Lifestyle Magazine February 2022

Page 47

Map Source: Tulare County California - Chapman 1867, Maps of the Past

The Purposeful Living Issue

The Mysterious Tulare Lake

Story & Photos by Terry Ommen

For thousands of years on land that was once part of Tulare County,

The huge freshwater inland lake was fed by numerous waterways

there was a large mysterious lake. It’s gone today, but in its prime,

that delivered melting snow from the Sierra Nevada. When the

the west shoreline of Tulare Lake stretched nearly to what is now

winter snowpack was deep, the melted snow came rushing down,

Kettleman City, and the east edge was close to the city of Tulare.

expanding the lake’s shoreline. A lighter snowpack meant less

It spread north almost to Lemoore, and its southern shoreline

water. Therefore, from year to year, Tulare Lake’s size would

approached the current Kern County boundary. It was said to be

fluctuate. Eventually, water from the Sierra Nevada was diverted

larger than the Great Salt Lake—perhaps even the largest freshwater

and the lake disappeared.

lake west of the Great Lakes.

Though it frequently changed in size and shape, the lake was always

The lake was a mystical “shape-shifter,” frequently changing in size

large enough to be an awe-inspiring feature. For at least a millennium,

and shape. Annie R. Mitchell, Tulare County’s premier historian,

native people known as Yokuts lived there, calling the lake Chintache.

called it a “phantom.” Even though it has disappeared, the story

The inviting habitat provided them with fish, game, and tule plants for

of Tulare Lake is worth another look.

making baskets, boats and shelter. When Spanish explorers arrived several hundred years ago, they called the lake La Laguna de los

First, Tulare Lake’s mystery and disappearance should be explained.

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