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Nature in the City Newsletter /* place css box model fixes for IE 5*

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October 10, 2008

NEWS

SF Garter Snake Sighting!

Cal Academy Releases Monarchs on Opening Day

Rec & Park Director Out

Backyard Bird Management

Earth Island @ Supreme Court

NATURE Gets to the Heart of It

 

 

Nature in the City Calendar

Links

Collective Advocacy in Sacramento

 

 

Calendar of Events

October 10 - 11

Green Schoolyard Alliance Conference

October 11

Big Blue Bucket Eco-Fair

10 am - 2 pm

October 12

California Least Tern Restoration

9 am - 12 noon

Geology Walk

1 - 3 pm

 

 

October 19

Mountain Jam

5 pm - 9 pm

23 Club

23 Visitacion Avenue, Brisbane

PLEASE RSVP

An evening of music for your listening pleasure, music to sing along

with and music that will make you get up and dance!

Suggested Donation of $15.

All proceeds from this event will be used for San Bruno Mountain

Watch Education and Stewardship programs.

October 25

Urban Wildlife Habitat Workshop

10 am - 12 noon

October 29

Fall TALK

Candlestick Point-State Park for the People

7:30 pm

November 6

2008 Wildland Weed Mapping Field Course (Oakland)

*For more calendar items, as well as regular volunteer

opportunities, go to the Nature in the City Calendar to view all posted events.

More Calendars

BIG YEAR Calendar

California Native Plant Society

Department of the Environment

Garden for the Environment

Golden Gate Audubon Society

Green City Calendar

Parks Conservancy

San Francisco Botanical Society

San Francisco Naturalist Society

San Francisco Nature Education

SF Natural Areas

 

 

 

Links

Green Hairstreak

MAP

Mission Greenbelt

Mt. Sutro

Native Plant Sale

Natural Areas Program

NTC's Programs

SF Weed Management Area

Past Newsletters

 

 

Collective Advocacy in Sacramento

Do you do California policy work and thus would you want a " Center for

Civic Engagement " in Sacramento? Tides Shared Spaces is requesting that you

complete a survey assessing interest in this center for state-level civic

collaboration.

The Center would offer accessible, affordable work and meeting space

to nonprofit organizations who want to influence state legislation and policies.

With space for both permanent offices and short-term use, this green nonprofit

center located in Sacramento would be designed to encourage and inspire

collaboration and civic participation.

Click here to fill out the survey.

Up

 

 

News SF Garter Snake Sighting!

Last week a few lucky Big Year folks got to see San Francisco garter snakes

at Sharp Park during the San Francisco Natural Areas Program tire corral removal

project!

 

Also in restoration news, check out this video of the Presidio's Thompson's

Reach. This video highlights the creek daylighting and extensive restoration

that has been going on for over 3 years now. If done right, the Tennessee Hollow

Watershed, not to mention other Presidio wetlands, could be home to Red-legged

frogs - the SF garter snake's favorite treat!

Other GGNRA Big Year events

Help restore the California Least Tern's nesting habitat with Friends of

the Alameda Wildlife Refuge. RSVP required: Call 510-522-0601 or e-mail.

 

Up

 

Cal Academy Releases Monarchs on Opening Day

From Liam O'Brien, local lepidopterist and Nature in the City steering

committee member:

" I was watching the local coverage of the opening day festivities at the

new California Academy of Science. Then boom, I almost choke to death on my

dinner: there's Gavin, and all the dignitaries, the world-famous architect and,

to my complete horror, a cloud of Monarch butterflies 'released' for the

ceremony.

No doubt many people didn't have the same visceral response that I did.

Over 60 companies in the U.S. raise butterflies for the sole purpose of sending

them off for release at weddings, graduations, baptisms, etc. But for me, as a

San Franciscan lepidopterist who has volunteered much of his time in the last

few years to monitor the return of this creature annually to our county, I

watched on television a complete compromise of this season's data. This

arrogant, ill-advised gesture by the Cal Academy did not take into consideration

a history roost ( a place where monarch gregariously cluster and overwinter

together in the Eucalyptus trees) just down the road from the new building in

the S.F. Botanical Garden. Take a deep breath and say out loud: this has

emanated from an Academy of Science!

 

The Xerces Society was in contact with them asking them NOT to do this. And

they did it anyway. Kimi Eisele, in an article called Magic for Sale, said:

'Ecological impacts aside, I'm more interested in what the phenomenon suggests

about our relationship to nature. Butterfly releases represent just one more

example of the many ways we consume, beautify and use nature -- and ultimately

exert power over it. The fact that they're available for sale at all suggests

something about the way we distinguish ourselves from nature.'

 

Finally, in an article by Jeffrey Glassberg, the president and founder of

the North American Butterfly Association, entitled: There's No Need to Release

Butterflies -- They're Already Free, he concludes: 'A solution that better

serves the public interest is to ban the environmental release of

commercially-obtained butterflies. The intentional release of native birds was

outlawed in 1947. The time has come to do the same for butterflies.' "

Up

 

Recreation and Parks Department Director Out

Check out these articles from the City Insider, the SF Chronicle, and the

SF Examiner reporting on today's resignation of the Recreation & Parks chief,

Yomi Agunbiade, as well as the appointment of a very environmental, interim,

general manager.

Up

 

Backyard Bird Management

From Josiah Clark, local naturalist and Nature in the City steering

committee member: " After years of trying different things and encouraging

robust vegetation in a small shaded strip of dirt, I have finally achieved a

truly birdy backyard!

 

Recent management changes and additions to the backyard in the past months

have included funneling bath/shower water out a window into a funnel and hose

that irrigate the ground below. In the past months plants have put on

significant new growth and there is much more understory. I have let the jasmine

and potato vine grow up into the birch tree I planted and this has become a

focal point. The water feature trickles water over a big slab of flagstone,

bringing in lots of birds for bathing and drinking. Most recently I erected an

18 foot long cypress log in the ground. Before I put it up I drilled lots of

1+'' holes into it with spade bit. I placed some pine cone covered branches

above the garage rooftop in hopes of attracting the nuthatches from nearby

Presidio pine trees.

Native plants are the single best way to attract wildlife to your garden.

The HANC recycling center located near Kezar stadium is currently the best

source for affordable native plants. I also happen to have a surplus of a few

kinds of native plants at the moment if people are looking to purchase some to

establish this coming wet season.

 

Note: I will be running a training for backyard habitat gardening on

October 25th through the Garden for the Environment if people would like to go.

Final note: If you feed birds, I recommend stopping for the season once all

the winter sparrows have left, and do not start again until they arrive. Summer

time brings in the bullies and overly common generalist species. The most

important thing is to keep track of what you are feeding. If starlings,

blackbirds, house sparrows, jays or other bold aggressive species become too

common, its probably time to cut them off or change the feeding practices. Keep

all feeders clean and avoid feeders that concentrate many individuals at once to

avoid the spread of diseases. "

Up

Join Nature in the City!

 

Become a member today and get a new map!

Go online, email

or call 415-564-4107.

Nature in the City is a project of Earth

Island Institute, a 501©3 California non profit public benefit

corporation.

 

Earth Island @ Supreme Court

A lawsuit bearing the Earth Island name came before the US Supreme Court

on October 8: Summers v. Earth Island Institute. People may be asking, " What's

up with Earth Island at the Supreme Court? " It's been pretty challenging to

understand the important but legally arcane issues being raised in this suit.

Briefly, if they prevail, it will preserve the right of groups such as

Earth Island to challenge federal agency procedures more generally through

litigation by contrast with, for example, a suit simply opposing a specific

timber sale event. This suit grew out of the work of the John Muir Project.

Read this post for further explanation.

Up

 

NATURE Gets to the Heart of It

The scientific journal Nature has asked the two major Presidential

candidates to answer questions about how science would factor into the work of

their administrations. We particularly like Obama's answer with respect to

evolution. Not only did he talk sensibly about the role of non-scientific

theories of life and the universe, but also he responded by using the more

general term " evolution " as opposed to " evolution by natural selection, " a more

narrow view of biological evolution that many scientists currently question as

being too simplistic a definition of this most complex, dynamic process. For a

podcast of the Terrence McNally interview with one of the experts,

Click here for Barack's answers. Republican candidate, John McCain, did

not respond to Nature's request.

Up

 

 

 

 

 

 

To to the Nature in the City Newsletter click HERE.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our postal address is

PO Box 170088

San Francisco, California 94117

United States

 

 

 

 

Enjoy life and smile.

 

 

 

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