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This is a Cottage in The Skyland District, California | Adorable Small House Design Ideas

For more infomation >> This is a Cottage in The Skyland District, California | Adorable Small House Design Ideas - Duration: 2:20.

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Tiny Cabin with 3 Bedrooms in California | Absolutely Small House Design Ideas - Duration: 2:03.

Tiny Cabin with 3 Bedrooms in California | Absolutely Small House Design Ideas

For more infomation >> Tiny Cabin with 3 Bedrooms in California | Absolutely Small House Design Ideas - Duration: 2:03.

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California Coast Cuisine: Santa Barbara - Duration: 1:01.

♪♪

TED: Okay, so you're speaking to a chef.

How does food and drink play into going to a new place?

Like 100%.

So what's fun about this is you actually travel locations dramatically and so you get different

experiences of the different ports.

♪♪

TED: We went up to Santa Barbara, and being

in Santa Barbara, it's all about the wine country, experiencing all of that, getting

to ride bikes around.

JOEL: It's a great opportunity to be able to do and experience other things, and doing

a bike tour for the ultimate payoff of drinking and eating at a beautiful winery in Santa

Barbara.

TED: Drinking wines, doing all of that fun things, just soaking in being out in the rolling

hills.

WILLIAM: Everything is beautiful out here.

You really get the sense of it when you're out there riding and seeing the vineyards,

and especially right now at harvest, when the vines are fully loaded.

TED: As a chef, I prefer to exercise my ability to eat and so part of the fun of the bike

tour was getting to see all of the scenery, but I think what's more fun about it was getting

to eat and drink at the end.

For more infomation >> California Coast Cuisine: Santa Barbara - Duration: 1:01.

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California Coast Cuisine: Ensenada - Duration: 0:53.

♪♪

JOEL: It's a food tour that's laid-back and

comfortable in Ensenada.

TED: Going the trip down to Ensenada, and then enjoying everything that Ensenada has

to offer,

you're having street food and tequila and beer and all of those awesome things, and

there's a seafood market down there that was just really cool.

JOEL: You get to experience the culture,

you get to experience the food,

you get to see the people behind the food.

TED: Beautiful seafoods that are caught right there,

tacos and chilies and all of these wonderful things like that.

WOMAN: This is very popular, but it's really spicy!

TED: It really changes what you're able to do on one vacation.

That's one of the first things I do when I'm going somewhere is I look up what are we going

to eat, you know?

JOEL: As a chef, I do plan my trips around food.

For me, it's very important.

TED: I 100% travel for food.

For more infomation >> California Coast Cuisine: Ensenada - Duration: 0:53.

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California Man Among Barcelona Terror Attack Victims - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> California Man Among Barcelona Terror Attack Victims - Duration: 2:58.

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Eclipse to have big impact on California power grid - Duration: 3:43.

Eclipse to have big impact on California power grid

Eclipse to have big impact on California power grid. Electrical power flow and conditions are monitored at the California Independent System Operator grid control center, in in Folsom, Calif., on Friday, Aug.

-- When the moon passes in front of the sun during Mondays eclipse California will lose enough solar energy to power more than 1.5 million homes, a figure that underscores the states growing reliance on energy from the sun.

California has rapidly deployed renewable energy and now produces 40 per cent of the nations solar power.

The eclipse presents an unusual challenge for those who manage the states power grid because the solar energy will drop off and re-emerge more quickly than during usual conditions involving clouds or nightfall.

For about three hours Monday, there will be diminished solar power available. Grid managers say theyve been preparing extensively for more than a year and are confident nobody will lose power.

Theyll ramp up other sources of power, mainly hydroelectric and natural gas, as the sky darkens and ramp them back down as the sun re-emerges.

Our grid operators are going to be functioning very similar to a director of an orchestra, trying to keep everything flowing, said Lynsey Paulo, a spokeswoman for Pacific Gas & Electric, which serves electric customers in Central and Northern California.

The grid requires power supply and demand to match precisely. Grid managers now have years of experience adjusting power sources when clouds and gusts affect solar and wind energy, which are much less predictable than a solar eclipse.

During the eclipse, however, the sky will darken and lighten two or three times as fast as a usual, according to the California Independent System Operator, which runs the grid for most of California and a small portion of Nevada.

Solar energy now makes up only about 1 per cent of the U.S. power supply, but its far higher in some areas.

On Monday morning solar supplied about 30 per cent of the power for the California ISO, said Deane Lyon, a shift manager. Solars precise share fluctuates constantly based on weather and demand.

California ISO projects it will need to replace just over 6,000 megawatts of capacity during the peak of the eclipse, about two-thirds from lost production at commercial solar farms and the rest due to higher demand from people and businesses that would otherwise draw from rooftop solar panels.

The Solar Energy Industry Association says California solar panels produce enough energy to power 258 homes on average. Other areas of the country also will take a hit, albeit a smaller one.

PJM Interconnection, the nations largest grid operator which manages the power supply in 13 Eastern states and Washington, D.C., anticipates replacing up to 2,500 megawatts of solar capacity.

The biggest impact will be in North Carolina and New Jersey, the Eastern states with the most solar energy, company officials say.

Xcel Energy, which manages more than 1,000 megawatts of solar capacity in Minnesota, Colorado and New Mexico, said the company was planning for the eclipse the same way it does for a storm or cloud cover.

Officials said there would be no impact on electric service. Grid managers have caught a few breaks.

The vast majority of the nations solar panels are outside the path of totality where the sun will be completely obscured, so most solar panels will lose some but not all of their energy source.

And in the West, the region most reliant on solar energy, the eclipse will pass in the morning, a period of relatively low energy demand.

Still, California regulators are asking people and businesses to conserve power during the eclipse to reduce the need for power from fossil fuels that release greenhouse gases.

Many states are adopting renewable portfolio standards that require an increasing share of energy to come from wind, solar, hydroelectric and other power sources that dont use fossil fuels.

California requires utilities to get a third of their energy from renewables by 2020 and half by 2030. Hawaii has set a goal of reaching 100 per cent renewables by 2045.

The eclipse highlights the need for energy storage technology to balance the fluctuations in supply that come with renewable energy, said Daniel Kammen, professor and chair of the Energy & Resources Group at the University of California, Berkeley.

Its building us toward a point where we can run the economy off renewable energy and store the excess in a diverse range of batteries, Kammen said.

The last total solar eclipse in the United States was in 1979, before solar power was connected to the countrys power grid.

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