70.6 F
Gilroy
September 16, 2025

First Street update

First Street in Gilroy between Monterey Road and Santa Teresa Boulevard is turning into a pot-holed disaster that needs immediate repaving. While I recognize that because it is Hwy. 152, this section of road is under the control of Caltrans, probably meaning nothing will happen for the next five years. Too bad that our beloved City Council appears to be powerless to exercise any influence on Caltrans to fix this section of road before it deteriorates further and makes driving it more unsafe. I'm wondering when First Street is going to be fixed.

Panhandling with dog

While leaving the Camino Arroyo shopping center recently, I saw a woman panhandling at the entrance/exit between Kohl's and Panera. My concern was that she had a large dog with her. What I don't understand is, California state Penal Code Section 597. 1 states: "Every owner, driver, or keeper of any animal who permits the animal to be in any building, enclosure, lane, street, square, or lot of any city, county, city and county, or judicial district without proper care and attention is guilty of a misdemeanor." The statute also creates "a duty in peace officers, humane society officers, and animal control officers to cause the animal to be killed or rehabilitated and placed in a suitable home on information that the animal is stray or abandoned." Why aren't these dogs being taken away from owners so poor they cannot properly take care of themselves with daily food, water and shelter? Shouldn't the police, city employees, or animal control take the animal for the animal’s sake and try to find it a home?

Ugly dump truck on Mantelli

There's a big ugly dump truck that's been parked on the east side of Mantelli near Wren. It's been there for about a month and it's blocking the view of our beautiful park for our neighbors and us. We've called the city a couple of times and nothing's happened. The name on the truck is Back and Forth, LLC. I don't understand why the truck is able to park on city streets for weeks at a time without ever moving. Can you help with this?

Replace the tattered American flag

Regarding the American flag that is flying over the McDonald's on Leavesley and Camino Arroyo near the Gilroy Premium Outlets: For the past week, maybe longer, the flag has appeared torn up. It looks so raggedy and disrespectful. I'm wondering why the manager or the owner of that McDonald's doesn't take care of it, or at least repair it. I've seen a lot of other people notice this, too. I think the management should be alerted to this and have the American flag waving, as it should be.

Gilroy actor Steven Good appears in TV film role

Steven Good of Gilroy will be up in front of a national TV audience in a leading role for the first time next week and he feels pretty good about it.

“Valley of the Heart” – A nostalgic visit to a disturbing past

“Valley of the Heart” is a heart wrenching story of actual happenings and how the almost forgotten Second World War affected the people of the time. It jars those of us that lived through that moment to remember a time we would rather forget. It also shows this generation what went on and cautions about it not letting the past happen again.

Companion planting with nasturtiums

There is nothing sweeter than walking out into your own yard and picking a piece of red leaf lettuce or pulling a juicy carrot and eating it fresh from the garden. Planting season is always an exciting time of year when I start daydreaming about the great kinds of veggies I can grow or I discover a new, fun heirloom to plant.I just moved to south county and I will be getting ready to put in my first garden here in Gilroy. Every new garden presents a brand new process of trial and error. An opportunity to find out what will grow best in a new outdoor space. This year is no exception, and I have lots of big questions to ask myself, namely: What should I plant? Where in my yard would each plant get the best light exposure? Will I depend on the plants for one season or should I invest in a few perennials that I can enjoy for years to come?But, being an organic gardener, one of the most important considerations I have is figuring out how to deal with pests naturally. It is a conscious choice to avoid pesticides and it need not be a reactive process. I can be proactive and use companion planting as a natural remedy to ward off common garden pests, like aphids and beetles. Rather than search for a treatment after the pest has already made a home.Companion planting works by creating a symbiotic relationship between plants in the garden. A companion plant can serve to either repel certain pests or perhaps attract beneficial ones. The companion plant may also provide a suitable decoy for the plant or vegetable that we hope to get a successful yield from. One of my favorite companion plants is the nasturtium, which has endless benefits in the garden. They are beautiful to boot.Years ago, when I first started using organic measures in my garden, I learned that planting nasturtiums in your tomato beds will draw aphids away from your precious tomato plants. The first time I saw this in my own garden, I was blown away by the intense cluster of black aphids feeding on this little plant near the base of my heirloom tomatoes. Nasturtiums are not only a delightful and alluring trap crop, but their peppery tasting flowers and even their small round lily pad shaped leaves are edible. I especially like the look of its jewel toned petals sprinkled on my salad. It is also interesting to note that even the seeds are edible and can be pickled.And nasturtiums aren’t just great for keeping your tomatoes free of aphids, they are a good companion for a variety of plants, including most members of the brassica family. Brassicas are cruciferous vegetables that include cabbage, kale, and broccoli to name a few. Nasturtiums need little calcium, making it a great companion plant for brassicas, which have a high need for calcium.Nasturtiums can also help to improve the flavor of several plants in the garden including: melons, squash, cucumbers, and others in the cucurbit family. They can be planted on the edges of your melon or squash beds to improve the flavor of the fruits. In addition to protecting your veggies from aphids, nasturtiums will fend off squash bugs, striped cucumber beetles, and other vine boring pests.The brightly colored blossoms of the nasturtium also attract bees and other pollinators important to a healthy garden environment. They are relatively easy-going plants that thrive in poor soil and don’t require a lot of water. They can pretty much be neglected—thrown down to grow under any plants, and they reseed quite easily.Nasturtiums can be bought as seeds or seedlings from your local garden center. But they grow quickly enough from seed, root divisions, or cuttings. Often they are so prolific, volunteers will crop up year after year. I like to harvest the dropped seeds to dry and save them for sharing and growing again next year.However simple it may be, the nasturtium plant is a beautiful, yet powerful adversary to have in the garden. If you have not already welcomed nasturtiums into your garden, consider making this spring their season to shine.  

Peak of success

SOUTH OF Monterey, the Santa Lucia Range rises boldly from the Pacific Ocean and parallels the coast southward for 105 miles. We know the range best for the local Big Sur coastline, where beautiful sheer conifer- cloaked cliffs plunge into the sea. But the range also has an inland side that rises above the Salinas Valley. While the Big Sur coast gets all the attention, the east side has a hidden nook that I promise will surprise and amaze you.

New winemakers find strong support in South Valley

Santa Clara Valley has everything it needs to become the next big wine area in California: the grapes, the winemakers and most importantly people who love wine and the California wine lifestyle,” says winemaker Jeffrey Fadness of La Vie Dansante Wines via email.

Thinking about long marriages

On the occasion of my 25th wedding anniversary a few years ago, it dawned on me that I had been married to my husband for fully half my life. That realization floored me. My life as a carefree child and teenager seemed to stretch for eons, while our marriage still seemed so new. The year we married, 1982, the U.S. divorce rate was about 50 percent. According to Wikipedia, the current divorce rate is now about 53 percent.

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