Ghost Towns Resurfacing As Lakes Recede Amid Worsening Western DroughtEvery two or three years, Lake Isabella’s shoreline pulls back almost like clockwork, and the former town of Old Kernville, California, rises from its watery grave to reveal its crumbling skeleton.
Retired Hollywood cinematographer Chuck Barbee has watched the lake give up its famous ghost town many times with interest.
The main difference today, he said, is that the abandoned town, once known as Whiskey Flat, has been exposed far longer than usual. Part of it is due to dam activity and the western drought that began in 2000.
“The town itself is fascinating. It has quite a history,” said Barbee, who lived in the town next door, which became the new Kernville, as a teenager and later moved back after a long career in movies and television....
Source: Ghost Towns Resurfacing As Lakes Recede Amid Worsening Western Drought (https://www.theepochtimes.com/ghost-towns-resurfacing-as-lakes-recede-amid-worsening-western-drought_4793391.html)