Los Angeles Times

For them, 82 degrees is hot

As most of California is dripping with sweat, residents in a gray part of the northern coast are pulling out their jackets

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

SAMOA, Calif. — There’s a saying about the denizens of this foggy timber town: They don’t tan. They rust.

That’s because it’s usually so misty, so salty and so gray here along California’s far northern coast, said Don Hofacker. But sometimes, he emphasized, it does “get pretty doggone hot.”

“It does get extremely warm here,” Hofacker said. “It gets up to 82 at times.”

Hofacker, 69, is a docent at the maritime museum on the Samoa Peninsula, the narrow spit of sand on Humboldt Bay where he lives. As he mused about his hometown, the afternoon temperatur­e was 56 degrees.

This was 24 hours after Burbank and Woodland Hills broke daily heat records last week, topping out at 112 degrees.

Told about the temperatur­es down in sunny Southern California, Hofacker joked that he could think of one

other place with that kind of heat: hell.

Most of California is baking under a so-called highpressu­re heat dome. Fires have raged in Los Angeles, San Diego and Siskiyou counties. And officials are begging sweaty California­ns to use less energy from the overtaxed power grid in order to avoid rolling blackouts.

But the month of September rolled in with a chill here on the Samoa Peninsula — one of the coldest places in California in these waning days of summer.

“We have our natural air conditioni­ng here. If you can put up with a little morning fog and drizzle and overcast sky, it’s not too bad,” said Doug Boushey, a meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in Eureka.

The Pacific Ocean has a moderating effect that Boushey calls a “cool, moist pump.”

When it is hot inland, that warm, thinner air rises in the atmosphere, and cold marine air is sucked in, like a vacuum, to fill the void, Boushey said. The warmer air aloft acts “like a lid,” trapping the heavier, cooler air, which can’t easily flow over mountains.

In Eureka, a mile east across the bay from the peninsula, the hottest temperatur­e ever recorded is 87 degrees, Boushey said. The mercury hit that number in 1993, 2017 and 2020.

It’s a “wimpy record” as far as heat goes, he acknowledg­ed.

With the heat dome firmly in place in parts elsewhere, the average highs around Eureka over the next week are in the mid-60s, Boushey said.

That’s even cooler than the famously frigid summer in a city five hours south: San Francisco. A high of around 79 is forecast there over Labor Day weekend.

Though the overwhelmi­ng majority of U.S. cities have had shorter, hotter winters over the last 50 years because of climate change, Eureka is one of the few to buck the trend, with its winters becoming slightly colder, according to Climate Central, a nonprofit research group.

Since 1970, the average winter temperatur­e in Eureka has dropped 1.3 degrees.

Longtime locals and real estate agents speak of “climate refugees” — people moving to the damp little towns beyond the Redwood Curtain to escape fire, smoke and heat — who are helping to drive up housing costs in an already tight market.

But for all the existentia­l angst about population growth, global warming and sea level rise, most people here are happy to show off their little slice of paradise, which Boushey called “one

‘If you can put up with a little morning fog and drizzle and overcast sky, it’s not too bad.’

— Doug Boushey, a meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in Eureka, Calif.

of the coolest places in the state, in more ways than one.”

So what was life like on the Samoa Peninsula last week, while the rest of the state sizzled?

For the 1,100 or so residents of the narrow spit, which is about 10 miles long and 1 mile wide, it was, well, pretty chill.

With gloomy gray skies overhead, Hofacker — a burly, bearded man who has played Santa Claus in the Salty Santa Boat Parade — closed up the Humboldt Maritime Museum, walked across the parking lot and ate a hearty dinner of meatloaf and piping-hot minestrone soup at the Samoa Cookhouse.

With its faded red-shingle siding, the Samoa Cookhouse, which opened in 1893, is the last surviving lumberjack camp-style cookhouse in the western U.S. It has long tables, with red-andwhite-checkered tablecloth­s, and its own lumberjack museum, with giant saws — and soup ladles befitting Paul Bunyan himself — hanging from the walls.

Many of the local patrons wore short sleeves as the temperatur­es outside hung in the mid-50s.

“You watch somebody from down south come up here, they’ll be in longsleeve­d shirts, down jackets,” Hofacker said. “We’re comfortabl­e.”

Just across Cookhouse Road is a trailhead for the Samoa Dunes & Wetlands, which Jennifer Savage — a 20-year peninsula resident who leads the national effort by the nonprofit Surfrider Foundation to reduce plastic in marine environmen­ts — was excited to show off.

Savage raised three children here. They’re beach lovers who can name the native plants on the dunes and who balked the first time they felt “real heat” in the Central Valley years ago.

In a puffy vest and long sleeves, Savage hit the sandy hiking trail with Carol Vander Meer and Carla Avila-Martinez, members of the board of directors for the nonprofit Friends of the Dunes, which became the interim owner of the 357-acre conservati­on area two years ago.

The trail dipped into a coniferous forest, where the women picked and ate wild huckleberr­ies. Vander Meer noted that the shore pines here grow in contorted shapes because of the chilly wind off the water.

Pale green lace lichen — pronounced “liken” — hung from the branches, flourishin­g in the damp climate. Vander Meer said people mistake the composite organism of fungus and algae for moss, but there’s a children’s tale to describe what it is:

Once upon a time, she said, there was a fungus named Francine Fungus. She was a great home builder but a lousy cook. She met Albert Algae, who couldn’t build a home worth a darn but could make wonderful food just using energy from the sun — photosynth­esis.

So, Francine Fungus and Albert Algae took a lichen to each other.

The peninsula’s dunes and beaches drew a lot of people during the first year of the pandemic, when so many indoor places were closed. There was a lot of illegal camping, garbage dumping and off-road driving in ecological­ly sensitive areas.

“It was a lot of RVs and van lifers everywhere,” Savage said.

The women said they know the area is going to become more popular, thanks to its cold, clean air.

On the other side of a steep, sandy dune, the ocean roared. The wind whipped.

Boushey, with the National Weather Service, said that when people spend time outdoors here, they often don’t realize they are getting sunburned.

It’s a phenomenon nicknamed fogburn, he said. The sun’s ultraviole­t rays still penetrate the fog and clouds, but “you don’t realize you’re being burned because the air is so cool.”

“You’re comfortabl­e, but the ultraviole­t is cooking you and all of a sudden you’re red as a lobster,” he said.

It doesn’t look as though the sun will come out much this week along the redwood coast, he said.

“But I’ll take fogburn any day over 103 or 105 degrees in L.A.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? SUNSET on Northern California’s Samoa Peninsula, where locals and real estate agents speak of “climate refugees”: people moving to the damp little towns beyond the Redwood Curtain to escape fire and heat.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times SUNSET on Northern California’s Samoa Peninsula, where locals and real estate agents speak of “climate refugees”: people moving to the damp little towns beyond the Redwood Curtain to escape fire and heat.
 ?? ?? DON HOFACKER, a docent at Humboldt Bay Maritime Muse- um, says locals are comfortabl­e with temps in the mid-50s.
DON HOFACKER, a docent at Humboldt Bay Maritime Muse- um, says locals are comfortabl­e with temps in the mid-50s.
 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? IN HUMBOLDT COUNTY, fog covering low-lying coastal towns can be seen from the mountains near the community of Kneeland.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times IN HUMBOLDT COUNTY, fog covering low-lying coastal towns can be seen from the mountains near the community of Kneeland.
 ?? ?? THE SAMOA Peninsula chilled in drizzle and fog as the rest of the state baked. The ocean has a moderating effect a meteorolog­ist calls a “cool, moist pump.”
THE SAMOA Peninsula chilled in drizzle and fog as the rest of the state baked. The ocean has a moderating effect a meteorolog­ist calls a “cool, moist pump.”

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