Drizzling Rain Paddling Jenner and Still Dealing With the Site Hackers

Wednesday January 4, 2017 Jenner CA.

I should of put those rain pants on

It looked like the weather would be good to day at Jenner with no rain showing, so I headed on down that way. I put the boat in the water and paddled across to the Penny Island;s upper end channel where I found Steve in his boat taking it easy.islandchannel

 

We were shooting the bull when John S. showed up in his kayak so we shot the bull some more.

Time to get the rain pants on

All this time, it was starting to drizzle lightly and I didn’t bring my rain pants, so I thought I should go get them from my car and put them on. Sometimes that makes the drizzle stop. John left to go down the island backside and Steve and I headed back to my car where I put my rain pants on and it was still drizzling. Steve was already rigged for rain.

John ditched us

We headed down to the bottom end of Penny Island looking for John, but he had ditched us. :O) He tends to be a loner, somewhat.

It was drizzling or spitting rain and there was some cold air coming off the ocean, so we decided not to go down to the mouth area, but instead headed up the island’s back channel. It’s an overcast day and drizzling as we paddle along.river

 

We can hear some geese going over up above. They don’t sound like Canadian geese, but some other kind of goose.geesefly

 

End channel and going ashore on the island

We Paddled over by Candee’s place and sat for a bit, then headed to the upper end of Penny Island and entered the little channel there as Steve wanted to go ashore on the island for a break.channel

 

We’re eyeing that little shore landing on the left under the trees to pull into.island

 

The old milk barn

We land and go ashore. We’re headed to the old milk barn through these old trees. You can see the barn up ahead.trail

 

Here’s the old milk barn which was used by the last Indian family to live on the island. I think they were still here in the 1960s, but not sure.milkbarn

 

It’s really a processing building

This is where things got milked. I say things as they had cows and goats. I think the shed was also used to process other things that they sold to the locals such as fish from the ocean, as they were known to go out on a reef just outside the mouth to fish. The also likely used the building to butcher animals too, so it’s really  more a processing building.barnstall

 

Here’s another view of the old milk barn. It’s the last standing building on the island.barnview

 

We spent a bit of time on the island and Steve had lunch, then we got back in our boats here.boats

 

Headed on up the river in the drizzle

It was still drizzling but we were dressed for it now, so we headed on up the river to this spot I call Eagle’s landing and stopped for a bit.landing

 

By the way, the river is up and muddy again from some more rain we just had, so debrie is drifting down the river.

We continued on up along the river’s edge and stopped in this spot for a bit.riverspot

 

It sorta looks like a kayak up there floating

We saw what looked like it might be a kayak flouting up river so we continued on up to see and as we got closer it turned out to be a dock from bridge Heaven which moved down river just a bit, so we stopped at the place I call the Grotto for a bit.

Then we crossed over the river to the other side and saw these merganser ducks by Paddy’s rock. The white ones with the black heads are the male ducks which come from somewhere and join the females around this time of year. Otherwise they don’t seem to hang out together once they nest.gansers

 

It drizzle all day

It never did stop drizzling. We headed on back to Jenner which looked like this.paddling

 

We hit the boat ramp and pulled our boats out of the water and went on home for the day.

It wasn’t drizzling at my house, ,but I was beat, so that was my day.

Playing hacker blocker

In the evening I played hacker blocker with the hackers that have been trying to penetrate my site. They seem to be coming from countries all over the world to get something on my site that another hacker put there which I removed and isn’t there now, so they can’t access it, but they keep trying. I think I’m winning as they are doing it less. When I see them try to log into my site, I use my Wordfence protection software to block their IP networks so they are blocked from my site.

Anyway, I hope they go away soon as I’m tired of dealing with them. Right now they are all locked out and my site is secure. They basically use one’s site to relay illegal type stuff to their friends or use it to email out lots of spam emails.

Anyway, that was my day.

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4 Responses to Drizzling Rain Paddling Jenner and Still Dealing With the Site Hackers

  1. Dennis Olson says:

    Hi, Bob. Any clue how Penny Island got its name? I figure if anybody knew, it would be you….

    • Bob says:

      Hi Dennis,
      Here’s all I know about it.
      << In 1867 John Rule purchased 4,000 acres of Rancho Muniz at the mouth of the Russian River. The following year, Charles Jenner reportedly received permission from Rule to erect a small house on the north side of the Russian River and named the spot Jenner Gulch. In 1905 the Redwood Lumber Company mill was erected on the south side of the river, which would be at Bridge Heaven. It was later rebuilt upriver at Duncans Mills. Jenner School opened in 1905 for children of the mill workers. In the 1920s the Penny brothers owned and lived on the 29-acre island in the Russian River (now called Penny Island). <<<<< I got that from here: http://www.scwa.ca.gov/files/docs/projects/estuary-eir/4-8_Cultural%20Resources.pdf
      Bob

      • Dennis says:

        Thanks Bob! That is interesting, and I wonder if that old Mill on the south side of the river is the source of stacks of submerged boards I have seen there when the water is clear?

    • Bob says:

      Hi Dennis,
      Yes, the cut boards by Bridge Haven that are submerged in the water would be from that mill. Usually they burned all the scrap boards off the sides of the logs, but for some reason they threw those boards in the river instead. Maybe the idea was for the river to take most of the scrap to the ocean during winter floods? It might have been safer than having a fire burning in those early days?
      Bob

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