Coyote Creek (Ventura County)

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Coyote Creek is a stream in Ventura County, California, United States, which feeds Lake Casitas. It is a major tributary of the Ventura River.

34°21′15″N119°18′38″W / 34.354165°N 119.310669°W / 34.354165; -119.310669 [1]

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Solimar Beach is within western Ventura city, in Ventura County, California. It is a small Southern California beach and one of the few that still allows dogs on a leash.

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Ventura County Christian School is a private, nondenominational Christian school in Ventura, California. VCCS began in 1994 as a high school only. In 2003 it began hosting all grades K-12, and moved to a separate building on MacMillan Avenue. It currently has approximately 90 high school students, and an average class size of 15 students.

Upper Ojai is a rural valley with several unincorporated communities in Ventura County, California.

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Naval Construction Battalion Center Port Hueneme, operated as an independent base from 1942 to 2000 as the West Coast home port of the Navy’s Construction Battalions. In 2000, the CBC merged with nearby Naval Air Station Point Mugu to form Naval Base Ventura County.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rancho Cañada Larga o Verde</span> Mexican land grant in Ventura County, California

Rancho Cañada Larga o Verde was a 6,659-acre (26.95 km2) Mexican land grant in present-day Ventura County, California given in 1841 by Governor Juan B. Alvarado to Joaquina Alvarado. The grant extended along Sulphur Canyon Creek, east of the Ventura River, between Ventura and Ojai. To the west, across the Ventura River was Rancho Cañada de San Miguelito; to the north Rancho Ojai; and to the south and east Rancho Ex-Mission San Buenaventura.

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Rancho Santa Ana was a 21,522-acre (87.10 km2) Mexican land grant in present day Ventura County, California given in 1837 by Governor Juan Alvarado to Crisogono Ayala and Cosme Vanegas. Rancho Santa Ana was located inland in the Ventura River Valley on the west side of the Ventura River across from Rancho Ojai which was granted in the same year. Rancho Santa Ana encompassed present day Lake Casitas and Oak View.

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Rincon Creek is a creek that marks the boundary between Santa Barbara and Ventura County, California. The Santa Barbara County - Ventura County Line follows Rincon Creek from near its source in the Santa Ynez Mountains near Divide Peak, at 34°28′36″N119°26′29″W, down to its mouth on the Pacific Ocean, just east of the extremity of Rincon Point.

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Camp Bartlett is a small, isolated, rural unincorporated community in Upper Ojai, Ventura County, California, United States. Six of the twelve cabins in the community, located east of the city of Ojai, burned down in the Thomas Fire in 2017.

Calleguas Creek, serves as the conclusion of a comprehensive river system located within Ventura County, California. This watercourse emanates from the expansive Calleguas Creek Watershed, an expanse measuring 30 miles in length and 14 miles in width, encompassing pivotal regions such as Simi Valley, Moorpark, Camarillo, and a substantial portion of Thousand Oaks. Among its tributaries are Arroyo Simi, Arroyo Santa Rosa, Revolon Slough, and Arroyo Conejo. Ultimately, it discharges into the Pacific Ocean, specifically the Santa Barbara Channel, by converging with Mugu Lagoon at Naval Base Ventura County, positioned just north of Point Mugu. This juncture symbolizes the boundary where the Santa Monica Mountains interface with the ocean, delineating the southern and eastern periphery of the Oxnard Plain.

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