Posts Tagged ‘parks’

L.A. County tests plan for bird-friendly plant maintenance at parks

Posted in News, what on September 22nd, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

The distress call of a marsh wren at Los Angeles County’s busiest park has led to an experimental maintenance plan that favors birds by restricting tree trimming and vegetation cutting to winter seasons.

Los Angeles County Parks and Recreation officials revamped maintenance strategies at Legg Lake in South El Monte’s Whittier Narrows Recreation Area after bird watchers complained that a cattail removal effort had disturbed a marsh wren.

Now, with the approval of state and federal wildlife authorities, the county aims to make the park as peaceful and comfortable as possible for its avian visitors.


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“The beauty of this plan is not so much what we are doing as what we are no longer doing,” said Mickey Long, the department’s natural areas administrator. “Essentially, we’re pushing maintenance work into the winter months and out of nesting seasons in spring and summer.

“But no matter what time of the year it is, if a bird is nesting nearby, we will stop trimming and cutting,” he said.

Under the plan, one of the park’s three man-made lakes has been declared a wildlife preserve where future vegetation clearance work will carefully target non-native species. “That lake’s two islands are now regarded as bird sanctuaries,” Long said.

In addition, bird-viewing stations will be installed in areas where great blue herons and double-crested cormorants build enormous nests each year in the limbs of 100-foot-tall eucalyptus trees at the water’s edge.

Vegetation at the other two lakes will also be managed to protect wildlife and enhance habitat. However, those lakes will continue to allow recreational activities, including model boat racing and pedal boat rentals, officials said.

“This plan does not preclude safety work that needs to be done, such as removal of a hazardous limb from a tree,” Long said. “We also intend to maintain a clear waterway in each of the three lakes for trash removal and emergency response by boat.”

If successful, similar strategies will be adopted in other regional parks, including Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park in San Dimas and Castaic Lake State Recreation Area.

Word of the new management plan in the Whittier Narrows area, a lush pocket of remnant willow stumps, sycamore groves and grapevines where the San Gabriel and Rio Hondo rivers converge, was welcomed by naturalists and birding enthusiasts.

“Managing county parks in a manner that promotes wildlife and biodiversity is a step in the right direction,” said environmental consultant Dan Cooper. “This section of Los Angeles County embraces some of the most biodiverse public parklands in the United States.”

In June, Cooper spotted a yellow-billed cuckoo less than a mile from Legg Lake. The species was last recorded there in 1952.

“It’s obviously advantageous not to disturb habitat during the nesting season, when it is easy to disrupt and destroy an entire breeding season’s efforts,” said Kimball Garrett, manager of the ornithology collection at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. “It is also nice to know that government agencies can be responsive to the concerns of observant citizens.”

The issue was first brought to the attention of county officials in February by Michael San Miguel, an ardent conservationist in Southern California field ornithology, who died in July.

“Michael heard a marsh wren call out from a stand of cattails that was being cut down,” Long said. “That bothered him so he sent out e-mails to Audubon chapters and county officials.”

“In cooperation with the California Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, we came up with this plan,” he added. “I also handed out copies of the ‘Los Angeles Audubon Guide to Bird-Friendly Tree and Shrub Trimming and Removal’ to each of our maintenance units.”

In June, a copy of the management plan was dispatched to San Miguel. A short time later, “I learned that he had died,” Long said.

“In Mike’s honor,” Long said, “we came up with the best possible management plan.”

louis.sahagun@latimes.com
L.A. County tests plan for bird-friendly plant maintenance at parks

Ethics probe may hurt other Democrats, but not Maxine Waters

Posted in News, Politics, Science, Tech on August 9th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

When the congresswoman entered, the crowd rose up like a congregation on Sunday morning for one, two, then three standing ovations.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D- Los Angeles) stood facing her cheering supporters. She wore a pencil skirt, pearls and a smile that looked curiously triumphant, considering the month she has had.

Waters, 71, has been at the center of a political battle since the House Ethics Committee revealed that it was investigating whether she had used her influence to gain advantage for OneUnited, a Massachusetts-based bank in which her husband has a financial interest.


Neverland Ranch as a state park? Officials call it a fairy tale

Posted in Entertainment, News on July 14th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

Smiling docents, green-clad rangers, music piped in everywhere — for Michael Jackson fans, Neverland State Park would no doubt be a thriller. But state park officials say it’s an idea whose time may never come.

Assemblyman Mike Davis, a Los Angeles Democrat, said Tuesday that he’s going to push for a study of the possibility when the Legislature meets again in August.

Jackson “was one of the world’s preeminent entertainers and California is fortunate to have such a site in its jurisdiction,” said Davis, chairman of the Assembly Committee on Arts, Entertainment, Sports, Tourism & Internet Media. “It will absolutely be a destination for many who admire music and the performing arts.”


Irvine Co. gives 20,000 acres of open space to Orange County

Posted in News, Science, what on June 30th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

A rugged, 20,000-acre parcel of the original Irvine Ranch — a pristine landscape of steep canyons, native grassland and sycamore woodland that is home to golden eagles, mountain lions and dozens of rare and endangered species of plants and animals — became public property Tuesday in a historic deal with the developer who has sculpted the look of modern suburbia in Southern California.

The open-space land, a gift from Donald Bren and the Irvine Co., was unanimously accepted by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, which also approved a long-term plan to manage the natural habitat, designated a National Natural Landmark four years ago. In one swoop, the size of parkland owned by the county grew by more than half.

The transfer of a large part of the historic ranch was an important milestone, placing the last major chunk of open private land in public hands and signaling the end of an era of enormous growth for Orange County.


Irvine Co. gives 20,000 acres of open space to Orange County

Posted in News, Science, what on June 30th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

A rugged, 20,000-acre parcel of the original Irvine Ranch — a pristine landscape of steep canyons, native grassland and sycamore woodland that is home to golden eagles, mountain lions and dozens of rare and endangered species of plants and animals — became public property Tuesday in a historic deal with the developer who has sculpted the look of modern suburbia in Southern California.

The open-space land, a gift from Donald Bren and the Irvine Co., was unanimously accepted by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, which also approved a long-term plan to manage the natural habitat, designated a National Natural Landmark four years ago. In one swoop, the size of parkland owned by the county grew by more than half.

The transfer of a large part of the historic ranch was an important milestone, placing the last major chunk of open private land in public hands and signaling the end of an era of enormous growth for Orange County.


After numerous attempts, construction of Ascot Hills Park begins

Posted in News, what on June 28th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

It wasn’t real for Rudy Torres until the construction trucks and orange-vested surveyors started to roll past the gate at Ascot Hills near El Sereno this week.

The 140 acres of rolling grassland near where the 56-year-old retiree grew up will finally, after decades of setbacks, become a public park. The gates blocking the community from the hilltops will come down, nature trails will be carved out and a stream will be built, along with an amphitheater and picnic areas.

“At least that’s what the city is telling us,” Torres said. “But seeing is believing.”


Moving Home With a Young Family

Posted in Naples Stuff on January 25th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

naples

Moving home is a stressful time for anyone, especially if you have young children. The Collier County family is an upwardly mobile one, and often strives to improve their situation, including moving to different areas to improve their career or lifestyle. What follows are some tried and tested tips on minimizing the stress of moving on young children.

Moving is a busy time, so make sure you set aside to time dedicated to your children. Depending on their age, explain what’s going on and that you might be busy and distracted until it’s all over. Involve them where you can in planning, visiting the new home and choosing furniture.

If you can visit the new home, see if you can check out local parks or play areas too. Their new school or day care may let you have a look around, removing many of the unknowns from the impending changes. This will help the transition as children can be scared of the unknown. Introduce the new environment in a positive way and see if you can’t meet a couple of the local children.

If they have questions, answer them honestly and enthusiastically. Be warm and caring and get them as excited about the move as possible by painting it in a positive light and highlight benefits of the move to them.

We know that children like to feel included in everything. Why not get some special moving boxes for them and let them pack their own toys or special things? Make it a size they can carry themselves, let them decorate it and put their names on it. Build it up to be a “special” box and let them keep it with them during the move. You’ll be surprised how attached they get to them and keep them long after the move.

Saying goodbye isn’t easy for any of us, certainly not for children. Waving goodbye to everything they have ever know can be a wrench, and we want to make that process as easy as possible for them. Let them know it’s okay to feel sad, that it’s natural and that you feel sad too. Let them air their feelings and talk about it at length. Play moving games with them and get them used to having boxes around.

Once moved, try to return to the established routine as quickly as possible. It will take a while for them to get used to their new reality, but the comfort of the old routine in the new place will help them along. Talk to them about how they feel and reassure them everything’s okay. Let them keep their “special box”  if they like and give them as many opportunities to meet the local children as possible. New friends are the magic tonic to curing feelings of displacement.

Moving is going to be stressful for the parents too, but we have to suck it up and get on with it. Being strong for your children should be second nature, but make sure the stresses and strains of a move are kept as far away from the children as possible. They are amazing, adaptable creatures and will soon get used to their new reality.