
For the second time in 12 years, the Glory Hole at Lake Berryessa is spilling over. It's good news for the Bay Area's lakes and reservoirs, but bad news for one wayward duck. Around a.
For more stories like this, check out The Chronicle's weekly Travel newsletter! Sign up here. Most of the time it juts above the lake surface and is a curiosity for travelers passing by it on Highway past Markley Cove.

Lake Berryessa is currently the seventh largest man-made lake in California. Water from the reservoir primarily supplies agriculture in the Sacramento Valley downstream. The dam is noted for its classic, uncontrolled morning-glory-type spillway.
By Andrew Collins. San Francisco essentially created a ban on gay bathhouses back in the mids as a response to the devastating spread of AIDS. A result is that in San Franciscoestablishments where gay men meet for sex no longer rent private rooms or have the sorts of "spa" facilities typical of bathhouses.
Greetings from never-never land. Want to stay young forever or act like you're 21 for the duration of your pathetic existence? Are you an outsider inside your small town of 2, farmhands?


There are a few telltale signs it's been an especially rainy winter in Northern California. Often there are mudslides checktons of snow in the Sierra yup, got thatand then there's the Glory Hole. That benchmark was also passed Tuesday morning.
The circular, drain-like spillway at Napa's Lake Berryessa is actively draining right now, and that was bad news for one poor duck caught on video. First, some background: Lake Berryessa is a man-made lake — a. It is the seventh-largest lake in California, and during wet winters the water level actually didn't get high enough inthe lake hits capacity and water starts being let out into Putah Creek via this circular spillway — which has the unfortunate, naively bestowed nickname The Glory Hole.
It truly is a kinky city through and through. SF Eagle. Grungy and sleazy with an undeniable SoMa vibe. They have a great patio, too.
For the first time in over two years, California's captivating 'glory hole' of sinking water has been activated after weeks of heavy rain. The circular Morning Glory Spillway on Lake Berryessa in northern California has consistently fascinated onlookers on the rare occasion it is used to drain water from the Monticello Dam. The spillway is 22 metres wide and its drain is 75 metres long, making it one of the largest of its kind in the world.
Berryessa, a reservoir about two hours north of San Francisco, is formed by the Monticello Dam and features an open bell-mouth spillway, 72 feet wide with a vertical drop more than feet deep. When the lake fills up, excess water pours down the pipe and out the base of the dam. The crowd waiting to see the Glory Hole in action kept getting larger on Friday but the nearby Canyon Creek camping resort is moving people out because outflow from the spillway is flooding some of the lower campsites.
Meu deus, essa mulher existe?
Her ass is a fucking freak show of drool-inducing wonder...... post your asian girlfriend
Not all heroes wear capes.