Caption the photos!
Aint these cars all wheel drive rally ready?
Kristopher Olinger was murdered in 1997 at the turnout by the foghorn.

Jacobo Ruelas, who was 18 when Olinger was stabbed to death and dumped on the Pacific Grove Recreation Trail, faces a potential death penalty if convicted.
Despite years of prodding by Olinger’s mother, Shell Phillips, there were no arrests until 2006, when Pacific Grove police got a “hit” between the state’s new palm print database and a print lifted from the car.
North Main Street, Salinas. Not one electric car or hybrid on the lot, LOL.

Sustainable P.G.’s Green Spot Has A Carbon Emitting Evil Twin
Until two months ago, thousands of shrieking seagulls would converge on the Marina landfill every day, distracting workers, pecking through trash and pooping everywhere.
The coastal birds have long flocked to the dump to feast on a smorgasbord of landfill leftovers, such as fast food, chicken bones and rotting fruit.
But that’s all changed. There are new birds in town, and they’re shaking things up.
“I don’t know where the seagulls are,” Monterey Regional Waste Management District general manager William Merry told The Pine Cone. “But they are not here.”
Since March, the MRWMD has contracted with a Turlock company to release falcons and other birds of prey to drive all but a few of the seagulls away.
I know where the gulls are, they are feasting from open dumpsters in P.G.
Zocalos Dumpster
Better Than A Distressed Seagull Alarm, It’s Hawks Hunting Prey
Second hand men’s clothing store. Prices were insane, I swore that this was really some kind of speakeasy or card room in the back with the old clothes and umbrellas as a front.

Anyone for a hot dog stand in front of the Mvsevm?
Next the poor sellers of “Stuff No One Wants But Would Buy To Give To Someone Else” will complain that the market is taking away their customers or not leaving any spaces on Lighthouse Avenue to park their carpet cleaner vans.
Pacific Grove’s farmers market will move a block downhill from its downtown location on Lighthouse Avenue, pending approval by the city Planning Commission.
The move was undertaken to satisfy complaints by merchants on Lighthouse that the market was taking away business each Monday.
“The complainers,” Bennett said, “have won.”
Constant fail, tax for more Library services. Need to pay for more non-reading events.

The City Council voted unanimously late Wednesday to place a parcel tax measure on the November ballot that would provide money for the city library.
The tax would need approval by two-thirds of voters to pass. A similar measure for a $95 parcel tax failed in November 2009 because only 65.91 percent of voters supported it.

Resident that was once called a “moron” by the runaway mayor Dan Cort is authoring the revision in the city’s policy on tree removal.
“I want to be safe in my own yard,” said Del Monte Park-area resident Georgia Booth, who was a founder of Residents for Responsible Change and co-author of a proposed revision of the tree ordinance — which got a lot of votes from workshop participants. “Large canopy trees don’t belong in small Pacific Grove yards.”
Eliminating the two-for-one replacement requirement was a top vote-getter, as were proposals that property owners, not the city, decide when a hazardous tree should be removed, that no permit fee for it should be charged, and that property owners who plant a tree may remove it
without a permit.
Hear-Old Reports the fight was about a woman.
Alexander R. Lyon, 20, was arrested and booked on suspicion of stabbing a 20-year-old on Sunday at a home in the 1100 block of Forest Avenue.
Police said they were called to the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula at 4 a.m. on Sunday where a 20-year-old male victim said he was stabbed several times during a fight.
Super Secret weapons being developed.. now we know why that innocent NOAA office needs bright lights and security worthy of protecting the pope.

In a full-scale regional exercise focusing on the state’s response and recovery to multiple terrorist attacks at Bay Area ports, federal, state, and city officials took part in the Golden Guardian emergency preparedness program.
At Pier 48 in San Francisco, the city’s police and fire departments, along with its Emergency Operations Center, conducted a drill demonstrating the ability of dolphins and California Sea Lions to help protect coastal areas from maritime attacks.