STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



423 



Table Showing Average Temperature and Rainfall 



nardino County. 



for San Ber- 



Average Precipitation in San Bernardino County. 



P 

 B 

 C 

 P 



P 



p 







(J? 



co 



>3 



3 

 o 



Bear Valley 



Camp Cady 



Colton 



Daggett 



Feuner 



Needles 



Redlands 



King's Station 



Riverside 



6.30 

 0.27 

 1.37 

 0.48 

 0.15 

 none 

 1.47 

 4.65 

 2.55 



34.31 

 0.50 

 2.74 

 1.45 

 1.32 

 1.90 



11.32 

 4.69 

 2.21 



25.14 

 0.56 

 1.51 

 1.17 



2.25 

 2^08 

 10.95 

 3.44 

 1.24 



1.51 



none 

 0.11 



none 

 0.05 



none 

 0.70 

 0.19 

 0.04 



0.50 

 0.15 

 1.10 

 0.29 

 2.40 

 1.32 

 1.87 

 3.33 

 0.92 



SUMMIT COUNTIES. 



LASSEN COUNTY. 



This county is a succession of mountain ranges and valleys, and although 

 in the central and eastern parts the hills seem to have been placed regard- 

 less of direction or order, the ranges have a general trend to the southeast 

 and northwest. A ridge, having an altitude of 8,200 feet and called Dia- 

 mond Mountain, makes the dividing line between Lassen and Plumas 

 Counties. Diamond Mountain forms the southern side of Honey Lake 

 Valley, which extends southeast and northwest, a distance of 45 miles, 

 and about 15 miles in width. In the extreme northwest corner of the 

 county, and extending into Modoc County, lies Big Valley, a large stretch 

 of agricultural land, comprising in Lassen County, about 75,000 acres. 

 This valley is watered by Pitt River, Ash Creek, and several smaller 

 streams, and has something less than 1,000 inhabitants. Long Valley lies 

 in the extreme southeast of the county, contains for its size but little agri- 

 cultural land, but is remarkable for its singular conformation. Its south 

 side is formed by a high, and very heavily timbered ridge, while the rise 



