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Bolthouse Farms, founded 1915 in Grant, Michigan, is a vertically integrated farm company specializing in refrigerated beverages, salad dressings, and baby carrots. It is located in the San Joaquin Valley of California and is headquartered in Bakersfield, California in Kern County. The company operates facilities in Prosser, Washington.
Besides sparkling water drinks, the company also produces ready-to-drink teas called Tejava in Bakersfield, California. [1] [2] In 1990 Crystal Geyser was acquired by Otsuka Pharmaceutical's parent company Otsuka Holdings Co. Ltd. [3] In 2014, the company had plans to bottle water from an aquifer in Mount Shasta, California, but many local residents criticized the plan.
Its largest holding is the 47,000-acre Elk Hills Oil Field, 20 miles west of Bakersfield, California in the San Joaquin Valley. [1] It is also operates the Wilmington Oil Field in partnership with California, several smaller fields in Los Angeles County, and the Huntington Beach Oil Field in Orange County, California.
Buena Vista Lake was a fresh-water lake in Kern County, California, in the Tulare Lake Basin in the southern San Joaquin Valley, California.. Buena Vista Lake was the second largest of several similar lakes in the Tulare Lake basin, and was fed by the waters of the Kern River.
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Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board (ABCAB) Alcoholic Beverage Control, Department of (ABC) Allocation Board, State (SAB) Alternative Energy and Advanced Transportation Financing Authority, California (CAEATFA) Apprenticeship Council, California (CAC) Arbitration Certification Program (ACP) Architects Board, California (CAB)
With a real concern of the southern San Joaquin Valley suffering a similar fate as the Owens Valley (agricultural land became a desert when Los Angeles Department of Water and Power acquired water rights to the Owens River), the city moved to protect its rights. [3] First, the city went to Tenneco West to discuss its problem.
The Friant-Kern Canal, constructed as part of the Central Valley Project, joins the Kern about 4 mi (6.4 km) west of downtown Bakersfield, restoring some flow to the river. The river channel continues about 20 miles (32 km) southwest to a point near the California Aqueduct on the western side of the San Joaquin Valley.