Category Archives: This ‘n’ That

CAPS/ECTV Crew produces safety video for schools

CAPS is holding an open house.

Meet the new CAPS/ECTV Crew – the talented high school students at El Camino in the media education program at CAPS. Recently the ECTV team worked with Ventura Police school resource officers (SROs) to produce a new school preparedness instructional video for teachers and students in the Ventura Unified School District.

The ECTV program was created by CAPS in partnership with the VUSD. The career education program provides high school students with hands-on training in all aspects of media production including writing, directing, producing, recording, and editing their own award-winning programs.

KPPQ’s DJ of the month is Kathleen Good, host of “In the Women’s Room”. She has been a member of CAPS for fifteen years which constitutes nearly her entire retirement. For eight years she produced environmental videos for CAPS-TV.

When CAPS Media invested in a local community radio station—it was a no-brainer for Kathleen to propose a show. The format came together almost instantly because she had been working with women’s issues as well as environmental issues, and had honed skills such as preparation, timing, sequencing, interviewing skills, as well as storytelling.

Kathleen says” “In the Women’s Room” is your place for enlightening discussions with experts about our history, health, psychology, politics, workplace, art, child-rearing, literature, social and economic issues, environment, and much, much more. Every woman knows what the issues are—we live them every day!” Tune in Monday and Wednesday at 8a, Tuesday and Thursday at 2pm and Saturday at 1pm on KPPQ at 104.1fm or streaming on myTuner.

Join us for a special CAPS Open House on Thursday, October 5th from 4-p.m. to 8pm at the CAPS Media Center. Everyone is invited to drop by, meet the CAPS crew, tour the facility, and enjoy brief, hands-on, informative demonstrations on all aspects of media production including videography, studio, radio and podcast production, scripting and storytelling, live streaming, video editing and much more.

CAPS is Ventura’s public access media center, managing Channel 6 (public) and Channel 15 (government and education), plus KPPQ radio at 104.1fm and video streaming. CAPS crew members provide expertise and service to the City of Ventura by covering City Council and other meetings at City Hall, as well as producing informational public service videos and more.

At the CAPS Media Center, the team offers one-on-one training to the public in all aspects of media production helping CAPS Members to produce their own projects. In addition, CAPS has all the tools Members need to produce their stories including cameras, tripods, sound gear, editing computers and more.

Anyone who lives, works, or attends school in Ventura is welcome to become a CAPS Member and take advantage of the training and resources CAPS has to offer. Currently CAPS Members include teenagers, young and mid-career professionals, educators, storytellers, retirees, and everyone in between. In addition, CAPS Members also include local community councils, and nonprofit, faith-based and other community service organizations throughout Ventura.

The CAPS Media Center is located a 65 Day Road, between Loma Vista and Telegraph, on the east side of Ventura College directly across from Foothill High School.

Join us for the CAPS Open House on Thursday, October 5th. Discover a world of limitless creative possibilities at CAPS. We know you’ll be surprised and enjoy the people you’ll meet and what you’ll find inside the CAPS Media Center.

Love VC, Inc. Presents Love Ventura – A City Wide Day or Service

Love VC, Inc. and Title Sponsor Greg Abrams of American Pacific Mortgage proudly presents the second annual “Love Ventura – Day of Service”.

The Love VC, Inc 501c3 kicked off this annual day of service in

October of 2022 and found that it was a great success, as measured by their goals. With the goal of 10 projects serving a variety of non-profits and organizations spread across the city of Ventura, and aiming for 100 volunteers, the non-profit was pleased to host 188 volunteers, ranging in ages from 1 to 80 years old.

The 2023 day of service kicks off October 7th and has grown since last year’s inaugural event, currently hosting 16 projects and the goal of 300 volunteers. The event starts off with a morning rally at Plaza Park, in downtown Ventura. DJ Jon D, of Nautical Thrust, will be energizing the crowd with music, while volunteers get checked in or signed up, collect their free Love Ventura t-shirt, grab some breakfast, and enjoy vendors and a few activities to get excited and motivated for their day. We encourage all participants to join the rally. This is an exciting way to see the magnitude of volunteerism provided to show our city some love; all in one day!

The day is focused on connecting, giving and serving with collaboration at the core. The city of Ventura has a wide array of non-profits, individuals and organizations that provide services to the community, that it only makes sense to highlight, promote and partner with them! Volunteers can find all opportunities at www.loveventura.org where they can see descriptions and details for each project and register their spot for the day.

Love VC, Inc. is proud to bring Love Ventura to the city as an annual day of service, providing projects that range in both difficulty and function, making it possible for all ages, abilities and desires to participate – from manual labor and beautification projects, to painting and cleaning, and encouragement projects that work directly with people.

Additional details include:

Love Ventura is held on October 7, 2023
Morning Rally at Plaza Park (Thompson Blvd/Fir St) from 8:00-9:45am
Service Projects begin at 10am and end at 1pm
Volunteers are asked to pre-register for their desired project at www.loveventura.org
To learn more about event host Love VC, Inc. – visit www.lovevc.net
Love VC, Inc. has the sole focus of inspiring our community to love each other through connecting, giving and serving.

 

Wedding held at Olivas Adobe

On September 12, Megan Senate was united in matrimony with Webster Nygard at the beautiful Olivas Adobe. Maid of Honor was Jasmyn Christenson and best man was Veck Nygard. Parents of the bride and groom were in attendance at the garden wedding and reception at the historic landmark where the ceremony was held.  

Lessons from National Bee Day and pollinators

Lincoln Elementary School teacher Owen Garrood instructed his students to come to school dressed in yellow and black.

by David Goldstein

Honeybees work all day in service to their hive, and their pollination is essential for the growth of many plants, but the whole venture is sustainable only because the bees are paid. The payment is made by plants in the form of nectar. The lesson: work must be rewarded to be sustainable.

Lessons from honeybees were also applied to human society shortly after National Bee Day, was the third Saturday in August, by an innovative teacher at Lincoln Elementary School in Ventura. Owen Garrood, known as “Mr. G” to his kindergarten students, instructed his students to come to school dressed in yellow and black. He wore a yellow and black striped shirt, and they all wore antennae head bands. Mr. G noted, “Using color as a theme” creates “a community feel… connects them to their classroom and unites them as a group.”

Even bees’ buzzing sound was part of his lesson. As instructed, the kids made a low, buzzing sound as they walked across the courtyard and through the school. As he wrote to me in an email, “It is scientifically proven that the vibrations made in the throat cause the mind to settle and calm anxiety; hence the reason they use it in yoga.”

Last month, other organizations also used the occasion of National Bee Day to schedule educational outreach. At an event on August 31, the Museum of Ventura County hosted an event educating the public about pollinators such as honeybees and monarch butterflies. The museum, in Ventura, hosted presenters from the Ventura office of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Participants planted yarrow seeds in pots they personalized and were allowed to keep.

Bee Day at the Ventura County Agricultural Museum in Santa Paula, on August 19, had many more activities. Dozens of children scurried from crafts to displays and entertainment. Children made candles from wicks rolled into small sheets of bee’s wax, and presenters gave context to a year-round highlight of the museum — a working beehive. The hive, on permanent display within the museum, is fully enclosed with transparent plastic, but has an access port to flowers and plants outside.

During the remainder of the school year, Students for Education and Agriculture, SEEAG, a non-profit organization serving schools throughout Ventura County, will teach students about the importance of honeybees and other pollinators to local agriculture. Their third-grade education program, Farm Lab, observes pollinators at work amidst lemon blossoms. SEEAG’s middle and high school programs, which focus on agricultural careers, spotlight local insectaries, beekeepers, and companies working to preserve and cultivate pollinators, according to SEEAG Education Director Seth Wilmoth

Just as flowers “pay” bees with nectar, human society must also pay a debt to pollinators if we want to sustain their work. You can see the types of plants best suited to sustain the work of pollinators at the Ventura County Government Center’s two pollinator gardens. The newer of the two consists of two planters between the Hall of Justice cafeteria and the Hall of Administration north entrance. In addition to plant selection, using only organic pest control methods in those gardens also boosts pollinator populations, according to General Services Agency facilities manager Patrick Squires.

David Goldstein, Environmental Resource Analyst with the Ventura County Public Works Agency, may be reached at (805) 658-4312 or [email protected]