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Coastal View News • December 29, 2022

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Carpinteria, California

CARPINTERIA ON DECK

Vol. 28, No. 33

Thursday, September 22

Carpinteria Girls Golf at Fillmore (Buenaventura Golf Course), 2 p.m. *Carpinteria Girls Tennis vs Santa Paula, 3:30 p.m. *Carpinteria Boys’ Water Polo vs Buena, 3:45 p.m. Carpinteria Girls Volleyball at Malibu, 6:30 p.m.

SCHR completes steelhead trout project Tuesday, September 27 Carpinteria Girls Tennis at Santa Paula, 3:30 p.m. *Carpinteria Football vs San Bernardino, 6 p.m.

*Carpinteria Girls Tennis vs Nordhoff, 3 p.m. Carpinteria Boys’ Water Polo at Santa Ynez, 3:30 p.m. Carpinteria Girls Golf at Saticoy, 4:30 p.m. *Carpinteria Girls Volleyball vs Channel Islands, 6 p.m.

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Arts & Cultural Festival 2022

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A member of the Kalpulli Huitzilin Ihuan Xochitl Azteca Danza group , above, performs at the sixth Carpinteria Arts & Cultural Festival, held over the weekend. This year’s festival was hosted across three locations – the Lynda Fairly Carpinteria Arts Center, the Seal Fountain and the beach at Linden Avenue – with beach performances by a number of dance groups, a Tibetan Sand Mandala creation at the arts center and chalk art at the Seal Fountain. See more on pages 12 and 13.

Warriors sweep Saints in Santa Clara

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Maya Shelley keeps the ball in play during the Warriors’ 3-0 sweep over Santa Clara.

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Carpinteria volleyball sweeps Santa Clara

The Warriors girls volleyball squad had a strong showing in front of the home fans, sweeping the visiting Santa Clara Saints from Oxnard in three straight sets (25-15, 25-12, 25-11). “We were on a roll tonight and made solid plays,” said head coach Greg Novak. “Our goal is to stay in the system when we get out of the system, and we are definitely getting better at it.” BRE#01383773

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Brett Weiberg is Aliso School’s new principal

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Warriors tennis cleans up, off court and on

Carpinteria’s girls tennis team won three straight matches in the past week, before spending the weekend with a team bonding beach cleanup day at Carpinteria State Beach on Saturday. After winning a 10-8 home match over Villanova, the Warriors picked up where they left off with a decisive 17-1 win on the road at Hueneme. In singles, Silke Leonard swept her three sets and only dropped one game. Fellow singles player Zahra Porinsh had a harder time, but still finished 3-0 on the day. “She had to come back from a 5-2 deficit in the first round with five solid games in a row,” coach Charles Bryant said. Double duo Ariana Lounsbury and Charlotte Cooney continued a great season with yet another 3-0 sweep of their own. Then the Warriors hosted Fillmore for a 15-3 league win. Some of the Warriors were unable to play, but the team still performed well. Against Fillmore, Cooney and Lounsbury stepped into singles play with much success, both finishing 3-0. After three straight victories, the Warriors hit the road to Ojai to face Thacher in a non-league matchup, but Carpinteria struggled to recover from a deficit in singles play and fell 11-7. The highlight of the match was the return of the Lounsbury-Cooney doubles domination; the tandem swept their sets 3-0, continuing a sensational, undefeated season together. “Their communication is great, and being as athletic as they are, they see and react in a much faster way than most doubles teams,” Bryant said. Carpinteria is now 5-4 overall, and 3-1 in the Citrus Coast League play.

“Venetian Nights” raises big bucks for Boys & Girls Club

Water polo back in winning form against Foothill Tech

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After losing in the Malibu Tournament final, the Carpinteria Warriors were right back to their winning ways against Foothill Tech, with a 13-6 win. Through three quarters, the staunch Warriors defense held Foothill Tech to just one goal, while standout Asher Smith led the way on offense with seven goals. Justin Main and Jake Ehlers each finished with a hat trick of their own, while Aiden Alcaraz scored a pair, and Eli Sheaffer scored the opening goal. Goalie Jacob Taff made seven saves in the win.

Carpinteria girls cross country took 4th place overall at the Ojai Invitational at Lake Casitas.

Warriors XC races at Ojai Invitational

Eleven Carpinteria cross country team members came away from the Ojai Invitational with medals, with both the boys and girls teams finishing in fourth place overall in the 1.9-mile race. The fastest finishers for the Warriors in the 1.9-mile race at Lake Casitas were Pedro Campuzano (11:49), Edwin Hernandez (11:53) and Ben Smith (12:31) on the boys team, and Belen Herrera (13:31), Carel Bautista (14:08) and Ruby Cluderay (14:43) on the girls side. Carpinteria’s Hugo Alvarado finished the 3-mile race with a time of 18:51.

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Cate Rams roundup

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Rincon Voices: Simone Reddingius

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After dropping their season opener to Flintridge Prep, the defending CIF Champions in eight-man football, Cate, picked up their first win of the year in a 34-28 thriller against the Leadership Military Academy Wolfpack. The Rams started off hot, scoring the first 16 points of the contest. Rams quarterback Pen Brooks got the scoring started with a 75-yard toss to Tyler Martinez, before Cate’s defense got on the board with a 65-yard pick-six interception return from Ethan Renberg. After being locked up at 28-28, Cate made a big goal line stand and blocked a Wolfpack punt to take over with good field position. Brooks then found senior Jack Whelan in the corner of the end zone with 22 seconds left for a game-winning touchdown. “Leadership Military was a tough and physical team with tons of heart,” said Cate coach David Soto. “I’m proud of the way we responded when the chips were down. Our goal is to learn from our mistakes and build on the things we did well.” The Rams are back in action Saturday, Sept. 24 when they take on the Santa Clara Saints at home. In other Cate Rams sports news, the girls volleyball team swept their league opener against Foothill Tech in three straight sets (25-18, 25-22, 25-20). “I was impressed with the overall play from our side of the net,” said volleyball coach Jordon Dyer. “Our team has only played volleyball three times in the past two weeks, but we were able to put together three good sets tonight.”

Chef Nirasha: Fresh food, approach to community support

“My Body, My Rights”

Palate to Palette event benefits Arts Center

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INGRID BOSTROM

Deborah Dentler, center, holds her sign high: “I will not go quietly back to the 1950s.” Dentler, alongside dozens of Carpinterians chanting “My Body, My Rights,” met on the corner of Linden and Carpinteria avenues on Saturday to protest the leaked draft of a U.S. Supreme Court majority decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, a 1973 court case that made abortion access a federal, constitutional right. The recent draft was obtained by news outlet Politico and leaked to the public on May 2, causing protests across the United States. Several Carpinteria signs made pointed references Itzayana Hernandez, center,Student sings herathlete heart out alongside dance group Mariachi Inlakech to similar marches in the ‘60s and ‘70s as Carpinterians loudly shouted against Roe v. Wade’s projected reversal afterNiños on signing day, 2022 during Dia de Los Saturday at the Carpinteria Children’s Project. This is the 8th 50 years – “Now you’ve pissed off grandma,” one sign read. See more on pages 14 and 15. year Dia de Los Niños has been celebrated, held by the Children’s Project and Artesania

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para La Familia. Carpinteria children explored local musical talents, sold their own items at La Mercadito in the entrepreneurial spirit and devoured tasty treats. See more on page 17

Back to back Warrior volleyball victories

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