Spooner Transportation Hub makes noticeable progress

SPOONER SUMMIT, Nev. – The Spooner Transportation Hub appears to be making very rapid progress, with the removal of trees drawing attention along State Route 28.

The project, which began in May, will supply an additional 250 parking spots, a watercraft inspection station and an access point for Tahoe Transportation District transit services, along with restrooms and EV charging spaces.

The project site is located near the Spooner Lake State Park entrance and is a part of regional partners’ larger initiative to reduce unsafe roadside parking along State Route 28.

The Tribune reached out to the Nevada Department of Transportation (NDOT), a partner on the project along with Tahoe Transportation District, Tahoe Regional Transportation Agency (TRPA), the U.S. Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, and Nevada State Parks, to ask why this project feels like it is making such quick progress.

“Each construction project is unique, with components that impact [the] timeline of each phase of construction,” Meg Ragonese, a spokesperson for NDOT, said.

Ragonese says the construction now underway actually follows years of project development, including extensive design and coordination.

However, the current phase of construction involves tree removal, and as she explains, “This type of eye-level tree removal can have a more profound visual impact than compared to underground utility work that isn’t as fully seen by passersby. With projects like this, you can visually see a quick change in a short amount of time.”

The project site for the Spooner Transportation Hub.
Rob Galloway / Tahoe Daily Tribune

Ragonse says the contractors are working very efficiently, using specialized tree-removal experts and equipment for this stage of construction under a U.S. Forest Service permit.

The construction is also taking place in an area with no underground utilities, such as storm drains, water, sewer, electrical, communication, or highway traffic considerations, which impact construction schedules.

Once the project is past the tree removal work, things may appear to slow down. The project will enter its general excavation phase, a more intricate and detailed construction phase that includes tasks such as final grading, drainage and parking lot paving.

The project is on schedule to be completed at the end of next year.

From Stray to Hero   

TRUCKEE, Calif. – It sounds like a story straight out of Hollywood: a stray dog rescued in California ends up a hero, helping save lives in Venezuela after a natural disaster. But it’s the real-life story of Greta, an adult dog who arrived at the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe as a stray in 2024, and ended up searching through the rubble of collapsed buildings in Venezuela following a pair of catastrophic earthquakes. But for those who spent time with her at HSTT, there were early signs of greatness. 

“Our staff quickly noticed her friendly personality, unwavering confidence, and one undeniable obsession, tennis balls, said Steph Nistler, CEO of the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe. “Those traits weren’t just charming; they were exactly what the Search Dog Foundation looks for in future disaster search dogs.”  

Greta and Arby Fields
Provided / Search Dog Foundation 

When HSTT shared Greta’s story on Facebook, both a Search Dog Foundation volunteer and HSTT team members recognized something special. Having partnered with the Search Dog Foundation before, HSTT reached out, believing Greta had the potential to become something extraordinary, and they were right.  

Greta was accepted into the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation’s training program, where trainers discovered she was every bit as remarkable as HSTT staff had hoped. Smart, energetic, social, and driven by an incredible desire to search, Greta thrived in the program. She graduated in May 2024 and was paired with firefighter Arby Fields of California Task Force 2.  

Arby’s own journey to becoming a search-and-rescue handler is just as inspiring. Before becoming a firefighter, Arby played professional baseball for the Chicago White Sox and the Seattle Mariners. After his baseball career ended, he followed a different calling, one inspired by a terrifying experience during the 2005 Southern California wildfires. As flames surrounded his neighborhood, Arby experienced first-hand the courage and compassion of firefighters who brought hope during one of the scariest moments of his life. That experience shaped his future.  

When Arby later learned about FEMA canine handlers, he knew that was the path he wanted to pursue. When he first met Greta during handler training, he knew he had made the right decision for both of them. 

“After an agility demonstration, Greta ran right to me and leapt into my arms. I knew right then the bond had been created,” Arby recalls.  

Together, the pair earned FEMA certification in February 2025, qualifying them to deploy on disasters throughout the United States and internationally with USA-2. On June 25, 2026, that call came.  

Following the catastrophic 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes that struck Venezuela, Greta and Arby deployed as part of USA-2 alongside other elite search-and-rescue teams from around the world. As hundreds lost their lives and thousands remained missing beneath collapsed buildings, Greta began doing exactly what she was trained to do, using her incredible nose to search for survivors. 

“Greta’s story is a powerful reminder of why every shelter animal deserves a second chance. The frightened stray who once wandered into our shelter is now a highly trained disaster search dog whose work may help save lives in one of the world’s most challenging moments,” says Nistler. “We are incredibly proud to have played a small part in Greta’s journey and grateful to the Search Dog Foundation for recognizing her extraordinary potential. Most of all, we’re thankful to Arby for believing in her, trusting her, and forming a partnership built on courage, dedication, and an unbreakable bond.”  

As Greta and Arby continue their lifesaving work in Venezuela, HSTT asks our community to join in wishing them, and all the first responders and canine teams, strength, safety, and success.  

“Sometimes, the dog waiting quietly in a shelter kennel isn’t just waiting for a home,” says Nistler. “Sometimes, they’re waiting to become a hero.” 

Arby & Greta with the Search Dog Foundation.
Provided / Search Dog Foundation 

Regan Beach repairs will start in September

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – Frequent visitors to Regan Beach have seen the bolted metal fencing preventing people from leaning over the damaged railing. The beach and park, owned by the city, is the oldest beach facility and will undergo repairs by September.

In 2015, a rehabilitation plan for Regan Beach was drafted to help upgrade the facilities, enhance recreational access and restore the shoreline. Eight years later, it was also included in the city’s ADA Transition Plan to improve accessibility.

The California Tahoe Conservancy awarded the city with a $500,000 grant in March 2025, which the city matched with a $50,000 fund for ADA upgrades and a $100,000 fund from the general fund undesignated excess reserves.

According to the city, the public works staff has been working to finalize the scope of work for repairs to the railing, reinforcing the retaining wall and patching asphalt.

The project still must be bid on and a contractor must be selected, but once those are squared away, work is expected to begin in September of this year.

Larry Fitzgerald’s wildest fan request at ACC? Signing a baby

What is the craziest thing a fan has ever asked a professional football player and Hall of Famer Larry Fitzgerald to do? The answer might not be what you expect.

“I signed a baby yesterday,” Fitzgerald said. “It was in a onesie, and the baby was sleeping. I didn’t really want to wake the baby, so I was very gentle with the signature on the back.”

During the American Century Championship at Lake Tahoe, Fitzgerald shared one of the strangest fan interactions he’s had this weekend.

“I’ve been asked to hold a baby, take a picture with a baby, but never to sign a baby,” he said. “So, that was a first.”

The former wide receiver built a reputation as one of the NFL’s most consistent and respected players during his 17-year career. Fitzgerald ranks second all time in NFL history in receiving yards and set a standard for excellence with his reliability, longevity and production.

Beyond his accomplishments on the field, Fitzgerald is widely recognized for his impact in the community. He was a co-recipient of the 2016 Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award, one of the league’s highest honors for charitable and philanthropic contributions.

Writers in the wild: Sharing a birthday with a 250-year-old nation

I was born on July 4th, and as far as holiday birthdays go, it’s a pretty good deal. Christmas babies definitely get the short end of the stick (why buy you birthday gifts if you’ll be getting a Christmas one?) and Thanksgiving and St. Patrick’s fall somewhere in the middle (turkey and/or leprechaun-themed socks again?), sharing with America means you always get the day off, you nearly always have a great day for grilling and if you like a lot of attention, you can always pretend they’re shooting off fireworks just for you.

My parents immigrated to the United States and it just so happens that a Filipino holiday, Republic Day falls on the fourth of July as well. It’s officially also an independence day, as it marks the Philippines forming a republic after years of being a U.S. colony. Definitely not as much fanfare around that holiday, but my birthday has always been a fascinating reminder to me about an important part of my identity.

Normally, I spend my birthday with my family, but this year, I figured that sharing my birthday with a 250-year-old nation could be a fun time in Tahoe.

Yes, I know locals usually run for cover around this time. In fact, before the weekend even started, I noticed quite a few tourists had already come to the beaches I visit on my daily walks. (Maybe they were taking a page out of founding father John Adam’s book, who believed we should celebrate on July 2nd, when the vote was actually cast on the Declaration of Independence.) Despite all that, I settled in on the grass across from St. Theresa’s to watch the parade on the morning of Independence Day.

Having been in quite a few parades myself, it’s funny to be on the sidelines. In the past, I’ve had to prep for singing and dancing on a float, marching for a 2.5 mile stretch or handing out stickers and candy in 100 degree weather. This time, I mostly just snapped pictures and waved back at kids with gap-toothed grins beaming at the crowd.

After that hour of spectating, I took a short walk down to Regan Beach, curious to see what the gatherings looked like. There was nary a bare patch of grass: massive tents of families, picnic blankets of teenagers, paddleboarding and kayaking gear stretched out across every inch of the park. It was mildly impressive, but mostly claustrophobic. I imagine pretty much every beach was the same way.

My partner and friends quickly whisked me away to our much quieter backyard barbecue that we’d planned—and genuinely, that to me is what any holiday is actually about. I had a wonderful time just chowing down and catching up with everyone, grilling corn and playing cornhole (which felt right, since the game was invented in North America.)

It was also kind of a going-away party. Frequent readers of the Tribune will recall that my stories are usually accompanied by a note about the California Local News Fellowship, which was always going to be a two-year program. I will be transitioning to a new job by the end of this month and officially moving out of Tahoe by the end of summer.

That was the real reason I wanted to spend my birthday here in South Lake Tahoe—I wanted to have some kind of marker for this era of my life, where I got to work full-time as a reporter at the Tribune and the Sun.

The Fourth of July is ultimately a holiday that celebrates our nation striking out on its own, forging its own identity and its own political reality. And I can’t say that America figured it out after all this time. Over the last 250 years, there has been amazing good and progress, as well as a great many mistakes and evils that we’ve tried to change. The tumult of the last decade has been my only political reality: the first time I got to vote was in 2016.

Being a local journalist and connecting with so many different communities gave me the chance to see what life is like for everyday Americans. From interviewing candidates for the upcoming election and attending school meetings, talking to business owners and tribe members, reporting on rallies and city council meetings, I got to know so many people and see so many different sides of Tahoe—which itself, is just a fraction, a tiny glimpse of the country I live in.

When I walked out to Lakeview Commons to watch the fireworks show, I was surrounded by all stripes of people. Bright flowers bloomed in the sky, exploding into sparks that rained down like so many shooting stars. I used to make birthday wishes while watching fireworks rather than blowing out candles. Guess I thought Roman candles were a little more exciting.

It’s been a whirlwind ride for me between 26 and 28 years old. I can’t imagine what the next years are going to be like for America or even for myself. But I can tell you this: I’m glad I spent the holiday here, if only to remind myself of what an honor it’s been to write for you all here in Tahoe.

I’ll hopefully still be freelancing in Tahoe, so stay in touch at mxeliramos@gmail.com! Thank you to every community here that has let me interview them and has supported me through my time here, especially to Lake Tahoe Pride and of course, the Tahoe Daily Tribune and Sierra Sun teams. And to everyone keeping up to date with local news, thank you for your readership.

Truckee-Tahoe – Pet of the Week: Petals

Looking for a dog with a heart as big as her paws? Meet Petals, a 2-year-old, 75-pound bundle of love who is guaranteed to brighten your days!

Petals is an affectionate, playful sweetheart who brings joy and personality everywhere she goes. Whether she’s tossing around one of her favorite plushy toys, heading out on an adventure, or curling up for snuggles, she’s happiest when she’s spending time with her people.

This lovable girl enjoys staying active and is always excited to make new canine friends and join in on the fun. After playtime, she’s more than happy to soak up all the love and affection you have to give. Snuggles are one of her specialties!

Petals is this week’s Pet of the Week.
Provided / HSTT

Petals would thrive in a home that can provide continued guidance, regular playtime, and plenty of love while helping her settle into a consistent routine. With her eager-to-please personality and loving heart, she’s sure to blossom into an incredible companion for a lucky family.

If you’re searching for a loyal best friend who will keep you smiling, laughing, and feeling loved every single day, Petals is waiting to meet you.

Come visit Petals at the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe and see why this big sweetheart is ready to steal your heart. She can’t wait to find the family she’s been dreaming of!

If you are interested in meeting this sweet girl or learning more about her, please get in touch with one of HSTT’s Adoption Specialists, 530-587-5948 or adoptions@hstt.org. She is spayed, vaccinated, and up to date on her vaccines. To view more adoptable pets or to learn more about the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe, visit, www.hstt.org.

Washoe culture, language and history painted across the Tahoe Basin

LAKE TAHOE BASIN, Calif./Nev. – In 2024, Aspen Carrillo painted the first mural in Lake Tahoe created by a Washoe artist and the first to feature the Washoe language. Two years later, the 24-year-old artist is continuing that work, using public art to share Washoe stories, cultural knowledge and a connection to the land across the Tahoe Basin.

Her murals bring bright colors, Washoe words and traditional symbols to walls throughout the region, inviting passersby to learn more about the people whose homeland has long been the Tahoe Basin.

“The reason I know Washoe and speak Paiute is because I feel like there’s a lack of representation of Native Americans,” Carrillo said. “In my homelands of Lake Tahoe, a lot of people don’t even know there’s a tribe up there.”

Her inspiration also comes from her grandmother, a Washoe and Paiute cradleboard weaver and boarding school survivor.

“I’ve always really wanted to make her proud and honor her language, her history and her identity,” Carrillo said. “It all started because I wanted to make my grandma proud.”

Carrillo serves as the youth representative for the Washoe Warriors Society, a grassroots nonprofit organization made up of Washoe community members dedicated to restoring Washoe land, culture and the tribe’s sacred relationship with the Tahoe Basin.

“Mountain Are Always there” Lake View Commons, South Lake Tahoe

“Mountain Are Always there,” Lake View Commons, South Lake Tahoe
Provided / Aspen Carrillo

Completed in the summer of 2024, Mountains Are Always There was the first mural in South Lake Tahoe created by a Washoe artist and the first in the city to feature the Washoe language. Carrillo spent about two months bringing the project to life.

The mural weaves together traditional Washoe stories, cultural knowledge and the tribe’s enduring relationship with the land. Carrillo said it represents both day and night, with a hawk on one side and a spirit bird on the other. It also illustrates a traditional Washoe story about rising waters, which explains the formation of the region’s many lakes after ancient floodwaters receded. Another section depicts Coyote and Lizard, referencing a traditional story that explains why lizards are said to have blue bellies. 

Basket patterns incorporated throughout the mural are inspired by designs created by one of Carrillo’s relatives. Along the river are willow, tule and cattails, plants traditionally harvested by the Washoe to weave baskets, bags and other items.

For Carrillo, the mural is ultimately about the Washoe people’s long presence in their ancestral homeland.

“As long as the mountains are there, the Washoe will always be there too,” she said. 

“Wá:šiw ‘itlu’ gáwgayay ‘í:wayé:si” (Speak Washoe all the time) – Kings Beach Visitor Center

“Wá:šiw ‘itlu’ gáwgayay ‘í:wayé:si” (Speak Washoe all the time)
Provided / Aspen Carrillo

Spanning four walls inside the Kings Beach Visitor Center, Wá:šiw ‘itlu’ gáwgayay ‘íé is designed as an educational mural that encourages visitors to learn the Washoe language. Created in collaboration with Shenice Turtle, the mural features native animals, plants and trees, each labeled with its Washoe name alongside an English translation. 

“I think there is a lot of power in the Washoe language, and I’m just trying to get more people to even say one or two words,” she said.

One of the animals featured in the mural is the Sierra red fox, an incredibly rare native species that was spotted in the Tahoe Basin about a month after the mural was completed. Carrillo said she viewed the sighting as a meaningful reminder of the connection between the Washoe language, culture and the natural world. She hopes that teaching people even a few Washoe words will encourage a deeper appreciation for the region’s native plants and animals and inspire efforts to protect them, and even bring them back into Lake Tahoe. 

Carrillo began painting the mural in October 2025 and completed it in January 2026. 

“Wá:šiw ‘itlu’ gáwgayay ‘í:wayé:si” (Speak Washoe all the time), red fox featured on the bottom right of the mural.
Provided / Aspen Carrillo

South Lake Tahoe Historical Society Museum Mural (In Progress)

Carrillo’s newest mural is currently underway and is expected to be completed in October 2026.

The mural is being created for the South Lake Tahoe Historical Society as part of a new exhibit inside a cabin adjacent to the museum that will explore the history of transportation in the Tahoe Basin.

Rather than retelling the familiar story of explorer John C. Frémont’s “discovery” of Lake Tahoe, Carrillo said the mural will present the often-overlooked Washoe perspective. It will highlight the assistance the Washoe people provided to Frémont and his party, including sharing food, teaching winter survival skills and helping them navigate the Sierra.

By centering the Washoe role in the region’s history, Carrillo hopes the mural will offer visitors a more complete understanding of the people who have called the Tahoe Basin home since time immemorial.

Beyond Murals: Washoe Warriors Society Festival Logo

In addition to her murals, Carrillo also works as a graphic designer, creating artwork that celebrates and preserves Washoe culture.

One of those projects was the logo for the Washoe Warriors Society’s T’anu ʔIšɨmiʔ (“The People Singing”), a free Indigenous music festival fundraiser on Aug. 1 at Truckee River Regional Park.

The design features people round dancing around Lake Tahoe, surrounded by native wildflowers and sage, plants that grow throughout the basin and hold cultural significance for the Washoe people.

El Dorado County leaders hash out housing issues

American Century Championship Thursday afternoon (Gallery)

Why Stephen Curry, Mardy Fish and Joe Pavelski keep coming back to the American Century Championship

STATELINE, Nev. – Considering Stephen Curry is one of the most decorated athletes in the country, the fact that he only has two trophies displayed in his home, and one of them is from the American Century Championship, says a lot about what the tournament means to him.

“This is kind of a full-circle moment for me because I remember my dad playing this back when it was as stroke play,” Curry said.

Curry, the Golden State Warriors point guard and one of the most accomplished basketball players in NBA history, said his connection to Lake Tahoe and the American Century Championship started long before he ever competed in the tournament.

He remembers his father, former NBA player Dell Curry, traveling to Tahoe to participate in the event. When Curry was drafted by the Warriors, he became even more familiar with the region and the tournament’s connection to the Bay Area.

“It was like, ‘I want this invite,'” Curry said.

That invitation eventually turned into history. Curry won the American Century Championship in 2023, becoming the first active professional athlete to win the tournament and the first Black champion in its 34-year history.

For former professional tennis player Mardy Fish, the tournament has also become about much more than competition. Fish, who won the ACC in 2020 and again in 2024, joked that he took it easier the following year because he wanted to give the rest of the field a chance.

But beyond the jokes, Fish said receiving the annual invitation is one of the highlights of his year.

“That email that comes through is the best email all year,” Fish said. “You always want to play well, but this whole week is not necessarily about golf. I don’t get to see him (Stephen Curry) very often, but we’ve developed an awesome relationship and friendship.”

Former NHL star Joe Pavelski, who won the championship in 2025, shared a similar appreciation for the tournament.

“I remember in 2014 or 2015 saying, ‘Sarah, if I ever get invited to the tournament by chance, just know I’m going. I don’t care what’s going on,'” Pavelski said, recalling a conversation with his wife.

Pavelski received his first invitation in 2014, and has attended ever since.

“I will never miss one as long as they invite me,” Pavelski said.

Stephan Curry, Joe Pavelski
Petra Molina / Sierra Sun

Stephen Curry adds a fan-made sombrero to his ACC look

The walk between the 17th and 18th holes along the lakeside is one of the tournament’s most popular gathering spots, where its common to see fans line the course and lakeside hoping to catch a glimpse of their favorite celebrities and athletes.

What is less common, however, is seeing Stephen Curry approach the tee and take a swing wearing a custom-made sombrero.

“A kid gave me a nice Davidson Wildcat No. 30 custom sombrero, and it’s beautiful,” Curry said. “The lady who made it was wearing a matching one, so it was kind of cool.”

Curry was spotted wearing the hat while playing the 18th hole, adding a memorable moment to the tournament’s long list of fan interactions.

Steph_2
Steph_1

Camaraderie rivals competition at the American Century Championship

STATELINE, Nev. — While every competitor arrives at the American Century Championship hoping to hoist the trophy on Sunday, several of this year’s contenders agree that the celebrity golf tournament is about much more than winning.

World Golf Hall of Fame member Annika Sörenstam, country music star Jake Owen and former NFL quarterback Tony Romo each said the tournament’s unique blend of competition and camaraderie is what keeps them returning to Edgewood Tahoe.

“We come here, and of course, I look at my résumé,” Sörenstam said. “But when you are here, it’s more about family and friends, and having a good time and playing the sport together. I’m excited to be here, playing with these guys.”

Sörenstam enters this year’s tournament among the favorites after finishing seventh last year and third in 2024. A victory would make her the first woman to win the American Century Championship.

Romo, meanwhile, is also considered one of the top contenders. The former NFL quarterback is a three-time winner (2018, 2019, 2022). Romo said he’s been dealign with a wrist injury in recent years, and joked his odds have fallen because he hasn’t played well. Still, he’s a top contender. 

“It feels more comfortable than it has in a long time,” he said.

Romo said one of the highlights of the event is the opportunity to compete alongside legendary athletes like Sörenstam while continuing to learn from them.

Country music artist Jake Owen is taking a lighter approach to the tournament.

“My dad was mad at me this morning because I bet money on myself to win,” Owen joked. “But I mean, my odds are like 1,800-to-1. I’m in on that.”

Owen finished third last season and ninth the year before, as he now tries to become the second non-athlete to win the event, joining Jack Wagner.

“After three years of playing, I’ve been able to figure out the course a little bit,” Owen said. “I kind of just use that whole carefree attitude to my benefit. I’m just happy to be here, and I’m going to do the best that I can.”

All three competitors echoed the same sentiment: while the pursuit of the championship is real, the friendships, atmosphere and opportunity to share the course with one another remain the biggest draw to Lake Tahoe.

Mountain Biking for Everyone

“Hard to put into words how freeing it is,” Jimi Brenner said while taking a break from an afternoon at the downhill mountain bike trails. Brenner lives and works on an orchard around Auburn, he likes biking, he is into metal fabrication, and when he was 29, his car slid off the road into a big oak tree. He became paralyzed from chest down. 

JIMI BRENNER on his adaptive bike. Trails for these bikes should be at least 58 inches wide, according to High Fives. Photo courtesy Jimi Brenner

Brenner found the hospital-provided wheelchairs not to his liking, so a year after his injury, he built his own. “I’ve always been the outdoorsy person,” he said. “I can’t get stuck inside much.” 

Three years after his accident, Brenner rode a bike again. The bike was adaptive to his injury, lent to him at the High Fives Community Bike Day, a fundraiser open to everyone.

High Fives was launched in 2009 after its founder, Roy Tuscany, overshot a ski jump and became paralyzed from the waist down. Tuscany received help from his community and started High Fives to “prevent life-changing injuries and provide resources and hope if they happen.” Since then, High Fives has served over 1,000 athletes in a multitude of sports and funded more than 1,900 grants.

After receiving a grant from High Fives and the Kelly Brush Foundation, whose mission is “to inspire and empower people with spinal cord injuries to lead active and engaged lifestyles,” Brenner was able to buy one of the bikes, which start at $15,000. But he didn’t know where to ride it. “Auburn has a lot of real tight single track,” he said. “It’s hard to ride independently.”

In 2021, High Fives collaborated with Sky Tavern Bike Park, located off Mt. Rose Highway, to build a trail suitable for adaptive riders. “We wanted to include several [adaptive specific] design features,” said Becca Lefanowicz, director of brand and creative for High Fives. For instance, “that it would be wide enough for adaptive bikes that have a wider and longer frame.” 

I DID IT! Estocado is triumphant after a downhill mountain bike run.

A High Fives adaptive trail must be at least 58 inches wide, a standard that unaffiliated organizations like Lee Canyon resort in Las Vegas have begun to copy. Because adaptive mountain bikes have a lower clearance than standard ones, the trail is also maintained to avoid what Lefanowicz calls “pinch points” — areas that would be too rocky for the low clearance of an adaptive bike. Brenner described the Sky Tavern trail as “super fun, super flowy.” It’s also one of two locations for the High Fives Community Bike Day in June, July, and August this year.

Since the Sky Tavern installation, High Fives has put in another adaptive-friendly trail at Sierra Vista in Reno. 

“Most trails are not too far off,” Brenner said, “there’s maybe just a little something on them [that makes them not suitable for an adaptive bike].” But on Brenner’s new-model Bowhead Reach with a tilting mechanism, he said that “98, 99% of the trails — I can ride on them.”

ALL SMILES: High Fives collaborated with Sky Tavern Bike Park, located off Mt. Rose Highway, to build a trail suitable for adaptive riders, which Estocado happily bombs down. Photos courtesy High Fives

Brenner said it’s big news in his community when a new trail like this is put in. “It’s more open space you can get out and explore.” This, he said, is the point. And Lefanowicz added that the word she most commonly hears from people who use the adaptive trails is “independence.”  

Gambler’s Run Returns

There was a moment at the second-ever Gambler’s Run in 2024 when The Main Squeeze was covering Pink Floyd’s “Have a Cigar” and it all kind of came together for Crystal Bay Casino’s production/marketing manager Sam Shear.

“It was right at dusk,” he said. “The golden hour light. The energy of the band, the energy of the crowd. It was epic. All the work we’d done, a lot of things had to line up to make that moment happen.”

MUSICAL CONNECTION: A festivalgoer and a musician are in sync during a daytime set.

Things did line up and that moment did happen. More moments happened last year and more moments will happen in 2026, the festival gaining momentum like some incendiary fiddle solo played against a devil down in Georgia. This year, the String Cheese Incident leads its biggest lineup yet, headlining three days of deep-pooled musicality with their Thursday night set.   

Formed in Colorado a good 30 years ago, the band has shredded strings and lit up audiences around the world with its bluegrass meets funky-country-rocky-jazzy-reggae-infused sound that offers a pinch of psychedelia and throws in a warm breeze
for good measure.

IT’S ALL GRATITUDE AND GOOD TIMES in the front row at dusk at Gambler’s Run.

The band’s name stems from a cheese-heavy food fight the members had in a bar back in the ’90s. They’ll be coming off a two-night run at Red Rocks Amphitheater before rolling the dice in Crystal Bay as part of their five-month Just Keep Spinning tour. 

Red Rocks has a 9,500-person capacity, a typical venue size for the band. Gambler’s Run, on the other hand, is capped at 1,000. A faraway lawn seat won’t exist at the festival, and access to the front rows won’t cost $500-plus — so fans will see and hear and feel the cheese-grating up close.   

“String Cheese is about the biggest act we can get,” Shear said. “We’ve had them in the Crown Room, but this is a new time for a new setting.”

That setting is outdoors. That setting is intimate. That setting is Tahoe air and golden hour light and the mysteries of the night.  And visuals. 

“A lot of focus is also on the art, the eye candy of the festival,” said Shear, who was coy with details to not give away too much and spoil first-impression surprise and intrigue. “It’s an all-encompassing experience. We’ll transform the festival grounds as much as possible.”

Those adorned grounds will be played from 4 to 10 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, with the gates opening at 3 p.m. for food and craft vendors, and high-energy afterparties in the Crown Room raging until midnight or so. 

Big Head Todd and the Monsters headlines Friday’s lineup with its own sweet Colorado-born style that has continued to evolve and delight music lovers since its 1993 platinum rock album Sister Sweetly, featuring the decade’s iconic and seemingly immortal (for good reason) “Bittersweet.” The soulful sounds and rhythmic beat of The California Honeydrops will get Saturday night’s airs swirling and the dancefloor moving.

But Gambler’s Run isn’t just three consecutive big-name concerts; it’s a music festival that features eight hours of music per day and over 10 bands that run the gamut. Also performing are the Humboldt funk machine Diggin Dirt, the electronic-instrumental synthesis of the groovy Octave Cat (featuring Jessie Miller of Lotus), and the Nashville-based Grateful Dead-influenced punk rockers Sicard Hollow, among others.

Sicard Hollow’s guitarist Alex King shared his thoughts: “We love music festivals, casinos, and lakes. Gambler’s Run is a perfect place … because it crosses off all three of those boxes. Let’s party.”

Three-Pronged Event 

In addition to the intrepid tunes and dynamic art, Gambler’s Run also features a core contingent of activities and activism at its nonprofit village. 

The nonprofit tine is a who’s who of local ecological stalwarts: Keep Tahoe Blue, Sierra Nevada Alliance, Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC), UC Davis, Restoring My Lake; and, from Colorado, Conscious Alliance. Each entity helms an interactive booth and leads an engaging activity that ties back to its message. Festival-goers are provided a punch card; punches are earned by doing the activities; completing all the activities gains entry into drawings for signed posters and other rad prizes. 

A main component of the activism for the festival itself focuses on sustainability. “When we started Gambler’s Run four years ago now, we were like, ‘We are in Lake Tahoe, we should be as conscious of our environment as possible.’”

THE OUTDOOR GROUNDS at Gambler’s Run hosts bands from 4 to 10 pm. before the event moves into the Crown Room for the afterparties.

A main cog in that activism/sustainability wheel was to phase out plastic cups by phasing in aluminum ones. The CBC began doing so at the first Gambler’s Run in 2023 and it’s now become standard practice at every show it hosts. No single-use plastic cups, not one; stats showing the switch having already saved close to 100,000 plastic cups and thousands of plastic water bottles from ending up in landfills. 

That’s the type of action that helps the world keep spinning and the music keep playing. And summer music festivals right here in the Tahoe Basin, without having to undertake some distant drive in some super-hot direction, are a good thing too.  

“If you’re a local,” Shear concluded, “you know the Crystal Bay Casino; what we do is live music. This is our masterpiece — three days of music, art, activism. Come on over and hang out.” 

Ninety Days to One Bear Photo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wade Snider, master photographer, believes that every photo taken should be planned for months. In accordance with his tight hierarchy of strict guidelines, he camped out for ages, waiting for this exact photograph. On day 90, lightning struck. The beagles lined up. The bear was there. All he had to do was hit the shutter. The world softened for a bit. The birds, awestruck, quieted their ritualistic song. When the day returned to focus and time resumed ticking, all that was left was a photograph. Seen here.

~ wadesnider.com

The Earth and Stars: 9 July – 12 August 2026

ASTROLOGY

With summer in full swing, the Cancer new moon on July 14 offers a welcome invitation to slow down, to rest, and to reconnect.

On July 18, Uranus in Gemini trines Pluto retrograde in Aquarius, an amicable transit that highlights both the tension and harmony between abstract ideas and collective technological transformations underway. Two days later, Jupiter in Leo forms a trine to Neptune retrograde in Aries, while also opposing Pluto — encouraging examination of values and relationships to the world’s changes. 

The sun enters Leo on July 22, followed by Mercury coming out of its retrograde transit on July 24. Expect a certain momentum to return to a plan of yours that’s been stalled. 

A major collective shift occurs on July 26 as the north node enters Aquarius and the south node enters Leo. This new nodal cycle will be playing out for 18 months and encourages us to participate more consciously in worldly happenings. 

Leo-season energies amplify on July 29 when Jupiter conjoins the sun during a full moon in Aquarius. With Pluto in conjunction to the full moon, this lunation brings expansive emotional and subconscious transformation. Pay attention to what needs to be released as well as what’s coming up that needs to be celebrated. 

Venus enters Libra on August 6. This will bring balance, a focus on beauty, and an inclination to socialize. August 7 and 8 may feel more reactive, with the Gemini moon transiting first Uranus and then Mars. To give yourself time to take in the full picture, endeavor to pause before responding to things.

On August 12, we have a powerful solar eclipse. The Leo new moon also joins the south node, with Jupiter and Mercury also in Leo. This day will illuminate old stories of identities and patterns that may surface for review. 

NATURAL MAGIC

There are many transits happening in this time that relate to collective change and how that is personally significant, highlighted by the nodal shift into the signs of Aquarius and Leo exactly on July 26; consider setting aside twenty minutes a day between July 19 and August 2 to honor both the transition and your own evolutionary growth. Begin with ten minutes of heart-centered meditation. Place one hand on your heart and one hand on your belly, breathing slowly as you imagine your awareness dropping from your head to your heart. 

Then spend ten minutes reflecting and journaling. Consider these prompts: When I shift perception from my head to my heart, what changes within me?  What is my unique gift to the world? How can I use my creativity in service to something larger than myself?

The Buzz Around Our Native Bees

Bees. These remarkable bugs are more than just fuzzy visitors to flowers or “scary” insects that sting. They are vital pollinators who play a crucial role in maintaining the health of our mountain ecosystems and the planet as a whole. 

When most people think of bees, they picture the classic honey bee: living in its bustling hive, making honey, and serving the queen. However, honey bees are not native to North America and their highly social lifestyle represents only a small fraction of the world’s bee species. 

In fact, the vast majority of bees around the world and in the Sierra Nevada are solitary, up to 85% living quiet, independent lives that often go unnoticed by humans. In these species there are no queens, no workers, and no hives.

Rather, every female bee is essentially a one-bee construction crew, food gatherer, and parent all rolled into one. After snowmelt, they find or build suitable nests, collect nectar and pollen, and create a carefully stocked nursery for future offspring. After supplying the nest chamber with food, the female lays a single egg, seals the chamber, and begins the process of preparing the next chamber for another egg. Once her work is complete, her life cycle comes to an end and the next generation develops during the winter months to emerge in the spring. 

Meanwhile, male bees have a simpler life. Their lifespan lasts only a few weeks and equates to: emerge, compete to find a mate, reproduce, and that’s about it. 

Native Tahoe/Truckee bees come in an incredible variety of shapes, sizes, and colors. Some wear the familiar yellow-and-black striped patterns while others look like tiny flying jewels, shimmering in the sunlight with their metallic greens, blues, or bronze. When identifying whether an insect is a bee, a helpful clue is to look for yellow, dusty pollen clinging to its body. Female bees often carry pollen on specialized hairs attached to their legs called corbiculae (or “pollen pants”), and other species will tote it on the underside of their abdomens. 

Tahoe/Truckee Bee Diversity

One of the most interesting solitary bees around Tahoe/Truckee are leafcutter bees (Megachile spp.). These tiny architects carefully cut out near-perfect circles from leaves or other plant material and carry them back to their nests. They then use the leaf pieces to form the structure of their nursery chamber cells, and, like wallpaper, the leaf material lines and protects the chamber to promote growth of beneficial microbes. 

Gardeners sometimes notice the neat circular holes left behind by the leafcutters and wonder, “What happened?” Fortunately, it’s most often good news. The holes rarely harm the plant as a whole, and the “damage” is little more than a tiny rental fee, paid in exchange for excellent pollination services. 

Mason bees (Osmia spp.) include another type of solitary bee found in our area. These small critters have dark bodies and an often iridescent sheen, and can easily be mistaken for a fly. However, they are all bee: widely considered some of nature’s most efficient pollinators. A single female has been known to pollinate up to 2,000 blossoms in one day. 

Her pollinating power comes from how she carries pollen. Instead of packing it tightly on her legs, the mason bee female carries it loosely on the underside of her body, allowing her to transfer more pollen between flowers. Around Tahoe/Truckee you can find mason bees living in natural cavities such as hollow stems and holes in wood, but they will also readily occupy homemade bee boxes with paper or cardboard nesting tubes placed near flowering plants (a fun project for your yard). 

For other bees, that patch of exposed dirt in your yard or a downed log out back can be prime real estate too, so leave them be! 

Of course, no discussion of Sierra buzzers would be complete without mentioning bumble bees (Bombus spp.). The fuzzy giants of the bee world, bumble bees are larger, louder, and easier to spot than many of their smaller relatives. 

Unlike most of the area’s native bees, bumble bees are social insects, forming small colonies led by a single queen and supported by a female workforce. Their colonies, however, function very differently from honey bee hives. As fall approaches, the workers die off, leaving only the newly mated queens alive, seeking shelter underground where they overwinter beneath the snowpack. When spring arrives, each queen emerges to build an entirely new colony from scratch. 

Truckee/Tahoe is home to several bumblebee species, including the endangered Western Bumble Bee (Bombus occidentalis). Not long ago, at Sagehen Creek Research Station, Dr. Nina Sokolov of UC Berkeley found 23 Western Bumble Bees in just 45 minutes, a remarkable find given this species is endangered and difficult to find across the state of California. Perhaps Truckee is a hotspot for this species? More research and time will tell, but for now this is encouraging for Bombus occidentalis. 

Supporting
the Bees That Support Us

Bees play a critical role in maintaining our region’s biodiversity. Their services support the plants that provide food and shelter for countless other species, while encouraging outcrossing among the plants themselves, increasing genetic diversity and creating stronger, healthier, and more resilient communities of organisms. 

Sadly, not all news is good, and our bees face many challenges. Habitat loss, disease, pesticide exposure, and climate change all threaten native bee populations. Habitat loss from human development destroys both nesting sites and the flowering plants bees depend on. Pesticides may directly harm the pollinators or indirectly kill the plants they rely on. Climate change creates timing mismatches between flowers and the bees’ emergence. 

Fortunately, communities throughout our nation are recognizing the importance of protecting pollinators, and Truckee has an exciting opportunity to join that effort. The Tahoe Institute for Natural Science (TINS) is leading the charge to designate the Town of Truckee as an official “Bee City.” TINS and other partners through Bee City USA intend to protect native pollinators through education, habitat restoration, and conservation. While the designation is an important milestone, its true value lies in the community actions that follow.

POLLINATORS: One of Truckee/Tahoe’s most common and widespread bumble bee species, Yellow-faced Bumble Bee (Bombus vosnesenskii) visiting a yarrow and showing a packed pollen basket. Photo by Will Richardson

Residents can help in surprisingly simple ways; planting native flowers and leaving patches of bare soil, dead wood, and dried stems all work to create nesting opportunities. Even participating in community science projects using iNaturalist, a free app that helps identify plants and animals while collecting data for science and conservation, can help researchers better understand local bee populations. In this way, every yard, garden, school, neighborhood, and human can become part of the solution.

So, the next time you hear a faint buzz while hiking a trail, walking through a meadow, or tending your garden, take a closer look and try to appreciate the bee for who it is and what it does.

These remarkable insects may be small, but their impact is enormous. Quietly and tirelessly, our native bees sustain the wildflowers, forests, and vibrant landscapes that make the Sierra Nevada the wonderful and biologically diverse place that it is.

New Bookstore Opens (Underground) in Tahoe City

If you’re not looking for the Understory, it’s easy to walk right past it. Owner Annie Stefani calls it a hobbit hole — picture Alice falling into the rabbit burrow and coming out in Tahoe. Located in an underground cellar at the north end of downtown Tahoe City in front of urgent care, the Understory is North Lake Tahoe’s newest bookshop, which opened June 30. 

“That aspect of getting lost in a story has been a big part of my entire life,” says Stefani, who grew up in Tahoe City and has worked in education for 20 years, teaching middle and high school English and social studies. “Reading is a way to learn about another place. Especially in a bubble like Tahoe, books are a window into another world.”

BOOK CLUB: Tahoe City has a new bookstore, thanks to North Tahoe High’s former librarian. Photo courtesy Daniel Stefani

Five years ago, Stefani obtained a master’s degree in library and information science and began working as the librarian at North Tahoe High School. When she took over that role, she completely redesigned the physical space of the school’s library. “When people asked me what I’d do if I wasn’t a teacher, I’d always say I’d be an interior designer,” she says. She discovered a designer who focused on home libraries, and she thought, “This is a thing? I can incorporate design and books and make them look beautiful and readable? Who knew?” 

Last year, she left her job at Tahoe Truckee Unified School District and launched Wonderwood Books and Library Services, a book-centric design studio for homes, hotels, and more. She designed and curated bookshelves at the new Apex Club at Palisades Tahoe — complete with books by local authors and ones based on Sierra Nevada ski history — as well as home libraries for several local residences. “When you walk into someone’s home, you look at what they’re reading,” Stefani says. “You want those shelves to not only look nice but also represent who you are.”

LET’S READ: Small but mighty, The Understory bookstore opened last month.

With the launch of her library design business, she needed a space outside her home to store books, so she began looking at storage facilities and commercial spaces around the area. A meeting with Christine and Andrew Ryan, who own the Tahoe Backyard in Kings Beach and operate a micro-business incubator, gave her a new idea: Find a space that could house her library design studio and also be a community bookstore.

“It seemed like a crazy idea in the Amazon-era of online book ordering to open a brick-and-mortar bookstore,” Stefani says. “But Christine and Andy gave me the confidence and encouragement that a bookstore could actually work.” 

Another serendipitous meeting with local architects Robb and Molly Olson, who recently purchased the Trading Post buildings in downtown Tahoe City, led Stefani to the so-nick-named hobbit hole. “They said they had a commercial space I might be interested in and when they stopped in front of that door into the underground, I thought, ‘Oh no,’” Stefani recalls. “But then we walked in and my answer was immediately: ‘yes.’ It’s much brighter than it looks thanks to the skylights, and the space has such a good quality.”

The underground store, which previously housed a law office and the office of the former property owners, the Dyer brothers, has been vacant for years. The interior and exterior were recently remodeled and landscaped in preparation for the Understory’s late June opening. 

At just 645 square feet, it’s not a huge space. The main room displays books for sale, and the two smaller back rooms offer a reading nook with a gas fireplace that can be rented out for book clubs or other gatherings and a conference room that can be used for private meetings. 

“The space is small, but because of that it can be carefully curated,” Stefani says. “I want this to be a community-based bookshop, so there will a rotating community shelf with reading recommendations.”

She doesn’t plan on focusing on outdoor guidebooks — Tahoe City’s Alpenglow Sports has that well covered — or competing with the vast collection at Truckee’s much bigger Word After Word Books. Her goal is to have a small, handpicked collection of fiction and nonfiction books that are switched out regularly, so you can always find something new. “I want everyone — locals, visitors, kids, adults — to be able to walk into the store and discover a book that invokes that sense of curiosity, joy, and wonder that you can find from a good story.”

The last bookstore in Tahoe City, called the Bookshelf, closed in 2012. Can this one fare better? “Tahoe is a very literary place, more than people may realize,” Stefani says. “I’m excited to create this space for our community around a shared love of reading and storytelling.”  

The Understory’s Summer Reading List

After 20 years teaching English and as a high school librarian, I’ve learned that while reading is a deeply personal act, it also has the innate ability to build community through the simple act of sharing the books we’ve loved or what’s next on our list. While Joyce Carol Oates once said, “Read widely, and without apology. Read what you want to read, not what someone tells you you should read,” I also believe that one should never turn down an opportunity to share what’s on their reading list. So, here are 10 books for your summer reading adventures, with stories rooted in travel and place. 

1. Properties of Thirst by Marianne Wiggins. The Eastern Sierra is magical this time of year and Wiggins manages to capture the beauty of the Owens Valley and create historical fiction perfection with this story about the building of Manzanar, the city of Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, and a family stuck in the middle. This is one of my favorite books of all time. 

2. Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy. Eco-fiction, mystery, family drama all in one. A woman washes up shipwrecked on a remote sub-Antarctic island guarding a seed vault, and nothing about the family sheltering her is quite what it seems.

3. Playground by Richard Powers. While Powers’ The Overstory was part of the inspiration for The Understory, his novel Playground is a captivating shift to the ocean with this sweeping story about ocean exploration, tech oligarchs, and what it means to be family. 

4. The Land and Its People by David Sedaris. I first discovered the sheer genius of David Sedaris while reading Me Talk Pretty One Day on a study abroad trip to France. To this day, I have never felt so seen in a collection of essays about navigating life in another country with such sharp, tender wit. In The Land and Its People, Sedaris revisits those themes of travel, brotherhood, and friendship. 

5. Land by Maggie O’Farrell. This highly anticipated historical fiction piece will transport you to Ireland in the years surrounding The Great Hunger, from the author of Hamnet. 

6. Barbarian Days by William Finnegan. Much like skiing, surfing quickly turns into an all-consuming adventure. In this Pulitzer-winning memoir I come back to every summer, Finnegan shares stories of chasing waves around the world. Part travelogue, part coming-of-age-story, and part meditation on obsession in sport. 

7. Our Perfect Storm by Carley Fortune. In a past life when I worked for a surf camp in Mexico, my favorite colleagues were all from Tofino. This slow-burn romance set on the Canadian coastline is the perfect summer beach read. 

8. Saltwater by Katy Hayes. In this twisty, glamorous murder mystery filled with family secrets, the island of Capri is a character itself. Local Tahoe author Katy Hayes brings the same eye for atmosphere and intrigue that made The Cloisters a hit, making Capri’s sun-bleached cliffs and shadowy villas feel as vivid as anywhere in fiction this summer.

9. Villa Coco by Andrew Sean Greer. Italy, but make it chaotic. The Pulitzer-winning author of Less sends a young archivist to catalog a crumbling Tuscan villa for a 92-year-old baroness with one last love to track down. The other side of The Understory are library services, including archival work, so my inner cataloguer loves this premise.

10. Calypso by Oliver K. Langmead. This is going to be my personal challenge book for the summer, and it feels like good timing between the release of Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and the new Odyssey movie coming out in late July. Recommended by a friend who’s a sci-fi expert, this Hugo-nominated sci-fi novel is told entirely in verse, following a colony ship engineer who wakes from cryosleep to find her vessel transformed into a forest, ruled by the descendants of the crew. 

Flying High

I likely would not have become a pilot if I didn’t live in Truckee. Like many things we do in our natural mountainous setting — as you discover when backcountry skiing, biking, hiking, or exploring — flying a small, old airplane has some challenges.

When you take off in an old plane, there’s always some uncertainty. If you fly solo, which means alone, you have to solve problems on your own. What-ifs are part of the experience we choose to have.

I earned my private pilot certificate at Truckee Tahoe Airport (KTRK) in 1990, at age 42. In 1997 my husband Tom and I bought our first airplane, a 1946 Cessna 140,
a silver, two-seater, single-engine, tailwheel plane.

NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT: Tom and Laurel Lippert soar over Mount Rushmore during a feature flight that landed the husband-and-wife aviation team on a 2001 cover and inside article of a national aviation magazine. Image courtesy Laurel Lippert

Because my flight training happened here in Truckee, I learned the limitations of flying in an old airplane, taking off at 5,901 feet elevation and climbing another thousand feet, or more, to clear the surrounding mountains around us, which wasn’t always easy. 

In July 2002, Tom, who became a pilot at age 54, and I decided to fly to Stowe, Vermont, where we had friends. We had also skied there when Tom had a photo assignment for SKI magazine. 

The flight required many airport stops along the way (17 in total) for fuel, food, and overnight stays. Pilots are required to keep logbooks of every takeoff and landing, so I have the proof. There was, and are now, over 5,000 public use airports in the U.S.

If you hike or climb in the Sierra, you know the magnificent views from up there, near or on the peaks. Flying over our beautiful area in a small plane is like that, giving us an even greater appreciation for where we live and why.

On our way to Vermont we encountered weather issues such as wind, clouds, rain, or approaching storms that meant we needed to land and wait them out. At small, remote airports, with no indoor option, there often wasn’t a way to get into town, so we just sat outside. Inevitably, someone driving by would spot us and take us into town, or, sometimes, even to their own home. I remember once being driven to a lovely house on a beautiful nearby lake.

With every landing at some remote airport, through people’s kindness, it didn’t matter who they were, or what they believed, Tom and I felt they were our friends. Most people assumed that Tom was the pilot and I was the passenger. I never corrected them.

Reflecting on that trip to Vermont, and others, since moving to Truckee in 1977, I continue to be grateful to live in a community where people naturally connect with locals and strangers and love adventure.

I decided to become a flight instructor in 1998, at age 50; not to make money, but to become a better pilot. Also, as a freelance writer, published in skiing and travel magazines, I believed I could get more aviation writing assignments as a certified flight instructor. 

For those of us who choose to take on challenges, it’s not unusual to say, “How am I going to do that?”

But I found a way and I did it, and as a CFI, I met Henry Levy, a pilot from Lodi who had a house in Northstar and an airplane hangared at KTRK. He asked me to fly him to Sun Valley, Idaho, in his Cessna 182, as he no longer had a medical certificate. I did that, and we became friends. 

Henry later got divorced and moved to Truckee full-time. Tom and I enjoyed his company and high spirits, and Henry became a close friend. One day, he gifted Tom and me his Cessna 182 that he had bought brand-new in 1981.

The people whom Tom and I met over the years through flying remain special. With assignments from national flying magazines, Tom and I flew around the country, seeing beautiful places and meeting interesting folks. 

I also interviewed pilots who were famous, including Arnold Palmer, Harrison Ford, Sarah Ferguson (the Dutchess of York), and Clint Eastwood. Like most who understand the risks of flying, these celebrities were humble and never bragged about being pilots. Just like we skiers know we shouldn’t brag about being “hot” as it can jinx our next run, the same goes for pilots. 

I tell you this because many of us in Truckee have had experiences and adventures that we will never forget, and that affect who we are. In one of my ipilot.com articles, I wrote about being stuck in Newcastle, WY, due to a scary airplane issue. I closed the story, saying, “We know there are angels in the air. Stay open.”

Stay open. Share your stories while you can, and keep smiling.  

Will Annika Sörenstam make history at the American Century Championship? 

STATELINE, Nev. — Golf legend and part-time Lake Tahoe resident Annika Sörenstam has arrived at the American Century Championship with a chance to make history.

The 10-time major champion enters this year’s celebrity golf tournament among the favorites after finishing third in 2024. Sportsbooks have listed Sörenstam at 9-to-1 odds to win, and a victory would make her the first woman to capture the American Century Championship title.

While the competition has intensified in recent years, Sörenstam said the annual event remains about much more than the leaderboard.

“When you are here, it’s more about your family and friends, and having a good time and playing the sport together,” she said.

Sorenstam’s decorated career has made her one of the most accomplished golfers in history. She has recorded more than 90 professional victories worldwide, including 72 LPGA Tour wins and 10 major championships. She also holds eight Rolex Player of the Year awards and six Vare Trophies.

Known as “Ms. 59,” Sorenstam remains the only woman to shoot a sub-60 round in an official professional tournament. In 2003, she became the first woman in 58 years to compete in a PGA Tour event when she played in the Colonial Invitational.

Country music star and fan favorite Jake Owen also praised Sörenstam’s impact away from the course.

“She’s a great golfer, but she’s way better of a human being than she is a golfer, and I can attest to that,” said Owen while recalling a conversation with his father about Sörenstam.

Although she stepped away from full-time professional golf following the 2008 season to focus on her family and business ventures, Sörenstam’s legacy has only continued to grow. Sörenstam founded ANNIKA Foundation in 2007 to create opportunities for junior, collegiate and professional golfers.

“We have given back almost $10 million to the sport,” Sörenstam said.

Whether or not she leaves Tahoe with the trophy, Sörenstam’s influence on the game continues to extend through her foundation.

Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe celebrates grand opening, Lisa Vanderpump cuts ribbon

Lisa Vanderpump cuts the ribbon at the Grand Opening of Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe with Karie Hall, Anthony Carano, Gary Carano, and Stew Massie
Provided/Caesars Entertainment

STATELINE, NEV. – Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe has unlocked a new level of extravagance as they celebrated the grand opening of their newly transformed resort and casino on Monday, July 7. 

The completion comes after two years of renovations totaling $200 million, so it was no surprise to find smiling faces and champagne flutes in the air as Caesars Entertainment President and COO, Anthony Carano, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Karie Hall, and the Bravo icon herself, Lisa Vanderpump, a longtime Caesars partner, cut the ribbon inside the resort. 

Formerly known as Harveys, Carano spoke to a crowd of onlookers gathered on both floors overlooking the Caesars Republic lobby about the rebrand and transformation.

“Caesars Republic was just a dream six years ago. We just acquired Caesars Entertainment and we knew we had something truly special here in Lake Tahoe,” Carano said. “But we also knew that if we were going to do this project, we had to go above and beyond to set a new standard in luxury.” 

Carano touched on the thousands of people who contributed to a project of this scale on the 82-year-old property, saying he would be there all night if he tried to thank everyone. Instead, he gave thanks to partners Clique Hospitality, Chef Gordon Ramsay, and Lisa Vanderpump. He also thanked Marnell Companies, Rafael Construction, Caesars Design and Construction, and the team at Caesars and Harrah’s, noting how difficult it was to operate in a construction zone for more than two years.

“Where we’re located – in the beautiful Sierra Nevada mountains on the shores of the majestic Lake Tahoe – we knew we had to create the extraordinary, and I am so proud of everybody who put so much time, effort and dedication into this project, that they did just that.”

Lisa Vanderpump spoke a few words, giving high remarks to Caesars Entertainment while saying she had an incredible experience opening her upscale restaurant, Wolf by Vanderpump, in April of 2024 at the Lake Tahoe resort and casino. 

“It was something I wanted Lake Tahoe to feel really proud of,” Vanderpump said about Wolf before grabbing the giant scissors to cut the ribbon, signaling a fresh and exciting chapter following the multi-phased project. 

Included in the project is a brand new High Dive Pool and Lounge, a fully refreshed casino floor, a 25,000 square foot indoor event space, a state-of-the-art fitness center, and the electric live music lounge, Tessie’s Cocktails and Chords, where after the grand opening, Vanderpump and guests enjoyed cocktails, camaraderie and live performances. 

Hall spoke at Tessie’s saying, “What you see around you is so much more than a renovation – it’s a leap of faith. A leap of faith that the Carano family took with us.”

Hall invited Gary Carano, Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Caesars Entertainment and Anthony Carano’s father, to the front of the Tessie’s stage before presenting the Boys and Girls Club of Lake Tahoe with a $10,000 donation. 

Gary Carano and Karie Hall present a donation to the Boys and Girls Club of Lake Tahoe
Provided/Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe

Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe is located at 18 US-50 in Stateline, Nev. 

For more information or to book your stay, visit https://www.caesars.com/caesars-republic-lake-tahoe.

American Century Championship Thursday Morning (Gallery)

American Century Championship events beyond the green 

Travis Kelce dunks the basketball on hole 17
Laney Griffo/ Tahoe Daily Tribune

STATELINE, Nev. – The American Century Championship (ACC) is more than just a celebrity golf tournament, it’s a week filled with show-stopping excitement, millions of funds raised for nonprofits, and unforgettable, interactive experiences for all those who attend. 

“We try to build out as much as we can every night to make it as fun for all of our guests and for the town too,” said Gary Quinn, vice president, partnerships and general manager, owned properties at NBC Sports. 

A variety of events outside of the golf itself are officially in motion. Here’s the breakdown.

Friday, July 10 

NBA on NBC 

A three-point shooting contest kicks off the weekend at the No. 17 tee, and celebrities will compete to claim the title of 2026 “ACC 3-Point Champion”. 

In years passed, we’ve seen trick shots like Jason Kelce’s backwards and between-the-legs bucket, as well as easy-ins with perfect form from NBA stars like Vince Carter, Ray Allen and Grant Hill. 

It’s a toss up across the board and poses the question of who will bring their A-game this year to snatch the victory.

Corona Beach Challenge 

Stakes are high starting at 4 p.m. as nine celebrities, to be announced on Thursday, July 9, compete to win $10,000 by hitting two shots from the sandy beach, in classic Corona fashion, at par 3, No. 17. 

The Corona Beach challenge will replace the Korbel Closest to the Pin Contest whose winner last year was Hally Leadbetter. 

Rascal Flatts at the Lake Tahoe Amphitheatre

Along with the debut of their official ACC theme song, “Tahoe Nights”, Rascal Flatts will be performing at the Lake Tahoe Amphitheatre at Caesars Republic on July 10 at 8 p.m. 

The award-winning trio has visited Tahoe several times, including in 2010 and 2013. This year, they’re making another stop as part of their Life is a Highway Tour 2026.

Prepare to hear hits like “God Bless the Broken Road”, “My Wish”, and of course, their iconic “Life is a Highway”. 

Tickets are going fast. Visit Ticketmaster.com to secure your seats.

Saturday, July 11

United States Air Force Flyover 

In honor of the nation’s 250th birthday, two USAF T-38 aircraft will soar the skies over the 17th and 18th holes of Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course. Prior to the flyover, the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office honor guard will play the national anthem, celebrating 250 years of America. 

“It has to be timed perfectly,” said Quinn. “The flyover will be right at noon on Saturday. We’re looking forward to it. Should be pretty cool for the people on the ground.”

Nate Bargatze at the Tahoe Blue Event Center

While making a reappearance in this year’s celebrity golf tournament, Nate Bargatze will also make a stop at Tahoe Blue Event Center to perform his Grammy-winning comedy on Saturday night. 

Known as the “King of Clean Comedy”, Bargatze’s show is the perfect family-friendly event, bringing laughter to folks of all ages. 

His performance in Tahoe is part of his massive, global tour, “Big Dumb Eyes”, with tickets in high demand across the nation.

The show starts at 8 p.m. on July 11. To purchase tickets, visit tahoeblueeventcenter.com

Sunday, July 12

Gene Upshaw Scholarship Award Presentation

For its 18th year, the Gene Upshaw Scholarship Award will be presented to Lake Tahoe Community College (LTCC) student, Valery Gonzalez. 

Established in 2009 and every year since, the scholarship aims to honor an outstanding student with $10,000 who proves excellence in academics, athletics and community service. 

The award will be presented to Gonzalez by Terri Upshaw, Gary Quinn, NBC, and Nancy Harrison, Executive Director of LTCC Foundation and College Partnerships.

The presentation will take place at 10 a.m. in the media tent.

Whittell senior Anna White speaks at a press conference Saturday morning during the American Century Championship after she won the Gene Upshaw memorial Scholarship. White is flanked by Terri Upshaw, the wife of late Gene Upshaw (left) and Gary Quinn, representing NBC.
Bill Rozak / Tahoe Daily Tribune

Action in Tahoe: Classical Tahoe, Rascal Flatts, Eric Church and more

Friday, July 10

America Century Championship Celebrity Golf Tournament – Edgewood Tahoe Resort, 180 Lake Parkway. Additional dates: 7/10, 7/11, 7/12. For more information, visit https://www.garwoods.com/calendar.html.

Boogie Zoo feat. Cliff Porter – 6-10 p.m., AleWorx at the Y, 2050 Lake Tahoe Blvd. Funk/Classics + more feat. Reno percussionist Cliff Porter For more information, visit https://laketahoealeworx.com/event/boogie-zoo-feat-cliff-porter/.

The Heart of Robin Hood – 7:30 p.m., Sand Harbor State Park, 2005 Highway 28. Additional dates: 7/10, 7/16. For more information, visit https://laketahoeshakespeare.com/event/the-heart-of-robin-hood-3/ or call (800) 747-4697.

Lake Tahoe Summer Concert Series – Rascal Flatts – Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe, 4130 Lake Tahoe Blvd,. Summer, Music, Family Friendly. The Lake Tahoe Summer Concert Series has some of the hottest music acts under the stars, located across the street from our resort. For more information, visit https://www.margaritavilleresorts.com/margaritaville-resort-lake-tahoe/things-to-do-in-lake-tahoe/events/lake-tahoe-summer-concert-series-rascal-flatts.

Summer Play | Laughing Stock by Charles Morey – 7:30-9:30 p.m., Boathouse Theater, Tallac Historic Site. Laughing Stock. Step behind the curtain and into the hilarious world of summer stock theater in Charles Morey’s Laughing Stock. Set in a charming New England barn theater, this fast-paced comedy follows a determined troupe of actors, directors, and technicians as they attempt to stage an ambitious repertory season featuring Dracula, Hamlet, and Charley’s Aunt—with predictably chaotic results. For more information, visit https://valhallatahoe.com/event/summer-play-laughing-stock-by-charles-morey/2026-07-10/.

Wine Tasting at Black Bear Lodge – 5-7 p.m., Black Bear Lodge, 1202 Ski Run Boulevard. Join us at Black Bear Lodge for our Summer Wine Tasting Series, happening every other Friday from 5–7 PM. Enjoy an evening of curated wines from a featured winery, live music, and the relaxed gardens of Black Bear Lodge. Sip, unwind, and discover something new with each unique tasting experience throughout the summer. For more information, visit http://tahoeblackbear.com/events or call 5305444451.

Saturday, July 11

Classical Tahoe – 5:30-9:30 p.m., Ricardi Pavilion at the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe, 291 Country Club . Classical Tahoe Music Festival returns for its 15th season July 11–Aug. 9, bringing four weeks of orchestral, jazz and chamber music performances to North Lake Tahoe. Featuring more than 70 musicians from across the country, the 2026 season includes orchestral masterpieces like Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 and Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1, the return of Music in Motion with the Lake Tahoe Dance Collective, the Brubeck Jazz Summit celebrating jazz legend Dave Brubeck, family-friendly programming and a new chamber concert at Sugar Bowl Resort. Performances take place at the Ricardi Pavilion at the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe and additional venues throughout Incline Village. The season also honors America 250 with concerts featuring American composers and themes. Tickets and full festival information are available at classicaltahoe.org. Additional dates: 7/11, 7/12, 7/14, 7/16. For more information, visit https://classicaltahoe.org/ or call 775.372.7904 .

Clean Up Events – 9 a.m.-12 p.m., Diamond Peak Ski Resort, 1210 Ski Way. IVGID Waste Not organizes and promotes community cleanups in conjunction with The League to Save Lake Tahoe (Tahoe Blue Crew) and other local organizations. Picking up litter beautifies our town and helps prevent watershed pollution! We would love to see our ski community out there helping to clean up litter on the slopes and around town. Check back here often, as more cleanups may be added throughout the summer. June 13, 2026: Incline Green Clean (Incline Village Library, 9am-12pm) – view details Pollution Penguins/Diamond Peak Ski Team Cleanup (Diamond Peak, 9am-12pm) – meet at upper parking lot July 11, 2026: Pollution Penguins/Diamond Peak Ski Team Cleanup (Diamond Peak Ski Resort, 9am-12pm) September 19, 2026: The Great Sierra Cleanup (Incline Village Recreation Center)- view details Pollution Penguins/Diamond Peak Ski Team Cleanup (Diamond Peak Ski Resort, 9am-12pm) – meet at upper parking lot For more information, visit https://www.diamondpeak.com/event/clean-up-events/2026-07-11/ or call (775) 832-1177.

Fleetmac Wood at The Hanger Tahoe – 7-10 p.m., The Hanger, 2401 Lake Tahoe Boulevard. Sat July 11th The Hanger 2401 Lake Tahoe Blvd, South Lake Tahoe, CA 96150 19:00 – late Tickets on sale. https://ra.co/events/2420883 Not a tribute, but a party and DJ AV show that reworks the classic-rock sound of the Mac into a spectrum of electronic genres. Remixes of the hits and plenty of deep-cuts ready for the chiffon-filled dance floor. This is a tunnel-visioned, all-night journey. If you don’t like Fleetwood Mac, Stand Back, Stand Back. Since 2012, DJs Roxanne Roll and Alex Oxley have been hosting their tunnel-visioned event and celebrating the extensive back catalogue of Fleetwood Mac. With a curated and created assortment of remixes and edits they’ve shared their passion with like-minded hedonists at some of the best festivals and clubs in the world. Glastonbury to Robot Heart (Burning Man), from Printworks to Kantine am Berghain. Sounds like: https://bit.ly/fmwvolten Feels like: https://bit.ly/fmwsolvid Linktree: https://linktr.ee/fleetmacwood Instagram: http://bit.ly/fmwinsta Facebook: http://bit.ly/fmwfacebookpage TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@fleetmac_wood Partiful: https://bit.ly/fmwpartiful Threads: https://www.threads.net/@fleetmac_wood Soundcloud: http://bit.ly/fmwsoundcloud Twitter: https://x.com/FleetmacWood Youtube: http://bit.ly/fmwytpg Vimeo: http://bit.ly/fmwvimeo For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/1737433350578067/.

The Illeagles – The premier tribute to the music of the Eagles (SEATED SHOW) – 8 p.m., 14 NV-28. The Illeagles – The premier tribute to the music of the Eagles (SEATED SHOW) Sat. July 11th 2026 I Doors: 7pm Show: 8pm I Tickets: $25 ADV / $30 DOS I Ticket Link: https://tixr.com/e/182584 What do people want when they go see a live band? The members of SF Bay Area–based tribute band Illeagles believe audiences want to be fully engaged and captivated from the first note to the final encore. After more than a year of sold-out performances, that belief has proven true night after night. Illeagles was founded in late 2016 when six friends came together with two things in common: a deep love for timeless West Coast rock and a shared commitment to musical excellence. Each member is a standout musician in their own right, and that collective passion led to countless hours of study, rehearsal, and refinement — carefully recreating the signature harmonies, soaring guitar lines, and tight ensemble interplay that defined a generation of classic American rock. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/1260950406170558/.

Jeff Connor – 12-4 p.m., AleWorx at the Y, 2050 Lake Tahoe Blvd. Pop/Requests/80s For more information, visit https://laketahoealeworx.com/event/jeff-connor-5/.

Jesse Brewster Music – 8 p.m.-12 a.m., Crystal Bay, 580 Amagosa Rd. Jesse Brewster is a dynamic writer, producer and multi-instrumentalist in several styles. Fast or slow, heavy or soft, there’s an infectious pull in Brewster’s songwriting that is impossible to ignore. On stage Brewster and his band perform with a symbiotic grace, and his studio creations are deep and engaging For more information, visit https://www.bandsintown.com/e/108019304?app_id=pkvts0on0m&came_from=287&utm_medium=api&utm_source=partner_api&utm_campaign=event.

Macbeth – 7:30 p.m., Sand Harbor State Park, 2005 Highway 28. Additional dates: 7/11, 7/12, 7/15. For more information, visit https://laketahoeshakespeare.com/event/macbeth-4/ or call (800) 747-4697.

Nate Bargatze: Big Dumb Eyes Tour – 8 p.m.-10 a.m., Tahoe Blue Event Center, 75 U.S. 50. Hailed as “The Nicest Man in Stand-Up,” by The Atlantic Magazine, and “One of the Funniest People,” by CBS Mornings, Grammy & Emmy-nominated comedian, NY Times #1 bestselling author, actor, podcaster, director and producer Nate Bargatze is selling out shows with more than 1.2 million tickets sold in 2024 and over 20 venue records broken this year to date. He is currently the #1 comedian in the world according to Pollstar, putting him in the company of Coldplay, Madonna and U2. Billboard announced that Bargatze set a record in 2024 for the biggest one-year gross by a comedy performer in histo For more information, visit https://www.tahoeblueeventcenter.com/events/detail/nate-bargatze-big-dumb-eyes-tour.

Subra at the Castle – Night One – 4:45-7 p.m., Emerald Bay State Park. Guitar, bass, drums, piano, banjo, ukulele…he can do it all! Subra Doyle is a passionate musician and guitarist who has been playing since the age of 7 and performing since the age of 13. Passionate about various genres, including jazz, blues, reggae, and folk, Subra enjoys weaving multiple genres into his music, often performing complex and evolving live looping performances with musical layers that engage the senses. Catch good vibes with Subra Doyle’s songs and serenades on Saturday, July 11th, at Vikingsholm Castle. Enjoy a twilight reception at Emerald Bay, arguably one of the coolest venues in Tahoe, with arguably one of the coolest venues in Tahoe! This is a fundraising event, so your ticket supports education programs and restoration projects in the Tahoe California State Parks! Tickets are $110 ($100 for SSPF Park Donors), which includes an exclusive experience of driving down to Emerald Bay, parking, a private twilight reception with live music, and heavy appetizers. A reservation is required, so book now! For more information, visit https://sierrastateparks.org/events/subra-july11.

The Wayside – 1-5 p.m., The Grove, 1900 Jameson Beach Rd. Join us just outside the Grove Restaurant for a performance by The Wayside. For more information, visit https://camprichardsonresort.com/event/the-wayside-2/.

Wild Wonder Learning Series – Ambassador Animals – 1-3 p.m., Lake Tahoe Wildlife Care, 1551 Al Tahoe Blvd. Join us for a two-hour event and learn about LTWC’s three ambassador animals, the training they receive, and how the ambassador animals help LTWC fulfill their mission. This is for all-ages and an onsite event at Lake Tahoe Wildlife Care! This is a free event, but donations are appreciated ( Donate Here ). The suggested amount is $10 per individual or $25 per family. All proceeds directly support LTWC. For more information, visit https://ltwc.org/event/wild-wonder-learning-series-ambassador-animals/.

Sunday, July 12

Brubeck Jazz Summit 2026 – 7 p.m.-12 a.m., Classical Tahoe, 291 Country Club Dr. Grammy-winning Musician, Composer, Educator and Activist Roxy Coss has become one of the most unique and innovative Saxophonists on the scene. She is the Founder and President of Women In Jazz Organization (WIJO), Co-Artistic Director of the Brubeck Jazz Summit, and Visiting Fellow for the Think Tank at Wesleyan University’s Bailey College of the Environment ’24-’25. Starting in September ’25, Roxy will be joining Stony Brook University as Director of Jazz Studies. Downbeat called her “an exceptional young talent.” For more information, visit https://www.bandsintown.com/e/107899541?app_id=pkvts0on0m&came_from=287&utm_medium=api&utm_source=partner_api&utm_campaign=event.

Chuck Briseno – 1-5 p.m., The Grove, 1900 Jameson Beach Rd. Join us just outside the Grove Restaurant for a performance by Chuck Briseno. For more information, visit https://camprichardsonresort.com/event/chuck-briseno/.

Kristen Stephens (of the Imposters) – 5-9 p.m., AleWorx at the Y, 2050 Lake Tahoe Blvd. Country/Folk/Pop For more information, visit https://laketahoealeworx.com/event/kristen-stephens-of-the-imposters-2/.

Monday, July 13

Ambassadors Soccer Camp – July 13-17th: Ambassadors Soccer Camp Time: 9:30am-2pm daily Ambassadors Soccer Camps are designed for children ages 5-14 and offer a fun, safe, and positive five-day soccer experience. Campers will learn skills, play games, and compete in an encouraging environment led by Christian mentor-coaches from all over the world who care about both athletic and personal growth. Each day also includes a special Bible time, where kids will hear about faith in Jesus through our Toward the Goal curriculum-helping them grow both on and off the field.Whether your child is new to soccer or already loves the game, this camp is a great place to build confidence, friendships, and lasting memories! The cost of camp this year is $180 per camper for the week. Scholarships are also available if needed-we want every child to have the opportunity to participate. For more information, feel free to reach out to Amber at amber@cornerstonecommunity.net. Registration Link Additional dates: 7/13, 7/14, 7/15, 7/16. For more information, visit https://business.ivcba.org/event-calendar/Details/ambassadors-soccer-camp-1717124?sourceTypeId=Hub or call (775) 831-6626.

Constitutional Scholars Speaker Series at Lake Tahoe – 6-7:30 p.m., Description National Perspectives on the most important constitutional questions of our time – UNR at Lake Tahoe For more information, visit https://business.ivcba.org/event-calendar/Details/constitutional-scholars-speaker-series-at-lake-tahoe-1840135?sourceTypeId=Hub.

RENO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA- Decades: Back to the ’80s – 7:30 p.m., Sand Harbor State Park, 2005 Highway 28. For more information, visit https://laketahoeshakespeare.com/event/reno-philharmonic-orchestra-decades-back-to-the-80s/ or call (800) 747-4697.

Tuesday, July 14

Tahoe Inc Roundtable – 5:30-7 p.m., Cowork Tahoe, 3079 Harrison Avenue. Organizing & Accelerating Tahoe’s Innovation Ecosystem For more information, visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/july-14th-tahoe-inc-roundtable-tickets-1983573959108.

KEITH ANDERSON: A High-Energy Country Hits Concert – 7:30 p.m., Sand Harbor State Park, 2005 Highway 28. For more information, visit https://laketahoeshakespeare.com/event/keith-anderson-a-high-energy-country-hits-concert/ or call (800) 747-4697.

Sauna and Soul -July Session – 7 p.m., Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe Resort, Spa and Casino, 111 Country Club Drive. Join us for an evening designed for deep restoration and intentional living. Located in Stillwater Spa inside Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe Three evenings. Three energies. Join one or the full journey (registration required for each event) May 26th, June 23rd, July 14th 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM What to Expect: Sauna & Soul is a curated three-part experience, with each gathering inspired by the prevailing astrological themes of the season. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/1264566109095319/.

Wednesday, July 15

Alpine Glow Kayak Tour – 6:30-8:30 p.m., Sugar Pine Point State Park. Experience the alpen glow magic, where the summits of mountains appear to glow with a reddish or pinkish hue. Did you know this glow is caused by the way the sun’s light interacts with the atmosphere and the surface of the mountains? And we’re in the best possible place, right on the water surrounded by mountains, to experience that phenomenon! The Sierra State Parks Foundation is partnering with California State Parks to offer a unique after-hours kayak tour along the shore of Sugar Pine Point State Park in Lake Tahoe. The tour will take place between the highest-elevation operational lighthouse in the U.S. and the park’s southern boundary, overlooking Meeks Bay. State Park staff will provide insight into the region’s cultural and natural history under the radiance of alpenglow. Your ticket helps support educational programs in our parks! The cost of the tour is $55, which includes parking, the kayak rental, mandatory life jackets, and safety training. No experience is necessary. Attendees should arrive at 6:30 p.m. at the restrooms on the Day Use parking lot (lakeside, not campground side of the park), and from there, we will walk together to the boat house to pick up rentals. The tour begins at 7:00 p.m. and lasts an hour and a half, plus. Recommended for ages 12 and up. Space is very limited, so book now! Can’t attend this one? We have another kayak tour July 22nd and August 19th . Thank you to our kayak sponsor, West Shore Sports , for making this magic happen! For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/977053744808649/.

Lake Tahoe Summer Concert Series – Eric Church – Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe, 4130 Lake Tahoe Blvd,. Summer, Music, Family Friendly. The Lake Tahoe Summer Concert Series has some of the hottest music acts under the stars, located across the street from our resort. Starting on 07/15/2026 and ending on 07/16/2026 For more information, visit https://www.margaritavilleresorts.com/margaritaville-resort-lake-tahoe/things-to-do-in-lake-tahoe/events/lake-tahoe-summer-concert-series-eric-church.

Magic Work – 7:30-10 p.m., Boathouse Theater, Tallac Historic Site. Magic Work: Songwriters in the Round brings together three extraordinary voices in contemporary folk and Americana—Rita Hosking, Kathy Kallick, and Laurie Lewis—for an intimate evening of music and storytelling. In this special “in the round” format, the artists take turns sharing original songs, the stories behind them, and the inspiration that fuels their craft. The result is a dynamic, unscripted performance filled with harmony, humor, and heartfelt connection. For more information, visit https://valhallatahoe.com/event/magic-work-songwriters-in-the-round-with-rita-hosking-kathy-kallick-and-laurie-lewis-july-15-2026/.

South Lake Tahoe Mini Bug Camp – 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Various Locations, Various Locations. For campers ages 6-8. In this special three-day mini camp, young campers will look under logs, among plants, and in tree bark in search of hidden insects in various locations around South Lake Tahoe. They will also learn what these bugs eat and their important jobs in the ecosystem. For more information, visit https://www.tinsweb.org/south-lake-camps.

Thursday, July 16

2026 State of the Lake Report – 5:30-7 p.m., Granlibakken Tahoe, 725 Granlibakken Road. The Tahoe Environmental Research Center presents the State of the Lake Report providing an update of the ecological health of the basin. For more information, visit https://www.eventbrite.com/e/2026-state-of-the-lake-report-tickets-1992016721638 or call 530.583.4242.

SAILING CLUB, YACHT ROCK PARTY W/ PIER PRESSURE – 10 p.m.-2 a.m., Tessie’s Cocktails & Chords , 18 US-50. Sailing Club launches at Tessie’s with Tahoe’s smoothest & grooviest party starters, Pier Pressure. Captains Orders – grab a cocktail and head to the dance floor. Sailing Club offers a night of high-energy yachty fun that keeps the room rocking from start to finish. Rascal Flatts ticket holders receive a BOGO cocktail with their concert ticket. For more information, visit http://tessiestahoe.com/events or call 6194547421.

How did Tahoe tourism weather the winter? Pt. 2: Businesses managed with strong local base

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – In part two of a series on how tourism and businesses fared this winter, the Tribune asked businesses about their experience with the ebbs and flows.

Last week’s part one revealed that visitation numbers in Lake Tahoe were more resilient than expected during the warm winter. Depending on the region, lodging levels ranged from an 11% decline to a 4.2% increase compared to the prior winter.

To learn more about visitation markers, read last week’s article, titled How did Tahoe tourism weather the winter? Pt. 1: Visitation numbers show resilience

Shifting the lens to the business side of things, Jerry Bindel, general manager and area managing director of Forest Suites, said, “I think we’ve all become pretty astute at how to manage our businesses and understand that you can do all the planning in the world, and then you’ve got to execute based on what Mother Nature brings.”

Although Mother Nature brought a handful of generous storms this winter, they were often followed by rain, warm temperatures, and dry spells, resulting in a low snowpack and early melt-out.

A double-edged sword

Although cooler temperatures and, at times, more snow would have been ideal, some of the businesses interviewed point out that more snow can be a double-edged sword.

“It goes both ways, right?…”, Erik Rhodes, owner of Bruschetta, said, recalling a winter a few years ago when there was so much snow that no one could get up to Tahoe. “Businesses weren’t doing well either because nobody could get into town.”

While mild winters may deter visitors, big snowstorms can render travel impossible. Often, the timing of a storm can make the difference.

“We all pray for the snowstorm that starts on a Monday and ends on a Wednesday so we can clear the roads by Thursday,” Bindel said, “and then guests come up for a wonderful weekend of snow or stay the entire week.”

A strong local base

A trend that emerged in interviews with businesses is that those with a strong local base showed resilience, while those more reliant on visitors felt the fluctuations more.

“The main thing for us,” Bruschetta owner Rhodes said, “is we have our regulars that come in on a regular basis and they keep it going for us.”

Another establishment with a customer base largely made up of locals is Craft and Logic, a craft-beer taproom and scratch-kitchen restaurant in Truckee. Owner Austin Harrington actually saw a jump in business during the first quarter this year.

Harrington said that although business from visitors can be beneficial, “I think a big part of our success is having a great connection in the local community.”

For Tube Tahoe, a snow tubing park in Meyers with a customer base made up of 95% visitors, this winter was a different experience.

“It was a challenging season,” Mark Budgell, Tube Tahoe owner, said, whose business is also weather dependent, “relative to the four previous seasons, it was definitely a down year by a fairly significant margin.”

But he’s confident the pendulum will swing the other way. “That’s life in Tahoe, right?,” he said. “It’s feast or famine, it seems like. It’s an amazing place to visit, and it’s cyclical. We’ll have some amazing winters in the future and [I’m] still super optimistic about the business, the space, and in the community.”

Group bookings and holidays are more stable

Another pattern in milder winters, as Bindel pointed out, is that lodging operations catering to larger groups are typically more stable. He says that those lodging customers book months in advance and will come anyway, regardless of conditions.

However, those that do more individual or small family-based bookings fluctuate more.

“If you’re more of an individual property, where you’re getting last-minute couples and smaller families traveling, or that style hotel,” he said, “that was definitely an ebb and flow market. When the snows come, as soon as the roads clear, boom, great business, really strong, but then [it] recedes.”

Bookings are also typically more stable on holidays.

“People plan their vacations prior to knowing if we’re going to have snow, and they don’t really change them for big weekends,” Rhodes pointed out.

A summer resurgence

In contrast to winter, summer appears to be doing well with high demand for lodging in mountain destinations.

According to the North Tahoe Community Alliance’s May economic report, which draws on multiple destination reporting outlets, hotel bookings this summer are trending well ahead of last year, with June reservations up 4.4%, July up 5%, and September up 9.2%.  

The formerly known ‘Quiet Waters’ estate on Lakeshore Boulevard isn’t so quiet

When walking down Lakeshore Boulevard in Incline Village during the summer months, it’s hard to miss the construction activity going in and out of 885/887 Lakeshore property.

Formerly known as the Quiet Waters two-parcel estate, it’s no secret that Lyndon Rive—Elon Musk’s cousin—is building an underwater hockey pool there. The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency approved the blueprints for the 5,514-sq.-ft. natatorium three-story indoor pool house back in 2022, which includes five bedrooms, four bathrooms, a locker room, showers, bunkrooms, and other amenities on one of the parcels; and it’s clear to see construction is well underway.

At that time, rumors had been going around town that the Rives planned on hosting underwater hockey tournaments at their property, but the Rives never made a public announcement about it. In 2024 the TRPA affirmed that the property is still considered a “single-family residence” and holding public activities there would be a violation of their TRPA permit.

885/887 Lakeshore Blvd. 
Kayla Anderson / Tahoe Daily Tribune

However, a faction of Incline Village residents is still dubious about such a large compound being used only by the Rive family and their guests.

“My interest (as with many others in the community) is to not to stop the family from building what it is entitled to on its property—that is its right,” an anonymous source wrote in to the Tahoe Daily Tribune. “But no one wants to see a residential part of Incline Village turned into a ‘sports complex’, to see property values throughout town decrease because of the ego and whims of a billionaire, nor have the peaceful enjoyment of those living nearby disturbed by commercial traffic, noise, and related activity.”

A few months before that anonymous source wrote into us, the Rives bought a vacant lot across the street.

Acquiring 888 Lakeshore Blvd.

In October 2025, the Rives bought the 0.44-acre vacant lot on 888 Lakeshore Boulevard for around $3.5 million. The 5-bedroom house on the street behind the lot was sold on the same day to a buyer under a different LLC. Rumors started kicking up around town again that they would be building a parking lot and dormitory to supplement their underwater hockey tournaments across the street.

On February 12, 2026, TRPA Communications Specialist Thea Schwartz sent the Tahoe Daily Tribune this statement: “TRPA inspectors are monitoring construction at 885 Lakeshore Blvd., which continues to meet the conditions of the TRPA Permit for a single-family dwelling and indoor pool. Whether the homeowner exceeds the scope of the permit in the future will depend on how the property is being used.

The 888 Lakeshore Blvd. lot.
Kayla Anderson / Tahoe Daily Tribune

“At 888 Lakeshore Blvd., recent public documents include an Individual Parcel Evaluation System, IPES, Evaluation Application, which determines the allowable land coverage on a property, received Nov. 2025, and a permit for tree removal on the property was approved in January 2026. As of now, no development applications have been submitted for 888 Lakeshore Blvd.”

At around that same time, Washoe County Planning & Building Department Planning Manager Trevor Lloyd said that nothing had been sent to the department for changing the 888 Lakeshore Boulevard lot.

Flash forward to June 12, 2026, and an application for a Washoe County building permit for 888 Lakeshore Boulevard had been filed. However, when seeking more information regarding the application, Washoe311 sent a response stating that permits are not public record until they have been reviewed, approved, and issued.

The Tahoe Daily Tribune did receive the 888 Lakeshore Boulevard IPES application sent to the TRPA dated March 5, 2026, proposing “to construct a single family dwelling with an antique car storage space below on a currently vacant residential parcel. The residence is proposed to have one bedroom, one bathroom, and an open concept for the kitchen/living/dining/recreation areas,” the application says.

The residence is also proposed to have a Lakeshore Boulevard-facing terrace on the south side of the home. The entire project is meant to accept 4,705 sq. ft. of space on the vacant lot, as well as requesting 244 sq. ft. of off-site coverage to allow access onto the parcel from Rubicon Peak Lane.

According to TRPA Public Information Officer Jeff Cowen, TRPA planners have up to 120 days to complete their review of a permit application, not including time for an applicant to give more information that may be needed to finish it.

“If the planner requires additional information—like better stormwater infiltration plans or proof of an easement for a driveway—the applicant is responsible for submitting that information outside of TRPA’s review deadlines. Sometimes that can extend the review time for an application,” Cowen adds.

Some members of the Incline Village community are clearly concerned about seeing this project move forward, which again brings up the argument about the rights of private property owners and any responsibility they have to the public to communicate their plans.

“It is apparent that the Rives plan to go forward with the construction, occupancy, and use of a commercial swimming facility,” the anonymous citizen wrote. “I would merely like to see Washoe Country and TRPA enforce its own codes and ordinances and see the family agree—prior to occupancy permits and TRPA signoff—to abide by them. For once occupied, TRPA has limited enforcement powers; the small fines that could be levied for holding a commercial event on a residential property would be immaterial to this family.”

Back in February 2026, TRPA’s Thea Schwartz added, “We appreciate the vigilance of community members in shared accountability for protecting Lake Tahoe. If you or anybody notices anything that needs attention, please let us know. Concerns may be reported online (https://www.trpa.gov/contact/report-a-concern/) or by contacting our Compliance Manager Steve Sweet directly at ssweet@trpa.gov.”

As of July 5, 2026, a Whisper Homes sign is the only thing placed within the trees on the 888 Lakeshore Boulevard. On the sign is a QR code leading back to the Incline Village-based home construction company, where it touts constructing “ultra-contemporary luxury homes that deploy leading-edge technologies with minimal impact on the environment.” A representative from Whisper Homes could not be reached for comment about this project.

Tim Wakefield honored during ceremony at South Lake Tahoe Rec Center, Gary Quinn given ‘Key to the City’

From left to right: John Smoltz, Gary Quinn, Kevin Millar, Rick Luchinsky and Derek Lowe
Victoria Mastrocola/Tahoe Daily Tribune

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – Celebrity athletes and community members alike gathered for a special ceremony during the start of American Century Championship week on Tuesday, July 7 to honor Tim Wakefield, unforgettable Major League Baseball pitcher for the Boston Red Sox and legendary knuckleballer, at the South Lake Tahoe Recreation and Aquatics Center.

Wakefield, who passed away at age 57 from brain cancer, harbored a deep connection to the South Lake Tahoe community. To celebrate who he was as a man and as a teammate, Gary Quinn, Vice President, partnerships and general manager, owned properties at NBC Sports, American Century Investment’s Senior Vice President, Rick Luchinsky, South Lake Tahoe Mayor, Cody Bass, along with former professional baseball players, Derek Lowe, John Smoltz and Kevin Millar, spoke of Wakefield’s dedication to his family, his team and the town. 

“Every summer, our town lights up with a special kind of energy,” said Bass. “For more than three decades, the American Century Championship has brought the world’s eyes to our shores, but it’s always brought us something much deeper than celebrity spotlights. It has brought us true partners who care about the heartbeat of this town.”

Bass dubbed Wakefield the “champion of charity”, saying he always had time for fans and a smile for a child.  

“Though Tim is no longer with us, his spirit is officially, permanently woven into the fabric of South Lake Tahoe,” Bass said during his speech. “Thanks to a deeply generous donation made in his honor by the Tim Wakefield Foundation, NBC Sports and the American Century Golf Tournament, our new recreation center is now home to state-of-the-art batting cages.” 

Contributions in Wakefield’s name from NBC Sports and American Century Investments totaled a staggering $50,000 towards the South Lake Tahoe Recreation and Aquatics Center thus far.

Jerry Bindel and the South Tahoe Parks Foundation highlighted a special jersey dedication for Wakefield during the ceremony, saying the tribute will be hung inside the Rec Center. 

Gary Quinn was then handed the “Key to the City” by Mayor Bass who said Quinn was responsible for helping ensure that support be poured back into the community every year.

“We’re so grateful for the opportunity to give back. This community means everything to us,” Quinn said after accepting the key. “This is probably the most meaningful and rewarding part of my career, and I’m going to do everything I can with our partners at American Century to help the community keep this here for as long as we can.”

Sports legend and Wakefield’s Boston Red Sox teammate, Kevin Millar spoke about his bond with Wakefield and how it was born when Wakefield was a first baseman. Millar also joked about playing catch with him to see if he can catch his iconic knuckleballs.

As Millar ended his speech, he told Bass that it was time to change his style and handed him a Red Sox hat with a smile. 

Millar handing Bass a Boston Red Sox hat
Victoria Mastrocola/Tahoe Daily Tribune

Derek Lowe got up on the microphone and recalled his rookie year in 1997 when Wakefield took Lowe under his wing and taught him how to be professional, on and off the field. 

John Smoltz said a few words about having the privilege to be Wakefield’s teammate in the last year of Smoltz’s career. Smoltz noted that he and Wakefield shared a common bond – they were the two oldest guys on the team. 

“Tim, this is a great honor for him,” Smoltz told the Tribune. “He cared deeply about everybody, including his family and the community. This tournament and what this represents is going to go a long way to keep that legacy alive.” 

Lowe added, “We miss him, he was a tremendous guy. It’s a special day.”

After the ceremony, the crowd hit the batting cages and watched as Smoltz threw pitches to children in the community. 

John Smoltz pitching to children in the batting cages
Victoria Mastrocola/Tahoe Daily Tribune

The South Lake Tahoe Recreation and Aquatics Center is located at 1100 Rufus Allen Blvd in South Lake Tahoe, Calif.

Taylor Twellman discusses World Cup during American Century Championship press conference

Taylor Twellman discusses World Cup and his odds this year
Victoria Mastrocola/Tahoe Daily Tribune

STATELINE, Nev. – As soon as Taylor Twellman sat down for a press conference on Wednesday, July 8 at the American Century Championship (ACC), the World Cup was the hottest topic in the room.

When asked what Twellman, former Major League Soccer star, would say regarding whether or not Mauricio Pochettino, current manager of the US Mens National Team, should return, Twellman was quick to respond.

“I’ve always been one that says, ‘I stand on the side of the fence that managers shouldn’t get a second term,'” he said. “They should change the message.” 

Twellman expanded on his response, saying Pochettino didn’t really get a first term, and if US Soccer and Pochettino both believe that he can put his blueprint on changing the team for the better, Twellman would consider this being the real term of his tenure. 

“The United States Soccer Federation hired him too late,” Twellman said. 

Twellman was also asked what his thoughts were on what the US Soccer program and the team would have to do to get past being stuck in the Round of 16 for their fourth consecutive elimination following their loss to Belgium on July 6.

“The three and a half years of preparation for ’26 wasn’t at its best,” he went on. “Now, 2030 is coming around. You’ve got World Cup qualifying – that’s going to help. You’ve got the [CONCACAF] Gold Cup and all of that, so it’s going to be a little bit more preparation for them.” 

Although Twellman is considered one of the most elite goal scorers in MLS history, having been awarded the Golden Boot and MLS MVP, he’s also proved that he can dominate on the green. Last year, Twellman posted his highest finish ever at the ACC, placing fourth overall with 61 points.

Regarding his 12:1 odds this year, Twellman said, “They are what they are.”

“The thing about golf is, I’m not playing against anyone – I’m playing against the golf course. It is so much fun for me because I’ve played with John Smoltz who chips in three out of seven holes, and I’m like ‘What is this?'” he added. “It’s me against Edgewood, who got the better of me last year.”

Coming Home: The Washoe Tribe’s Journey Back to Ancestral Lands

For generations, the Washoe Tribe watched others manage the lands their ancestors had inhabited over thousands of years. Today, that relationship is changing. A series of milestone land acquisitions, conservation partnerships, and policy shifts is restoring both land and authority to the Washoe (Waší-šiw) people in what tribal leaders describe as an essential step toward healing historical trauma.

The Washoe Tribe once stewarded more than 3.5 million acres stretching from Honey Lake to Mono Lake, from Walker Lake west to the Sierra crest. At the heart of those homelands was Lake Tahoe — da ow a ga in Washoe, meaning “the lake” or “edge of the lake.” Each summer, Washoe families returned there to hunt, fish, gather, and renew their connection to the land. Westward expansion by emigrants and the Gold Rush in the mid 1800s, however, changed all that. Prospectors, loggers, and ranchers drove the Washoe off their lands, and state-sanctioned killing of Native Americans drastically reduced their numbers.

Over time, the Washoe tribal lands shrunk to almost nothing — three reservations in Nevada around Carson City and one in Alpine County, California — totaling around 3,200 acres. Their only foothold in Tahoe is three small pieces of land in Incline Village, Olympic Valley, and South Lake Tahoe, equaling 30 acres (including Babbitt Peak north of Stampede Reservoir).

Cut off from their lands, the people suffered.

“In Washoe culture, we don’t see our homelands as being separate from ourselves. Our language and part of our identity — there’s no way to really separate us from land,” said Helen Fillmore, Washoe Land Trust Board president. “We see our homelands as an extension of our own bodies. Being separated from it for so long and seeing the degradation of it, it feels like a degradation to ourselves, to our family, to our culture.”

The land also suffered. Without the Washoe and their cultural practice of burning and gathering, forests were impacted by massive wildfires, illegal dumping, and mining.

Now the Washoe have begun reclaiming some of their traditional lands — and through that their culture — via both acquisitions and management. This winter, the Washoe Tribe acquired thousands of acres north of Truckee, the third largest tribal land back (returning ancestral lands to Indigenous control) in California’s history.

A Shift at the State Level

In 1850, California not only passed a law that allowed for the forceable removal of Native Americans from their traditional lands, it also subsidized private and militia campaigns against Indigenous peoples. In his 1851 State of the State address, California’s first governor declared “that a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct must be expected.”

In 2019, California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a formal apology to Native Americans for the genocide that was inflicted on them by the state in the 19th and early 20th centuries — the first of its kind in the U.S., according to the New York Times. Washoe Tribe Chairman Serrell Smokey was in Sacramento, along with 100 other tribal leaders, for the governor’s apology.

“California has one of the worst histories of the treatment of tribes and I believe that’s why Gov. Newsom made his apology, because it was a history that wasn’t ancient history. It wasn’t just the Gold Rush or colonization,” Smokey said. “It was even during modern times when the Termination Era literally wiped tribes off the map just with the swipe of a pen. [The apology] was very meaningful … but what came out of it was the priorities, as well as funding sources and projects, of the State of California that were extremely helpful.”

One of those projects was Newsom’s 30×30 initiative. Launched in 2020, it aims to conserve 30% of California’s lands and coastal waters by 2030. A cornerstone of this policy is strengthening tribal partnerships and supporting Indigenous-led conservation and comanagement of ancestral lands, which the state recognizes as vital for biodiversity and climate. Then in 2024, voters passed Prop 4, a $10 billion climate bond measure that designates money for tribal-led environmental conservation, wildfire resilience, and ancestral land returns.

Acquiring the Wélmetli?Preserve

That policy shift at the state level helped to make the Washoe land back possible. But before state money came into play, the first step was identifying land for sale. This started with two nonprofits: the Northern Sierra Partnership, which works to conserve and restore the Northern Sierra Nevada from the Carson Pass to Lassen, and the Feather River Land Trust. Based in Quincy, the land trust’s mission is to conserve the Feather River watershed and wildlife habitat.

In 2021, the two organizations collaborated with the Washoe Tribe on an interpretive project at the Sierra Valley Preserve and Nature Center. The Washoe has a 10,000-year history in the valley, and the groups wanted to be sure that the tribe’s story was told in their own words.

Around the same time, NSP President Lucy Blake became aware of some large properties east of Loyalton that were possibly coming up for sale.

“I started thinking, “Why aren’t we working with the Washoe Tribe to get more land back in their hands? Would they be interested in owning more land?” Blake said.

In 2023, the Loyalton Ranch — a 10,200-acre property that stretches across the mountain range that separates Long Valley from Sierra Valley — came on the market. The property was owned by the City of Santa Clara, which purchased it in the 1970s for geothermal purposes, but that use never panned out. Instead, the land had been leased for cattle grazing for 50 years. After the 2020 Loyalton Fire, the city council decided to sell.

The property had a price tag of $6 million. The tribe needed to raise money.

The land trust, which had experience with land backs, played an instrumental role in helping the Washoe find grants. From 2019 to 2022, the FRLT assisted the Mountain Maidu in securing almost 4,000 acres in Plumas County owned by PG&E.

The bulk of the money to buy the Loyalton Ranch, a $5.5 million grant, came from the Wildlife Conservation Board, an 80-year-old state agency that provides funding for land and habitat protection statewide. In August 2025, the board made an explicit commitment to ancestral land return as part of its strategic plan, a direct response to Gov. Newsom’s initiatives.

“There has been a real push across state agencies to improve those [tribal] relationships and look for opportunities for ancestral land return whenever possible. And if not that, then comanagement agreements,” said Jennifer Norris, Wildlife Conservation Board executive director. “Anytime we’re getting land back to tribes, not only are we redressing a wrong, but we’re also giving it back to the original stewards who have a very reciprocal partnership perspective on how they work with nature.”

This was not the conservation board’s first time giving money for a land return. It has helped tribes reacquire 38,000 acres across seven projects since 2023, including a portion of the two biggest land backs in California history — 14,000 acres in Monterey County returned to the Esselen Nation in 2020 and 47,000 acres returned to the Yurok Tribe along the lower Klamath River in 2025.

WASHOE LAND: Washoe Chairman Serrell Smokey at the Wélmetli? Preserve, the 10,000-acre property in Sierra Valley the tribe recently acquired. Two federal measures move the tribe from the margins of land management toward the center of decision-making. Photo courtesy Northern Sierra Partnership

“Our goal at the Wildlife Conservation Board is biological diversity, protecting fish, wildlife, and plants,” Norris said. “We recognize that the worldview that our tribal partners bring will mean that these landscapes are cared for and protected and that diversity will thrive. So, for us, it’s a win-win.”

The remainder of the money to buy the Loyalton Ranch, now renamed the Wélmetli? Preserve (Wélmetli? is the name for Northern Washoe), came from individual donations. The sale was finalized this February, making it the largest land purchase by the Washoe and tripling the amount of land the tribe owns.

“This one in particular, it means a lot,” Chairman Smokey said. “Everything that the Washoe people have was all hard fought to get. We had small land bases kind of all over the place, over several counties in Nevada and California. This is the largest one. It’s really huge in terms of us gaining back territory that our people now own. We physically own it in the modern sense. And our people, it’s their land so they can go on it. They can use it. They can feel free that they’re not trespassing or on BLM lands or any other kind of private property. It’s theirs.”

The Washoe Land Trust, formed in 2025 to buy ancestral land for the Washoe people, holds the property. It plans to use the land to reinstate traditional cultural practices and provide educational opportunities with a focus on connecting youth back to the land and their native language. It already held its first event on the property, a spring celebration for tribal members, in May.

“We want to develop a land management plan for the lands we did reacquire. Lands that are just left alone aren’t necessarily well stewarded or functioning,” Fillmore said. “With this recent purchase of the 10,000 acres, it has experienced quite a bit of degradation, overgrazing, wildfire impacts, historical mining, and dumping. So, there’s quite a bit of work that needs to be done in terms of revegetation to clean up to the property and restoring its ecological natural functions.”

The Washoe Land Trust is currently working to raise $1 million for management of the preserve and another $1 million to purchase a neighboring 4,000-acre property. On Aug. 1, the Washoe Warrior Society, a nonprofit dedicated to restoring Washoe land, culture, and the sacred relationship in the Tahoe Basin, is hosting The People Singing, a free Indigenous music festival, at the Truckee River Regional Park as a fundraiser for the Washoe Land Trust and a celebration of Washoe culture.

“In Washoe culture, we don’t see our homelands as being separate from ourselves. Our language and part of our identity — there’s no way to really separate us from land.”

~ Helen Fillmore, Washoe Land Trust Board president

Smokey said the purchase of the Wélmetli? Preserve helps to right past wrongs. According to the chairman, the preserve was the largest area that the Washoe once inhabited and were forcibly removed from.

“Any land back, it’s a part of healing. It’s a healing from trauma,” he said. “Historical trauma is real. It’s not just from what we’ve learned, but it’s instilled in our bodies and our nervous system. To be able to get land back from where our people were hunted out of [means a lot].”

The other two organizations involved in the land acquisition see the purchase as not only returning land to the original custodians who share the same goals of environmental preservation but also working with the tribe as an equal partner.

“It’s obviously important for us to help restore that connection [of the Washoe to their land], but we are a conservation organization and so our focus is really on having the best strategic partners to have the greatest impact for conserving landscapes that are important for everyone,” said Corey Pargee, Feather River Land Trust executive director. “It’s really that tribes are leaders in this effort, like seeing them as true partners in this work, not as just beneficiary of the work.”

Blake said the preserve was the NSP’s single biggest acquisition since the nonprofit began in 2007, and the most rewarding.

“This wonderful combination of conserving land for future generations and returning it to its original stewards with all of the elements of justice and equity, I consider it to be one of the most beautiful and interesting projects we’ve ever worked on,” she said.

The tribe’s reacquisition of traditional lands is not limited to California. The Douglas County Lands Bill, which is currently in the U.S. Senate, would transfer 2,600 acres of federal land in Nevada to the Washoe Tribe. A portion of that is outside of Gardnerville. Chairman Smokey said the tribe is looking at several other pieces of land in Nevada as well.

“We’ll never stop looking for more land,” Smokey said, “especially in all these areas that we were forced out of.”

A Return to Tahoe

The Lake Tahoe Restoration Act, which provides millions in federal funding for environmental projects, habitat restoration, forest management, and water quality improvements in the Tahoe Basin, was first passed by Congress in 2000. Its renewal in 2016 (and again in 2024) significantly increased the Washoe Tribe’s authority at the lake by recognizing the tribe as a key partner in environmental programs and providing funding directly to the tribe to lead critical projects on ancestral lands.

“Now we are more of an official governing entity along with the TRPA and the Forest Service. We’re more heavily involved than we ever have been,” Smokey said. “We have access to do projects using Lake Tahoe Restoration Act funds and with the help of all of our partnerships, we played a major part in writing the Santini-Burton Modernization Act; it actually includes the Washoe Tribe as a governing entity.”

The Santini-Burton Modernization Act, an update to the original 1980 law that is currently making its way through Congress, empowers the Washoe Tribe even more. It not only designates the tribe as an eligible entity to receive land transfers — an authority previously only afforded to state and local governments — but it also allows for the transfer of Forest Service funds to the tribe for land management activities.

TAKING THE LEAD: Cale Pete, Washoe Tribe environmental manager, speaks to California Tahoe Conservancy staff and partners at Máyala Wáta (Meeks Bay Meadow), where the tribe is the lead on a restoration project. Photo courtesy California Tahoe Conservancy

One of the projects the Washoe are working on in Tahoe is the Máyala Wáta (Meeks Meadows) Restoration, located across the highway from Meeks Bay. The tribe is working with the Forest Service and California Tahoe Conservancy, a state agency, to remove several hundred acres of conifers, which encroached on the meadow after the secession of Washoe traditional burning practices. The conservancy provided a $1.4 million grant for the project, the majority of which went to the Washoe Tribe, as well as helped fund the position of the Washoe Liaison, which was created to represent the tribe within the Lake Tahoe Basin.

The Washoe Tribe is the lead agency on the Máyala Wáta project.

“It’s very rare that a tribe encounters this type of agreement,” said CTC Communications Director Chris Carney. “This is all forest service land, where the tribe is the lead implementing the project on Forest Service land. So that’s a very unusual relationship.”

The Meeks Bay Resort & Marina has been managed by the tribe through a special use permit with the Forest Service since 1997.

The tribe has also started its own work crew modeled after the California Conservation Corps, a workforce development program for young adults, called the Washoe Tribe Conservation Corps. In one of its roles, the WTCC serves as a contractor with the conservancy. The tribal conservation corps is helping to restore wetlands as part of the conservancy’s Upper Truckee Marsh South Project in South Lake Tahoe.

“There’s a responsibility to be in communication with the tribe on everything we’re doing,” said Scott Carroll, CTC senior environmental planner. “There are formal tribal consultation practices that the state of California and the California Natural Resources Agency [the conservancy’s parent agency] have. There’s a memorandum of understanding between the California Tahoe Conservancy and the Washoe Tribe. And our leadership often reminds us that this is actual government-to-government consultation … The chairman’s equivalent for us is the president or maybe the governor.”

From the tribe’s perspective, these agreements allow it to take care of its former lands with traditional practices. The Washoe are working with the Forest Service on controlled burns in the Basin, and with a new master stewardship agreement with the agency, the tribe will have a say over timber harvesting operations in several national forests from the Tahoe Basin down to Mono County.

“It does fuel reductions, which is way over-needed, and it also allows the tribe to be stewards of the lands the way our people always have,” Chairman Smokey said. “We can implement traditional Washoe ecological knowledge back onto the land.”

The Washoe Warrior Society, formed in 2009 to restore Washoe land, culture, and a sacred relationship to Tahoe, is working to secure land in the Basin to build a round house, a spiritual gathering space dedicated to ceremony, prayer, and Washoe cultural teachings. Lisa Grayshield, WWS executive director, said that the nonprofit is preparing to start discussions with the Forest Service about comanagement of land in Tahoe.

“All the little problems — alcoholism, drugs, unemployment, mental disorders, diabetes, high blood pressure — all of those things that we have at a very high level … is because we lost contact with who we are,” Grayshield said. “We were separated from the land, but now we are at a time in history where we need to come back to the land.”

Fillmore of the Washoe Land Trust agrees.

“The health of our people is inextricably linked to the health of our land and the health of our culture, our language, the health of future generations,” she said. “Our land has sustained us in a really challenging climate to live in. We have stories that date us back to at least 15,000 years ago in the Tahoe Basin. We see the health of our land as what’s needed to help sustain us for another millennium.”

For info about The People Singing event on Aug. 1 in Truckee, visit washoewarriorsociety.org. The conversation will continue at Mountain Lotus on Aug. 2, mountainlotusyoga.com/events.