  
Your financial commitment goes toward membership as
well as our critical work to build unity and community for the conservation of Franciscan nature and biodiversity.
*Believe it or not, this informative newslettertakes
substantial staff time to produce each week. We need your help to
implement this service and our many other important programs for
conserving nature in the city. If you’ve
already
renewed your membership, thank you.*
Nature in the
City has some wonderful success stories from 2007:
Earth Day at
McLaren
Park
The Map 2nd Edition
Mt. Sutro
winners
of the 2007 Beautification Award
Natural Areas Plan to
environmental review
Park Bond gave $5 Million to natural
areas
Talk Series
has become a community institution
Twin Peaks received $50,000 for habitat restoration
Website consistently receives 1000
hits per day
In addition, we need your help
to pursue our exciting new programs and broader initiatives:
Green Hairstreak Eco-Community Corridor
We
just started the initial planning for an exciting new project to
restore the ecological corridor of the locally rare Green Hairstreak
Butterfly, a charismatic critter that only flies on the west side of
the city in remnant dunes. The project is exciting for its integrated
goals and approach. We propose to both restore and to connect 4 hilltop
dune areas from Grandview Park to Hawk Hill. While we are primarily
concerned about the fate of the butterfly, the project will benefit
also the mosaic of native plants and animals within this habitat.
Yerba Buena Island
We
continue to work with the island community, the Department of the
Environment and the Treasure Island Development Authority (TIDA) to
restore native habitat at Clipper Cove and other sites on Yerba Buena
Island. We need more resources to effectively build a community
stewardship program and to support TIDA and the City in managing the
island for biodiversity.
Stewardship Program
Our
long-term goal of fostering a sustainable community stewardship group
for every natural area in the city is ambitious. It is critical,
however, for the ecological viability of our natural areas, for which
management and government is severely underfunded. We need enough funding
to be able to hire a dedicated community stewardship program manager.
Advocacy Program
We
have received some seed money from the San Francisco Foundation to
construct our advocacy program by building community and unity around
the Natural Areas Plan. We need much more help if we are to create the
formidable nature advocacy organization this city needs.
Join Nature in the City
via the website, email or call us at (415) 564-4107.
More
Eco
News and
Events
Say
Goodbye to Plastic Bags
(SF
Environment)

San Francisco’s
first-of-its-kind ban on plastic supermarket checkout bags becomes
effective November 20,
and the City will start enforcing the ban
December 1. The Department will provide an email address for
residents
to report violations.
The
Ordinance prohibits supermarkets that conduct more than $2 million
of business annually from using non-compostable plastic checkout bags.
Instead, all stores shall provide only the following as checkout bags
to customers: recyclable paper bags, and/or compostable plastic bags.
To read more about the ban, and what you can do, click here.
Oxymoron of the Day: Fiji Water Goes Green
(NY Times)
Fiji Water, with annual sales of about $150 million, is but a drop
in the bucket of the $15 billion domestic bottled-water industry.
Let
other companies talk about going carbon neutral. Today, Fiji will
announce a plan to be carbon negative — that is, to more than make up
for the greenhouse gases released in the creation, transportation and
sales of its product. It will also announce goals for using renewable
energy, preserving forests and conserving water — and it will specify
how it will attain them.
To read more, click here.
Robotic Goat Eats Losing Tickets
(Treehugger)
When the owners of a boat-racing enterprise in Japan wanted to keep
their best customers from throwing losing tickets on the floor they
came up with a unique idea; a robotic goat that eats them right in
front of your eyes!
The people who seem to love the goat most are kids. And
while uncertain to the general idea of bringing your
kids gambling, the goat itself is
helping kids see the wisdom of not littering. To read more, click here.
Are you a GREEN Host?
(Greenopia)
The holidays are approaching and it's a good time to think
about ways
you can make it a green season. How green a host
are you? Test your knowledge for a chance to win eco-friendly prizes.
Solar Hot Water Heater Workshop
(Urban Alliance For Sustainability)
Nov.
18
10
am - 3 pm
- EcoHouse
- 1305 Hopkins St.
- (enter via garden entrance on Peralta)
- Berkeley, CA
Join the Ecology Center in Berkeley to learn the process of
retrofitting a solar water heater on your
house. A slideshow presentation and tour of the EcoHouse solar water
heater system will be given. Workshop will be lead by Jon Christianson
of
Sun Light & Power.
$15 sliding scale
Call
510-548-2220 x242 or email for more info.
Preparing Your Garden For the Winter
(Garden for the Environment)
Saturday, November 10
10AM – 1PM
Garden for the Environment
7th Ave at Lawton Street
When Autumn nights grow longer, it’s time to start preparing your
garden for winter. Come to this workshop to learn how winterizing your
garden will conserve water and ensure less work and vitality for the
spring. Topics will include mulching, cover cropping, pest control
practices, weeding tips, and a crop selection appropriate for the Bay
Area Winter months! Pre registration required. Please call (415)731-5627 to register. $5 donation recommended.
Back
|
November 7,
2007
- Join

- Nature in the City!
Become a
member
today and get a new map! Go online, email or call 415-564-4107
to join us.
Nature in the City is a
project of Earth Island Institute, a 501(c) California non profit
public benefit corporation
News
Presidio Trust Changes Course
Responding to public feedback to the proposed new museum development for housing Don Fisher's art collection, the Presidio Trust
has terminated the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the museum,
and has initiated a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS)
to the 2002 Presidio Trust Management Plan. This they did in response
to criticism that they should analyze the impacts of the museum in the
context of the entire Main Post District, which will be the subject of
the SEIS.
Within the Main Post District, there are some significant natural resources issues, including the course of Tennessee Creek flowing into the restored Thompson Gulch, through which the creek then flows to Crissy Marsh, as well as the ecological restoration opportunities associated with the Doyle Drive Construction Project.
Top
Natural Areas Program Alert
San Francisco Park Patrol has begun moving into the Natural Areas Program lot
near the corner of Frederick and Stanyan. We were a big supporter of
the recent increase in Park Patrol to protect people, wildlife and
other resources in the City's parks. We are concerned, however, about
how the Recreation and Park Department will reconcile the needs of
these two very important functions for the City's parks. The Stanyan
location is clearly eminently centrally located, and this benefits the
Natural Areas Program and would benefit the Park Patrol. Considering
how much space in Golden Gate Park is used for parking private cars, a
mutually-beneficial solution must exist in the vicinity.
If you are concerned,
as we are, about the fate of the location and functioning of the
Natural Areas Program, please contact the Recreation and Park General
Manager and/or the Recreation and Park Commission and/or the Mayor:
Yomi Agunbiade, RPD General Manager, yomi.agunbiade@sfgov.org
McLaren Lodge, Golden Gate Park
501 Stanyan Street
San Francisco CA 94117
Phone: 415-831-2701
Larry Martin, President, Recreation and Park Commission
recpark.commission@sfgov.org
FAX: 415-221-8034
McLaren Lodge, Golden Gate Park
501 Stanyan Street
San Francisco CA 94117
Telephone: 415-831-2750
Gavin Newsom, Mayor, gavin.newsom@sfgov.org
City Hall
1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place, Room 200
San Francisco CA 94102
Phone: 415-554-6141
Fax: 415-554-6160
Top
California Academy of Sciences goes Green
Check out the recent article
about the unprecedented "green roof" atop the emerging California
Academy of Sciences. The plant selection and design were done by Rana
Creek, who implemented the restored Crissy Airfield planting. The dozen
or so native plant species will provide much needed habitat for birds
and butterflies in an otherwise totally non-native area of the Park
(though the oak woodlands are nearby). By the way, we heard through the
grapevine that the beloved herpetological exhibit - the one around the
alligators that housed all kinds of lizards, snakes and amphibians -
will not exist at the new Academy.
Top
Living New Deal
San Francisco's Columbia Foundation has given the California Historical Society $100,000 for the Living New Deal Project.
The grant is partly contingent on raising further funding to carry out
the Project's ambitious goal to create a statewide collaborative effort
to recover, database, map, and interpret the New Deal's physical impact
on the State of California, and to serve as a model for what other
states and cities can do.
Gray Brechin, who wrote Imperial San Francisco, is working with the National New Deal Preservation Association to commemorate next year the 75th anniversary of FDR's inauguration and the subsequent launch of Roosevelt's New Deal.
Top

Presidio Park Stewards
Volunteer
Opportunities
- from
the Nature in the City
Calendar
Wednesday November 7
CNPS Weekly Workparty
Presidio Nursery
Thursday
November
8
South Bay Shorebird Survey
Friday
November
9
North Bay Shorebird Survey
Presidio Plant Patrol
Saturday November
10
Central Bay Shorebird Survey
Save the Quail Restore-A-Thon
26th Street Sidewalk Planting
Heron's Head Marsh
Fort
Funston Nursery
Oak Woodlands Restoration
Friend's of McLaren Park
Colma Creek Restoration
Friend's of Edgehill Mountain
Land's End Stewards
Presidio Nursery
For more information, contact info, and
directions to natural areas and restoration sites, go to the
Community Calendar
on the Nature in the City website.
Top
Calendar
Of
Events
| Nov.
7 |
|
| Nov.
8 |
SF Naturalist Society
GGNRA
Big Year
with Brent Plater
Randall Museum
7:30 pm
Free.
For
more information, email Patrick or call
(415) 225-3830. |
| Nov.
9-11 |
GREEN
FESTIVAL
San
Francisco Concourse Exhibition Center
(8th St at Brannan)
Come to the table of one of our key partners, Tree Frog Treks! |
| Nov
12 |
Urban
Gardening Conference
CELLSpace,
2050 Bryant
10:00am
to 3:00pm
Come meet Brower Youth Award winners
Free workshops,
free lunch, live music, and dessert by Mission Pie.
Space
is limited, register today by calling Julia at
415.750.5110
|
*For
more calendar
items, as well as regular volunteer opportunites, go to the
Nature in
the City
Calendar
to view all posted events.
Top
|