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Renewable Energy

1/29/2024

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Top: Dennis Gibbs shows a model of the Earth in the Imperial Valley Discovery Zone classroom at Imperial High School. Peggy Dale photo

Above: Mudpots with a geothermal power plant in the background. 
Image by U.S. Geological Survey 

Left: The Imperial Valley Discovery Zone model of the Earth. Becky Gibbs photo

Geothermal is one of many forms of renewable energy in Imperial Valley


By Dennis Gibbs

Geothermal Energy
What is it?  Where does it come from?  Why here? How does it become part of my everyday life?

The Imperial Valley is blessed with several forms of renewable energy.  While solar and wind resources are readily available in a variety of locations around the world, geothermal energy is much more limited in its scope, and one place that can take ownership of this rare renewable resource is the Imperial Valley.

What is Geothermal Energy and where does it come from?


The word geothermal can be broken down.  The term geo means anything to do with the Earth.  Thermal just means that heat (a form of energy that is being transferred) is involved.  Geothermal energy then is a product of Earth’s interior where high internal temperatures end up moving heat toward the surface of Earth.

The Earth itself is composed of several different layers, if we could see beneath the surface.  These layers generally get progressively hotter as you move downward from the crust to the mantle, then into the outer core (liquid) and finally the inner core (solid).  The average temperature on Earth’s surface is approximately 57 degrees Fahrenheit (14℃).  But go deeper and that temperature will increase to the point that the inner core is approximately 9032℉ (5000℃), very nearly the temperature on the surface of the Sun.  This huge temperature difference means that heat energy will always move from hotter to colder or from Earth’s interior (inner core) toward Earth’s exterior (crust).    


Where does the energy in Earth’s interior come from?

There are several sources for this internal energy.  First, some of that energy has been within Earth since its formation 4.6 billion years ago.  Early in Earth’s lifespan, moving space debris was attracted by the fledgling Earth’s gravitational pull, crashing into the planet at high speed.  These blocks of rocky material, due to their motion, had a lot of kinetic energy.  These early collisions heated up the material that formed the early Earth, actually melting the planet.  The core is primarily nickel and iron (both very dense) while the outermost crust is mostly composed of silicate rocks (much lower density).  Density matters when objects float within one another.  The molten Earth allowed the dense iron and nickel to sink toward the center while the lighter silicate rock floated to the top.  The energy causing this differentiation is still with our planet even to this day.  Some of this energy from the colliding space debris and some due to the gravitational friction as elements sank and others floated to the top.

Another source for the energy within Earth is the action of some of the elements that were a part of our early accreting planet.  Because they are dense, radioactive elements such as uranium would have been pulled in by Earth’s gravity and become a part of the soup that was the early Earth, concentrating in the core.   Since that time, more than 4 billion years ago, those radioactive elements have undergone a decay process where their nuclei broke down into simpler products and released ENERGY, which also increases the interior temperature of our planet. 

Several studies have suggested that most of the heat powering Earth’s surface processes such as volcanoes, plate tectonics and earthquakes is still that original heat from Earth’s initial formation.  It takes a LONG time for heat energy to move from the core and escape into space at the surface. That energy continues to make that journey to this day, more than 4 billions years since it all started.  A tiny fraction of that energy is what we capture at our geothermal power plants.

Why isn’t that geothermal heat everywhere?  Why the Imperial Valley?

As that geothermal heat in Earth’s interior moves outward it encounters the insulating blanket we know as the crust.  In order to make it to the surface where we are, heat either needs to move through the crust or find a path where the resistance to heat flow is lower.  This means every place on Earth’s surface will have a particular geothermal gradient.  This number describes how much the temperature increases as you move downward into the crust at that location.  The average gradient is about 25℃ (77℉) for each kilometer of depth, meaning the temperature doesn’t increase very quickly.  In productive geothermal regions, the gradient is much higher.  The Salton Sea Geothermal Field (SSGF) contains a measured geothermal gradient greater than 200℃/kilometer or 8 times the normal average.

The Salton Trough, where we live, has a set of geologic features that provide an easy pathway for heat to move upward toward the surface.  These are faults and the features created by the movement of those faults.  The image on the right shows a map of our region (CA Dept. of Fish & Game image), fault lines are in black, and geothermal facilities are red dots.  Geothermallly speaking, the important features are the shaded regions within the yellow Salton Trough.  These regions are known as “pull apart basins,” areas where the faulting has created extensional motion where the crust is being literally pulled apart.  This extension thins the crust and can actually split apart the crust within those regions.  This gives the heat, and sometimes even molten rock material, a pathway along which it can move upward.  

The gradients in these areas are especially high as a result of that heat moving to the surface.  This heat and the rock that contains the energy is what provides the energy powering our geothermal power plants.  This energy also produces features related to heat such as our mudpots, and volcanic features such as the Salton Buttes along the Salton Sea’s southern edge and Cerro Prieto, a volcano in the Mexicali Valley.  


The groundwater beneath the surface is heated well above the boiling temperature of 100℃, but that water doesn’t boil and remains a liquid due to pressure at depth, which is exactly how a pressure cooker functions.  The hot water will assist in dissolving numerous elements including Zinc and Lithium which become part of the geothermal brine.  The brine is brought to the surface and flashed into steam.  The steam is used to spin generators in geothermal power plants to produce electricity for our use.  

The dissolved minerals in the brine can also be harvested, which leads to our new moniker, “Lithium Valley.”  But that story is one for another day!

Dennis Gibbs is a retired Imperial High School science instructor who has a master’s degree in geoscience from Mississippi State University and an indepth knowledge of the geothermal industry. 
He regularly posts information about earthquakes, energy, and other geological phenomena on his Facebook page, www.facebook.com/dennis.gibbs.5

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Vegetable Growers

1/29/2024

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​A group of Japanese tourists poses for a photo in front of a produce field being cutivated by Scott Howington's Oasis Farms as they spend a day learning how Imperial Valley local crops are cultivated, harvested, and processed.  Photo courtesy of the Imperial Valley Vegetable Growers Association

Tours highlight Valley’s uniqueness
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By Darren Simon

When Imperial Valley grower Jack Vessey hosts tour groups, whether from California, around the nation or anywhere around the world, he highlights a critical visual — the East Highline Canal, which marks the eastern border of the Valley’s farmland. 

Just to the east is the open desert. To the west stretches the tapestry of green fields woven together by a unique and complex system of irrigation canals that convey the Valley’s water supply to more than 550,000 acres of farmland.

“When they (tour groups) see how the desert has been transformed, their eyes light up, and they realize what’s been created here is a miracle,” said Vessey, president of Vessey & Co. and a board member of the Imperial Valley Vegetable Growers Association (IVVGA).

Every year, the IVVGA and its farmers host tour groups from around the nation and the world. At the time of this story, a tour group from France was next in line for a tour of Valley agriculture. Late in 2023,  a group from Japan visited the Valley, and before that, there was a tour group from Australia. 
Recent tour groups have also included farmers and community leaders from Kentucky, Texas, the Western Growers Association Young Leaders program, and the University of California Cooperative Extension. 

For the IVVGA and its growers, these tours provide a chance to show the importance of Imperial Valley agriculture, which produces commodities valued at $2.6 billion, according to the latest Imperial County Crop Report. Vegetable and melon crops make up more than $1 billion of that total.

“We are showcasing the Imperial Valley agricultural industry and how diverse we are,” said IVVGA Executive Director Shelby Trimm. “Those who take part in our tours are amazed to see Bermuda fields, next to sugar beet fields, next to lettuce fields.”

She added the tours also highlight the innovative methods Valley growers use to grow successful, healthy crops while managing finite water supplies.

Such tours are becoming increasingly important to share the Valley’s story with those who may not have a clear understanding of where the commodities they purchase in grocery stores all around the country come from.  Visitors get to see how the Imperial Valley winter produce harvest makes up the nation’s winter salad bowl. 

Showing how crucial Valley agriculture is to the nation’s food chain is even more important as local growers play a key role in conserving water to keep the Colorado River, the Valley’s sole source of water, flowing for all users.

“It is so important for us to promote what we do here,” Vessey said. “They need to see that what we grow here is not only important to our state and the nation, but on an international level as well.”

Scott Howington, president of Oasis Farming Inc. and an IVVGA board member, said, “Every tour group that visits the Valley is amazed at the scale and scope of what we do here.”

He added that the goal of tours is to show visitors the entire growing and harvesting process, including the distribution process and the importance of the Valley’s coolers for storing crops prior to distribution.

“They are seeing something they had no idea existed,” Howington said.

One tour he recently gave was to a group of professors and researchers from the University of California Cooperative Extension, who wanted to focus their research on Valley agriculture. “I think it was a real eye-opener for them to see the challenges we face here as opposed to what they have seen in the Salinas Valley.”

Another critical component of the tours is showcasing the partnership between the farming community and the Imperial Irrigation District to convey, manage, and efficiently use water to support the continued success of Valley agriculture.

“We could not exist without IID, and IID could not exist without us,” Trimm said. “It is a very unique partnership within the agricultural industry.”

Howington said, “It’s a true partnership, and what makes it work is the efficiency of both groups (the growers and IID).”

He added, “From these tours, visitors can see the complexity of our water system and the simplicity of how it works. What amazes people … is that we get our water almost on demand and that it comes from so far away.”

Vessey said for growers from states where water primarily comes from precipitation, it is an education to see how much planning goes into ordering water in the Valley and the labor it takes to manage that water.

The different techniques and methods  Valley farmers use to irrigate and conserve water are essential parts of the tours.

“One of the things I really like to show them is the level of water management we do,” Vessey said, adding that the level of planning it takes to manage the Valley’s gravity flow system and to use the water reasonably and beneficially “blows their minds.”

Whether it be utilizing sprinkler irrigation, drip irrigation, land leveling, or adding tailwater recovery systems, Imperial Valley farmers have taken steps to ensure they are using water efficiently, and that is a critical message during tours as well as the Valley’s role in feeding the nation and the world.
IVVGA also provides tours to local high schools and Future Farmers of America tours.

“It’s important to show the diverse kinds of jobs there are in agriculture,” Trimm said. “Students going away to college need to see what the career possibilities are in agriculture here in the Valley.”
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Vessey added, “We are opening their eyes to all the possibilities within the agricultural industry. There’s more to it than working the land or working on a ranch. There’re all kinds of avenues within agriculture, from exporting and working with international markets to seed development and pest control. There’s research and working for the Agricultural Commissioner’s Office — just a lot for someone to consider when they think about agriculture.”

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IVC sports

1/29/2024

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Clockwise, from top: The IVC men's basketball team, Athletic Director Enrique Lechuga, and the IVC women's basketball team. IVC photos

Imperial Valley College takes creative approach to recruitment



By Heidi Gutierrez

Imperial Valley College is introducing new sports to its athletic department in ongoing efforts to engage current students and incentivize students from local high schools to attend IVC. 

"Students are willing to continue their education if they can play the sport they played in high school here," said IVC Superintendent/President Lennor Johnson. "We have invited coaches from the local high schools to evaluate our athletic programs, and they have brought to our attention popular sports that we do not offer that are gaining traction in our local high schools."

One sport that is rooted in Imperial Valley tradition is wrestling. While not currently offered at IVC, it could well return to campus by next year. 

"There is a big wrestling community here, with CIF success at the state level at the local high schools,” said Athletic Director Enrique Lechuga. "We used to have a wrestling program in the 1970s.” 

Lechuga said he would like to see it reintroduced after conversations with members of the community. 

Lechuga came to IVC from CETYS University System in Baja California. An athletic director at CETYS, Lechuga was recognized for contributing to a proposal that changed NCAA regulations to allow accredited schools in Mexico to become members of an NCAA conference.

With extensive knowledge and experience in sports and administration, he was named IVC’s first associate dean of athletics in January 2023. He has become an essential part of IVC's strategy of "reimagining the athletic program and enhancing its quality for incoming and current IVC students," Johnson said. 

Lechuga’s work builds on a proud sports history at Imperial Valley College with an eye to the future. 

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, under legendary Coach Jeff Deyo, the college men's basketball team won multiple championship titles. About 16 Conference Championship, regional, and state win banners decorate DePaoli Sports Complex Gymnasium today.

And the IVC women’s basketball team under Coach Jill Tucker and Coach Deyo contributed to the college's streak of wins during the early 2000s period as well.

Currently, the women’s basketball program continues to dominate, and the men’s basketball team is working to bounce back this season. 

IVC’s men’s and women’s tennis and soccer continue to be popular as are women’s softball, men’s baseball, and women’s volleyball. 

Rather than looking to reintroduce or add just one sport, Lechuga has been looking at the big picture of what the college needs and how it can collaborate with the local high schools to up its game with new, trending sports. 

"If we are looking into the next three years, a sport we have contemplated is women's flag football," said Lechuga. "It is one of the fastest-growing sports across the United States." 

Lechuga added, "I would say traditional sports like volleyball, softball, and soccer will take a hit because of women's flag football popularity." 

Several local high schools now have flag football teams, and based on successes and popularity of those programs, Lechuga expects IVC to add a flag football program within three years. 

Pickleball is another sport the college hopes to offer soon. Although not a program at the local high schools, it has grown in popularity in various Imperial Valley communities. Lechuga wants to introduce it and other sports not rooted in Valley tradition that might interest incoming students. 

"Look at pickleball, a trending sport in the States, has drawn a lot of attention in colleges," said Lechuga. Efforts are growing for pickleball to gain official sports status in intercollegiate competition.

The proposed new sports programs symbolize the transformation and progress IVC is making to meet the needs of local students now and in the future. In 2023 alone, IVC achieved several milestones, chief among them was winning the Aspen Prize, a national designation that named IVC the No. 1 community college in the United States. IVC shares the award with Amarillo College, which is in Amarillo, Texas.

Also, during 2023, renovations of the 200, 300, 800 buildings and tennis courts on the IVC campus were completed. Still under construction is a new sports field concession facility and restroom. All of these are bond issue-financed projects that focus on modernizing the campus with state-of-the-art equipment and creating an environment that is inviting to students. 

The coming of new sports is all part of the college's strategy to remarket its extracurricular activities to boost student engagement, enrollment, and retention. 

It was a conversation between IVC Superintendent/President Johnson and a high school student that helped fortify the need to renew the college’s athletic programs. 

"A high school student from Holtville who I was encouraging to attend IVC over a period of three years had no motivation to enroll here after graduation.,” Johnson said. “If the college had wrestling, he probably would have come here and graduated,” said Johnson. 

"High school graduates are willing to continue their education if they play a sport here," Johnson added. "Men are not enrolling as much as women at the college, therefore, we need to get creative."

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Historic Value

1/29/2024

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Clockwise, from top: A view from the grandstands in this 1941 image from the Imperial High yearbook. The iconic Ben Hulse Auditorium in 1971, and Styx in concert at the grandstands in 1977. (Bert Hoppe photos)
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Fair’s journey reflected in its buildings
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By Darren Simon
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The California Mid-Winter Fair has been an indelible part of the Imperial Valley’s history, bringing together communities for 118 years.
As the Valley prepares for this year’s fair, scheduled March 1-10 and themed “Red, White & Moo,” work is underway around the Imperial Valley Fairgrounds and its buildings. Each has its own story to tell.

It’s a journey that reveals fascinating details of a different time in the Valley and connects the past to the present.

“What I want people to understand is that there is a historical value to the buildings here at the Imperial Valley Fairgrounds, and we are thankful to have them,” said Alan Phillips, the fairgrounds chief executive officer. “We are doing our best to protect that history and these buildings, so they are here for a long time to come for our community.”

The journey begins with stories of transplanted buildings either moved by rail or truck to the fair from various locations throughout the Imperial Valley and reconstructed to serve the fair’s needs.

Just beyond the entrance to the fairgrounds are The Hulsienda and The Lifestyle buildings, both of which have been a part of the fairgrounds since the late 1940s. Though The Hulsienda has been shuttered for two years after suffering severe storm damage, it has served as a facility for school and competitive exhibits and will serve that way again in the future. The Lifestyle building today serves as a maintenance building for the fairgrounds.

However, in another time, both buildings were part of a tuberculosis quarantine facility known as TB Sands, located near a military installation east of Holtville during World War II. The Hulsienda was actually a theater playhouse at TB Sands. 

When the war effort ended, both buildings were deconstructed and transported by rail to the fairgrounds, where they were rebuilt to serve new purposes. The Lifestyle building first served as home to Pioneers’ Museum before transitioning into a maintenance facility.

The Hulsienda has a special meaning for Phillips. 

He described how, when he was a boy growing up in the Valley, he would eat at a restaurant across the road from the fairgrounds and see a caldron atop the Hulsienda glowing with neon lights, as if flames were rising from the caldron.

“It was like a beacon for the fair,” Phillips said, adding his goal is to not only complete repairs to the building, but return it to its earlier glory when the neon lights beckoned people to the fairgrounds.

The large Preble and Casa De Manana buildings were also transplanted to the fair in the mid-1950s. Both previously served as hangars at the Imperial County Airport but were given new life at the fairgrounds, where they were reconstructed after being trucked there from the airport. 

James Jones, a maintenance worker at the fairgrounds for 20 years, whose father, Eddie Jones, also served as maintenance staff for 37 years at the fairgrounds before retiring, said it was likely less expensive to transport existing buildings to the fairgrounds as the complex expanded than to build new facilities.

Jones pointed out the Preble Building is named after the late Andy Preble, who worked in construction in the Imperial Valley, and helped perfect the use of gunite, a sprayed form of concrete often used to construct pools. Preble used his gunite materials to build up the exterior walls of both the Preble and Casa De Manana buildings.

It took the efforts of community members like Preble, fair board members, county supervisors, a team of maintenance workers, and even inmates from the county jail to build the fairgrounds’ transplanted buildings and other structures such as the barns and the grandstands. 

“They (the inmates), along with seven permanent maintenance staff, helped build this place,” Jones said.

The growth of the fairgrounds was also possible thanks to the efforts of leaders, like the late Sen. Ben Hulse, an Imperial Valley resident in the 1920s and ‘30s, who ran an auto and tractor dealership close to the fairgrounds. As a senator in the early 1930s, he helped get the fair designated as a District Agricultural Association, which helped bring growth to the fairgrounds.

The grandstands, home of events throughout the fair ranging from High School Madness to dirt track competition, represent another sign of that growth and a connection to the Valley’s history.

Construction on the grandstands was completed in the early 1930s. Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, the grandstands area became a National Guard headquarters to support the war effort. 
Buildings erected at the grandstands became barracks, an armory and motor pool. After the war, a fallout shelter was built beneath the grandstands.

During the post-war drawdown, the military returned the facilities to the fairgrounds and the grandstand took on its role as a fair entertainment complex. The fallout shelter was eventually filled in and sealed off but remains intact.

“We still have the sign that says, ‘radioactive fallout shelter’,” Phillips said, adding that fairgoers see the sign when they enter the grandstand through the northside tunnel. “We kept the sign up for its historical value.”

Another facility actually built on site is the fair’s board room. Before serving that purpose, it served as a fire station based at the fairgrounds, and somewhere—perhaps still in the Valley—is the firetruck based at that station, Phillips said.
The Imperial Valley Raceway at the fairgrounds, which features sprint cars and other auto racing, once served a different purpose as well. Through the 1920s and 1930s, it was much longer, stretching a mile and it served as a horse race facility, during a time when horse racing was connected to most fairs around the country.
“At one point it (the horse racing circuit) stopped here, and then in the 1970s, they tried to bring it back, but it didn’t work,” Jones said.
The Turn One Saloon at the fairgrounds is located at what historically was turn one of the original horse track.
At the time of the horse racing, there were horse barns on the grounds, and Phillips pointed out that when those barns were torn down, the wood was reclaimed and today can be seen as part of the décor in such facilities as the boardroom and the Rustic Bar, located underneath the grandstands.
Along with serving the needs of the horses, the fairgrounds provided apartments for the jockeys. That building still exists on the fairgrounds near the fair’s entrance, behind the Palm Stage, though today it serves as a storage facility.
Over the years, the buildings at the fairgrounds have been updated and renovated but always with an eye toward retaining each building’s historical importance.
“They are still here,” Jones said of the fair’s older buildings and facilities. “They are still part of the fabric of the fair’s history.”
In that sense, he added, “They are still very much alive.”

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A Cut Above

1/29/2024

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Clockwise, from top: Apprentice Derrick Sandoval, Ace Performance Welding and Fabrication owners Michele and Chris Flores, and welder Jonalhon Rodriguez. Rodriguez welds safety equipment. Creations by Ace Performance are shown above.  

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Photos by Alejandra Pereida

When creativity and steel become art
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By Susan Giller

In the steel and fire that shape industrial pipes, agricultural implements, truck beds, and bumpers, Michelle Flores found an artistic pursuit drawing rave reviews on Instagram and at festivals and farmers’ markets around the Imperial Valley.

She fabricates custom signs, plaques, lanterns, monograms, memorials, and a stunning variety of custom pieces from sheet metal on a powerful computer-controlled plasma cutting table. She breathes life into her inspirations amid a thriving industrial operation, Arc Performance Welding and Fabrication, which she and her husband and master welder, Chris, operate in a large metal building behind their rural Calipatria farmhouse.

A growing legion of fans is quick to rave about the range and beauty of pieces Michelle Flores started creating and showing in the last couple of years. Though made of steel, some of the pieces appear stunningly intricate and delicate. There is a plaque of the cowboy hat adorned with scrolling flowers sitting atop a pair of cowboy boots. Flores shows a series of metal-cut monograms she made with elaborate embellishments. Her work draws lots of Instagram love and sweet sentiments. “Loved this…” says one. “So pretty,” adds another comment.

A photo of a wall full of ornate crosses, one of which Flores fabricated, came with the Instagram comment, “When I saw this beauty, I knew I needed to add it to our collection. The work is amazing! Highly recommended for your metalwork.”   

There is a metal yard sign of an expressive Australian shepherd wearing a collar with the name Bailey that got the Instagram comment, “Thank you so much. We like it a lot.”

Instead of her craft, Flores prefers to talk about Arc Performance Welding and Fabrication. Over the past 12 years, the welding and metal fabricating business has grown dramatically. Today, it employs four people and does welding and fabricating for large-scale industrial and agricultural projects throughout the Imperial Valley, the state, and the nation. 

“When we got the plasma (cutting) table, I knew I had to step up and do more,” she said. Just operating the unit took some doing. Project designs are created on the computer screen that controls the unit’s high-speed, precision plasma cutter. The computer-controlled system operates faster and more precisely than any other cutting method. 

However, learning to run the $32,000 plasma table took some work. After a one-day training session, the couple brought the unit back to Calipatria. That is when the real learning began. 

“We destroyed a lot of metal in the process,” Chris Flores said.

In the three years since the plasma table arrived, Michelle Flores started doing powder coating finishes to add to Arc Performance’s service. And she began to create decorative items to add to the portfolio of products that the firm produces and markets on Instagram. 

The computer-controlled plasma cutting table now stands in a place of honor in the Arc Performance Welding and Fabricating shop. It can cut projects from 10 by 5 foot sheets of metal in a fraction of the time it used to take with a precision never before possible. At Arc Performance, the plasma table cuts precision parts from heavy-duty steel sheets for industrial projects. Decorative projects are made of lighter weight, though still substantial, steel sheets.

While the table and all the other complex welding and fabricating equipment are essential for Arc Performance’s work, the range of projects completed and visible throughout the Valley and beyond gives the Flores the most satisfaction. And pride.

Michelle Flores’ work has drawn an Instagram following and fans at numerous local events and festivals. She admits her favorite projects are memorials, some of which have been installed along highways.

“Whenever a customer wants a memorial, I love doing it,” she said. “Keeping those memories is special. And when they love it, I feel like I did my job.”
However, she is quick to point out that the gates, handrails, fences, shade structures, and other large installations on display and working throughout the Valley are her husband’s handiwork.

The lighted Spot 805 sign that hangs over the outdoor bar and grill on Brawley’s Main Street is an Arc Performance creation, as is an elaborate and stately entry gate at Brandt Ranches in rural Calipatria. There is an Arc Welding entry gate at the Cattle Call Arena. 

However, many of Arc Performance’s less visible projects are essential industrial, military, municipal, and agricultural operations. From geothermal pipe welding to ag agricultural gates and truck bed and bumper modification, Arc Performance does it all – on projects throughout the Valley and far beyond.
It was to keep more of their work in the Valley that the Flores couple founded Arc Performance. Chris Flores learned basic welding skills as a Calipatria High School student. After graduation, he went on to gain certifications to work on increasingly diverse and complex projects. As an independent welder with a well-equipped truck, Flores had a ticket to work on projects year-round on military installations and industrial projects throughout California and in other states.

He and Michelle even moved into a fifth-wheel trailer with their infant son, Austin, on a full-time basis about 16 years ago to keep the family together wherever welding jobs required. 

After about four years, the couple decided Austin and their welding business needed a home base. They moved back to the Valley and set up their home in Brawley, Michelle’s hometown. They also founded Arc Performance in a rented space in Calipatria. And the business took off.
Before long, they needed more space. They found the site about two years ago in a 10-acre parcel outside of Calipatria with a large metal industrial space that Arc Performance needed and a tiny old house begging for work.

Even as Arc Performance got busier, the couple took on a dramatic renovation of the housing structure that turned what had been a 1,400-square-foot house into a show-stopping modern farmhouse.

​It is just the ticket for a couple whose determination and creativity are energized by a dedication to steel and fire.

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