A Tucson woman died over the weekend as a result of a two-vehicle accident on Mount Lemmon Road. Toni Stalker, 59, was a passenger in a sand rail driven by a 27-year-old Tucson man. Stalker was ...
A motorist who drove a 4×4 bakkie into the sea at Warner Beach’s Baggies Beach today got more than they bargained for when the vehicle became stuck in the sand. South Coast Sun reports that, according ...
A snow-tracked sand rail sends Cleetus flying far past the landing zone. Democrats react to Donald Trump's "punishable by death" remark 'This is a structural goods recession': U.S. freight market is ...
There I was, staring up at a quarter-mile-high fold of sand that looked like it was the backdrop of a science fiction novel. It looked like CGI but it was real, and so far out in the desert that even ...
Heavy D adds snow tracks to Cleetus Sand Rail, leading to a dangerous jump in Snowed In episode 1. Winter storms could bring 4-8 feet of snow to parts of West. Latest forecast When coyotes threatened ...
More than 300 truckloads of sand from a quarry near Palm Springs are being delivered to a San Clemente beach this week as part of emergency efforts to protect the coastal tracks that are San Diego ...
An Amtrak Surfliner heads south. (File photo courtesy of SANDAG) Officials have marked a key milestone in the effort to protect a coastal rail line that stretches to downtown San Diego. The line ...
Sand is being shipped from a quarry in Palm Springs to San Clemente’s North Beach, a test case to see how the desert grains hold up at the shore. The Orange County Transportation Authority’s initial ...
Sand traps come in all shapes and sizes. Colt Knost and Drew Stolz, co-hosts of GOLF’s Subpar Podcast, have experienced every type of bunker imaginable on the golf course. But nothing could prepare ...
In dire need of sand to replenish its eroding beaches, San Clemente is on the lookout for nearby offshore deposits to dredge. Coastal Frontiers Corp., a consultant hired last year to carry out a sand ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. Orange County officials are moving ...
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