the unfinished infrastructure that we saw there several years ago? There is what is obviously the start of the ground work (foundation for a subdivision and possibily utilities) that were obviously left ignored for a long time. That really baffled us.
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08-11-2009, 02:39 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Tulare, CA
130 posts, read 45,620 times
Reputation: 229
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The Salton Sea, while being scenic and serene-especially from a distance, is actually a cesspool when you get close to it. No sane person I know of would dare stick a finger in that water let alone swim in it. It's sad that it fell into its present state of decay. It had so much potential.
Now. It would be just best if the Colorado River Delta could somehow be fractured and let the Gulf Of California retake the Imperial/Coachella/Mexicali valleys the way it did in antiquity.
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08-11-2009, 07:36 PM
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TANSTAAFL!
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: SoCal desert
1,425 posts, read 376,186 times
Reputation: 1559
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And don't forget the crazy artist, I think his place is called Salvation Mountain?
He's been around for years and years.
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08-12-2009, 09:55 AM
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Currently receiving coffee via central line
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: San Sevaine, SoFo
2,716 posts, read 1,321,162 times
Reputation: 2923
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Des-Lab
Now. It would be just best if the Colorado River Delta could somehow be fractured and let the Gulf Of California retake the Imperial/Coachella/Mexicali valleys the way it did in antiquity.
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Why?
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08-12-2009, 08:25 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Aug 2009
64 posts, read 16,866 times
Reputation: 52
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fontucky
Why?
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Yeah, that is a crappy idea.
My grandfather owned some land out in the Salton Sea too. 
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08-12-2009, 11:06 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2006
565 posts, read 487,500 times
Reputation: 131
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salton sea is a nasty dead lake. it smells and is polluted with raw sewage.
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