I was living in Ukiah a little less than 30 years ahead of you (1976 and 1977). Things were different.
If you strip out the town and just look at the natural surroundings, it's not much different from the upper Napa Valley---St. Helena, for example.
But when the area developed, its proximity to lumber was what stood out. Masonite was the town's largest employer when I was there. So it grew up on labor, not leisure.
Yes! I've heard lots about Masonite. Apparently as recently as the 90s (when, exactly,
did they shut down? I've never found out), they were a big deal, and people often wished they were still in business because of the economic void their absence created.
The population, as I'm sure you know, is still only about 15-20,000, so it hasn't grown much over 50 years, and the surroundings are still beautiful (when they're not burning, anyway).
The strongest San Francisco AMs (KSFO, KFRC, KNBR, KCBS, KGO) came in like locals in Ukiah, because the noise floor was lower. Interference from electronic devices and fluorescent lights pretty well ate the AM band between the time I was there and the time you were.
Yeah, more recently (2004-present), KSFO and KNBR are often rather weak and noisy, especially at night, but KGO, KFRC and KCBS are among the strongest, and they sound better than most of the local stations (most notably, they tend to be louder, so they can cut through the noise better).
And, as for KXBX, it's a 500-watt station at 1270. It was KBLC when I was there, and a daytimer. They now have night power of 97 watts. The reason it sounded like KABL was that KABL's morning man from 1960-1993, Bill Moen, retired to Lakeport, where he had a second home and helped them create that sound there.
I did know about Bill Moen at KXBX! I never listened to him much (I think his show was called
Moen in the Morning, or some variation thereof), but no so much from a lack of interest but for the fact that I'm not much of a morning person, and I was rarely up early enough to tune in to it. It took me a few years to realize the KABL connection, basically because I tuned in for the music, and would turn the radio down whenever there was talk other than when the DJs were announcing song titles (such as promos or commercials).
500 watts was actually good enough that I could sometimes hear 1270 as far south as the Calistoga side of Mt. Saint Helena or the US101 corridor from Cloverdale to Hopland. At night, however, I was lucky if I could hear it clearly as close as downtown Lakeport!
And is it me, or has KXBX AM always been a bit on the quiet side? I've also noticed that sometimes, when playing a stereo song, one of the channels would be dropped.
As I think I mentioned above, I go back occasionally, having married a Ukiah girl. Masonite closed decades ago, there's more winegrowing, less local business, and a much bigger divide between rich and poor.
Yeah, lots of wine, but it's slowly being displaced by marijuana nowadays, both legal and otherwise (a combination of the wide rich-poor divide and hippy-ness from Berkeley, perhaps?) The Clear Lake area wasn't much better until fairly recently; over there, winegrowing has actually been somewhat of a good thing economically, of course until they started soaking up what little was left of the water up in the hills....
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