Yuba-Sutter Area

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Yuba City Metropolitan Area
Map of the Yuba-Sutter Area

Common name: Yuba-Sutter Area
Largest city
Other cities
Yuba City
 - Marysville
 - Live Oak
 - Wheatland
Population  Ranked 243th in the U.S.
 - Total 165,080
 - Density 152.4 /sq. mi. 
 /km²
Area 1,252.3 sq. mi.
km²
State(s)  California
Elevation   
 - Highest point 4825 feet ( m)
 - Lowest point 50 feet ( m)

The Yuba-Sutter Area is a smaller metropolitan community including Yuba and Sutter Counties in Northern California, USA's Central Valley. The official name given by the US Census Bureau is the Yuba City Metropolitan Statistical Area. It is anchored by Yuba City, California, the county seat of Sutter County and Marysville, California, the county seat of Yuba County. They are given the title of twin cities.

Contents

[edit] Yuba Sutter Fair

Yuba-Sutter Fairgrounds main entrance.
Yuba-Sutter Fairgrounds main entrance.

The 13th District Agricultural Association or Yuba-Sutter Fair as it is most commonly referred to is the local fair in the area and is a part of the California State Fair System. The 13th district used to include parts of Yolo and Sacramento counties but decentralization led to exclusion of Sacramento County in 1889 and in 1893 Yolo County left the association.

In 1941 a ten arce piece of land was purchased for $1,020 in Yuba City in order to even better centralize the fairgrounds. Today the 13th District Agricultural Fair is one of fifty-four district agricultural associations, twenty-four county fairs, two citrus fairs and the state fair which make up the 81 State Fair system in California.[1]

[edit] Yuba Sutter Fair Scholarship Competition

Every year at the Yuba-Sutter Fair there are scholarship competitions held much like the Miss America and Miss USA Competitions. In 2000, they opened competition up to male candidates as well with the Ambassador Competitions Though in recent years lack of interest has caused the titles to remain vacant.

Yuba-Sutter Royal Courts

Year Miss Yuba-Sutter Miss Teen Yuba-Sutter Mini Miss Yuba-Sutter Yuba-Sutter Ambassador Yuba-Sutter Teen Ambassador Yuba-Sutter Junior Ambassador
2002 Diedre Wallis Chloe Nelson Harveen Gill Keith Bordsen n/s n/s
2002 Candee Jensen Ashley Newman Autumn Kleinert Manuel Ramos n/s n/s
2003 Sarah Guerrero Krystal Brownfield ? n/s Alex Cesena Jacob Larson
2004 ? Harveen Gill Kelsey Cena n/s n/s n/s
2005 Samantha Slack Alexandria Mazerolle Adrianna Hernandez n/s n/s n/s
2006 Ashley Newman Margery Magill Courtney Taylor n/s n/s n/s

[edit] Concert venues

  • Sleep Train Amphitheater
  • Marysville Pavilion

[edit] Beale Air Force Base

See Beale Air Force Base

[edit] Education

[edit] Colleges/Universities

[edit] High schools

[edit] Sights, Museums, Recreation, Shopping, and more

Sutter Buttes
Sutter Buttes

[edit] Media

[edit] Newspaper

  • Appeal-Democrat- the daily newspaper for the Yuba-Sutter area. It has been printed in Marysville, California since 1926 when the Marysville Appeal (founded in 1860) and the Marysville Evening Democrat (founded in 1884) merged together. See Appeal-Democrat
  • Territorial Dispatch
  • The Nor-Cal Paper

[edit] Radio

[edit] FM

  • KKCY 101.5
  • KKCY 103.5
  • KXJS 88.7
  • KRCX 99.9
  • KXCL 103.9
  • KRYC 105.9

[edit] AM

[edit] Television

[edit] Hospitals

[edit] Bok Kai Festival

Annually, Marysville celebrates the Chinese New Year and the Bok Eye god with a festival. The parade has been produced each year for more than 120 years and is the oldest continuing parades in California. People from as far away as Taiwan come to worship at the secluded temple. The crash of gongs, the crack of fireworks, and the pounding of drums signal the beginning of the Bok Kai Parade. Marching bands, fire trucks, antique cars, floats and dance groups walk the streets of historical downtown. Over 15,000 spectators each year come to watch the parade's greatest asset, a 150-foot long dragon.

Other activities include martial art demonstrations, food vendors, and art exhibits.

The festival concludes with the firing of 100 ceremonial bombs with "good luck" rings contained inside the bombs.

Because the fesitval celebrates New Year according to the Chinese lunar calendar, the date of the parade is different each year.

Another interesting fact is that it has never rained during the parade, and has very seldom rained on the day of the parade.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links