
O.C. fairgrounds' the Ranch opens gates to public in debut during Discovery Day
Fairground officials debuted the facility in a Discovery Day event Wednesday, inviting more than 500 youth to the Costa Mesa site to learn about the care, keeping and use of horses in Orange County's past and present.
'This is a vision the board had; I shared that vision, and the staff got behind it,' said Michele Richards, chief executive, who welcomed guests to the center. 'It's the newest expansion of agricultural education programs at the OC Fair & Event Center.'
Despite a dearth of regular equine occupants (only five, including two that are privately boarded, reside at the roughly 144-stall center) the day's event featured 21 horses that children can visit with, touch and learn more about.
Members of the California State Guard's 26th Cavalry Support Regiment led demonstrations on the use and history of horses in military operations, while six deputies from the Orange County Sheriff's Department's Mounted Enforcement Unit were stationed, hip to hip, at the Ranch's western edge.
Other horses, on loan from other locations in Orange County, included two belonging to a fairgrounds volunteer who illustrated how OCFEC, serving as California's 32nd District Agricultural Assn., is equipped to provide large-animal evacuation services in an emergency or disaster.
Handlers of three resident horses from San Juan Capistrano-based nonprofit Walk Intuit discussed equine-assisted therapy lessons and programs being offered at the Ranch, while representatives from Tanaka Farms' Barnyard program in Irvine introduced 27-year-old rescued miniature horses, Dolly Madison and Lil' Debbie.
'Their owner died and so we took them in. They're just lovely little sassafrases, two old ladies gossiping all day,' joked Shelmarie Main, creator of the Barnyard's programs.
Youths toddled through educational exhibits from Knott's Berry Farm 4-H and Hapa Honey Farm, engaging in activities from veterinary tech students of Anaheim's Platt College and interacting with bunnies, domesticated chickens, a donkey and a llama from the fairgrounds' own animal landscaping team.
For kids who may have been looking to saddle up, Discovery Day at the Ranch offered a stick-horse rodeo, where kids could gallop and practice jumps, and saddles mounted onto bales of hay that provided a ranch-themed photo opp.
Riding lessons, which once flourished at the fairgrounds' former Equestrian Center, could soon rebound, now that OFCEC signed a contract with its first trainer, Sara Zomo, owner of San Juan Capistrano's Zequestrian Riding Academy, who recently began boarding two horses at the facility.
Zomo, who brought out horses Rosie Posey and Princess to meet the kids, said she's looking to meet the needs of clientele in the area and is starting off with those two horses but may bring more.
'The purpose for us expanding is there is a need for fresh blood in the sport, and not a lot of people teach kids,' she said. 'So, we're so excited to be here as a second location and really excited to serve the community.'
Kids, parents and teachers who attended Wednesday's Discovery Day were equally excited to check out the Ranch and see a part of the fairgrounds they hadn't really explored before.
'I think this might have been my best field trip yet,' said Natalie Schild, a kindergarten teacher at Coto de Caza's Wagon Wheel Elementary School, who's taken students to nearby Centennial Farm but had never stepped foot in the Equestrian Center before Wednesday.
'We never knew it was available for field trips,' she continued. 'There was no limit on volunteers, so we gave it a try — it was a great experience.'
Fellow Wagon Wheel kindergartner Dalante Dunklin Jr, 6, happened to be on his first field trip and pointed out a bunny-petting station and being able to touch horses as highlights of the visit. Classmate Malia Nevarez, also 6, agreed petting the horses was 'amazing.'
'Usually we go to Centennial Farm, but this is kind of more free flowing,' said their teacher, Kim Nakamoto. 'This is really fun. It's interactive, and the kids were really looking forward to that.'
Richards, who plans to retire on May 30 after 23 years at the fairgrounds, said she couldn't be more pleased with the Ranch's debut.
'This is exactly what we envisioned,' she said. 'I know it's just the beginning, and I honestly can't wait to come back in a year and see how it's grown.'
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Los Angeles Times
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Around Town: Huntington Beach police, O.C. Sheriff's Department offer free e-bike training
Join the Huntington Beach police and the Orange County Sheriff's Department Saturday, May 31 for a hands-on e-bike training event featuring six 70-minute sessions focused on safe riding practices, traffic awareness and California e-bike laws. Riders can take their own bicycles and helmets to the event, which takes place from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., at Dwyer Middle School, 1502 Palm Ave., in Huntington Beach. Registered participants can receive prizes, giveaways and a sticker for completing the course. Registration is required, and all riders under 18 need a permission slip to attend. To register, visit the event's Eventbrite page. The Orange County fairgrounds' Heroes Hall Museum invites the public to attend a free Speaker Series talk on May 31, from 2 to 4 p.m., titled 'Beyond the Battlefield: Navigating the Journey of Veterans with PTSD.' The event begins with a viewing of the documentary film 'The Volunteer,' which documents the journey of veteran Bruce Nakashima as he searches for and reconnects with a fellow Army Ranger and friend who saved his life in Vietnam. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion on post traumatic stress disorder and its impact on veterans and their families featuring Nick Berardino, a Marine Corps veteran who served in Vietnam; Tom Clark, a Vietnam veteran and Distinguished Flying Cross recipient; and Tim Higle, veteran and director of the South County Veterans Center. Heroes Hall is located at the O.C. fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Admission is free. Local residents are encouraged to join Costa Mesa Planning Commissioners Tuesday, May 27 at 6 p.m. to discuss future land use concepts and key components of the Fairview Developmental Center Specific Plan, which will guide future growth at the 85-acre site. Topics for discussion will include the proposed land use distribution, open space framework, circulation network and overall site organization on the grounds of the decommissioned state hospital site. Tuesday's study session takes place at Costa Mesa City Hall Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive, in Costa Mesa.


Los Angeles Times
16-05-2025
- Los Angeles Times
O.C. fairgrounds' the Ranch opens gates to public in debut during Discovery Day
After more than a year of planning and preparation — and following an exodus of horse trainer tenants and their equines — a new Ranch Community Center at the Orange County fairgrounds this week opened its doors to the visiting public. Fairground officials debuted the facility in a Discovery Day event Wednesday, inviting more than 500 youth to the Costa Mesa site to learn about the care, keeping and use of horses in Orange County's past and present. 'This is a vision the board had; I shared that vision, and the staff got behind it,' said Michele Richards, chief executive, who welcomed guests to the center. 'It's the newest expansion of agricultural education programs at the OC Fair & Event Center.' Despite a dearth of regular equine occupants (only five, including two that are privately boarded, reside at the roughly 144-stall center) the day's event featured 21 horses that children can visit with, touch and learn more about. Members of the California State Guard's 26th Cavalry Support Regiment led demonstrations on the use and history of horses in military operations, while six deputies from the Orange County Sheriff's Department's Mounted Enforcement Unit were stationed, hip to hip, at the Ranch's western edge. Other horses, on loan from other locations in Orange County, included two belonging to a fairgrounds volunteer who illustrated how OCFEC, serving as California's 32nd District Agricultural Assn., is equipped to provide large-animal evacuation services in an emergency or disaster. Handlers of three resident horses from San Juan Capistrano-based nonprofit Walk Intuit discussed equine-assisted therapy lessons and programs being offered at the Ranch, while representatives from Tanaka Farms' Barnyard program in Irvine introduced 27-year-old rescued miniature horses, Dolly Madison and Lil' Debbie. 'Their owner died and so we took them in. They're just lovely little sassafrases, two old ladies gossiping all day,' joked Shelmarie Main, creator of the Barnyard's programs. Youths toddled through educational exhibits from Knott's Berry Farm 4-H and Hapa Honey Farm, engaging in activities from veterinary tech students of Anaheim's Platt College and interacting with bunnies, domesticated chickens, a donkey and a llama from the fairgrounds' own animal landscaping team. For kids who may have been looking to saddle up, Discovery Day at the Ranch offered a stick-horse rodeo, where kids could gallop and practice jumps, and saddles mounted onto bales of hay that provided a ranch-themed photo opp. Riding lessons, which once flourished at the fairgrounds' former Equestrian Center, could soon rebound, now that OFCEC signed a contract with its first trainer, Sara Zomo, owner of San Juan Capistrano's Zequestrian Riding Academy, who recently began boarding two horses at the facility. Zomo, who brought out horses Rosie Posey and Princess to meet the kids, said she's looking to meet the needs of clientele in the area and is starting off with those two horses but may bring more. 'The purpose for us expanding is there is a need for fresh blood in the sport, and not a lot of people teach kids,' she said. 'So, we're so excited to be here as a second location and really excited to serve the community.' Kids, parents and teachers who attended Wednesday's Discovery Day were equally excited to check out the Ranch and see a part of the fairgrounds they hadn't really explored before. 'I think this might have been my best field trip yet,' said Natalie Schild, a kindergarten teacher at Coto de Caza's Wagon Wheel Elementary School, who's taken students to nearby Centennial Farm but had never stepped foot in the Equestrian Center before Wednesday. 'We never knew it was available for field trips,' she continued. 'There was no limit on volunteers, so we gave it a try — it was a great experience.' Fellow Wagon Wheel kindergartner Dalante Dunklin Jr, 6, happened to be on his first field trip and pointed out a bunny-petting station and being able to touch horses as highlights of the visit. Classmate Malia Nevarez, also 6, agreed petting the horses was 'amazing.' 'Usually we go to Centennial Farm, but this is kind of more free flowing,' said their teacher, Kim Nakamoto. 'This is really fun. It's interactive, and the kids were really looking forward to that.' Richards, who plans to retire on May 30 after 23 years at the fairgrounds, said she couldn't be more pleased with the Ranch's debut. 'This is exactly what we envisioned,' she said. 'I know it's just the beginning, and I honestly can't wait to come back in a year and see how it's grown.'


Los Angeles Times
11-04-2025
- Los Angeles Times
Lasting legacies: O.C.'s trailblazing women given the spotlight in special cemetery tour
Though some Orange County residents may recognize Nellie Gail Moulton's name — or even parts of it — most may not truly know who she was. Moulton Parkway and Nellie Gail Ranch are named after her. Following the death of her husband, Lewis Moulton, she managed Moulton Ranch until 1950. She also enjoyed art and donated to various local artists and art groups. 'I knew nothing of Nellie's legacy until much later, after I had graduated college, lived in France for eight years and returned,' said Scott T. Barnes, of Lake Forest, who is chief financial officer at the Moulton Company, treasurer for Moulton Museum and also Nellie Gail Moulton's great-grandson. 'It was only when I moved to Orange County to marry my wife, Grace, that I became familiar with her legacy.' In an effort to raise awareness about and honor historical women, Fairhaven Memorial Park & Mortuary in Santa Ana recently launched a Women in History Tour as part of Women's History Month in March. Tour guides sought to educate the public about the female trailblazers now resting in the cemetery. Accomplished early Orange County landowner Gail Moulton, who lived from 1878 to 1972, was one of them. But there are many others — a total of 14 trailblazing women were featured in the 45-minute tour. 'Everybody, or most everyone [featured] on the tour, either was a first in the field or a first to accomplish something back when things weren't being accomplished by women,' said Cynthia Adair, Fairhaven Memorial Park campaign coordinator, who ran the Women in History tour. Plenty of research was involved — including rounding up information from previous tours, local historical groups and even from a previous memorial service. 'One of my favorite additions was Dorothy Alice Chandler, and we just did her service two years ago,' Adair said. 'I learned about her when we were getting items for her memorial service, and that's when I found out that she was the first Orange County sheriff deputy, female sheriff deputy, and all about her life. And I was able to actually go to her memorial service, so that was such an honor to hear people actually speak about her and learn about her through firsthand stories.' Chandler, who lived between 1928 and 2023, became Orange County Sheriff's Department's first female deputy on Aug. 1, 1949. She grew up on a ranch in Irvine, where she learned to ride horses and shoot guns. She also raised and trained German shepherds. 'My favorite is Bessica Raiche,' Adair said. 'She was the first woman to fly solo [17] years prior to Amelia Earhart, but she did not do transatlantic. She only did continental. So yes, Amelia Earhart does have the transcontinental claim to fame, but we have our own. And she was very scandalous because she went out in public in pants. So all of her neighbors thought, 'Who is this woman?' She was the talk of the town.' Bessica 'Bessie' Raiche, who was born in 1875 and died in 1932. She was a musician, painter and linguist. Raiche and her husband built a Wright brothers-type biplane in their living room. Her first solo airplane flight in the U.S. was on Sept. 16, 1910. There's also Cornelia 'Corrie' Ten Boom, who lived between 1892 and 1983, and wrote 'The Hiding Place,' her autobiography about her family's experience during the Holocaust. 'They were Dutch. But the effects of the Nazis and the Holocaust affected them and as a Christian family, they saved and gave refuge to hundreds of Jews and their families to the point that their family was finally caught,' Adair said. 'She was the only surviving member of her family, and it was found out later that she was released from a concentration camp due to a clerical error and the entire group that she was in was killed like a week later.' After World War II, she came to the U.S. and ended up in Fullerton. She is now buried at Fairhaven. 'It's so wonderful. You go to her grave marker at any time and there's always fresh flowers and it's people who have just read the book or know that she's here,' Adair said. 'She is the person that people stop in our office and are always asking where is she located because they've been so affected by reading her book.' Clara Cushman, who died in 1972, was the first female attorney in Orange County. She was admitted to the Bar Association in 1922. 'There is the first female who passed the bar, but then we have the first female attorney that was practicing,' Adair said. 'So she started practicing before the other one did. So Clara Cushman, her biggest problem when she decided she wanted to practice after passing the bar is nobody wanted to hire her because, heaven forbid, they didn't want a female attorney. So she decided to be a solo practitioner. Her second problem became keeping a sign out — because it was such a novelty to have a female lawyer, people kept stealing her sign.' Dr. Hester Olewiler, who lived from 1895 to 1986, was one of Orange County's first female doctors. She delivered more than 3,000 babies in a time when there were few hospital births. Her first payment for delivering a baby was a rooster. 'So it's kind of a thing in Santa Ana — if you're like third generation, there's a chance that one of your ancestors were delivered by Dr. Olewiler,' Adair said. There were some pretty familiar names on the tour as well — including Renee Mary Segerstrom, who lived between 1928 and 2000, and Virginia Maurine Knott Bender, who lived between 1913 and 2003. 'Renee Segerstrom: She's obviously the wife of [the late] Henry Segerstrom. She just brought so much to Orange County. She handpicked some of the South Coast Plaza stores and restaurants and then was instrumental in bringing performing arts to Orange County,' Adair said. 'Virginia Knott: She is the daughter of Walter and Cordelia Knott, Knott's Berry Farm, and she came to her dad when she was 19 years old with an idea that Knott's Berry Farm needed a gift shop. And that was her thought as a high school student. And so Virginia's Gift Shop came to be at the amusement park, and then she served as director until it was sold in 1997, after her dad retired. I was impressed. I know what I was thinking about at 19 and it wasn't entrepreneurial.' Adair said the list of prominent women laid to rest at the cemetery is like a who's who of Orange County history. 'Looking at it from today's standards, these things that they accomplished don't seem that impressive — but when you go back and you think of the time that they accomplished it in, it really was groundbreaking,' she said. Donna Marsh Peery, office manager for the Tustin Area Historical Society, attended the tour. 'I love history and think it's important to honor and remember these women trailblazers,' she said. 'Now if we tell people a lady doctor, woman pilot or woman attorney, people think nothing of it. The women buried at Fairhaven were the first. They broke down the barriers to make those careers commonplace today.'