MAR
29 - APR 27, 2008
EXHIBITION & ART SALE:
BACKCOUNTRY MAJESTY
a benefit for ForestWatch
Marcia Burtt Studio, downtown SB
The
Oak Group, a collective of local artists who dedicate their
work to the preservation of open space throughout the Central
Coast, launches its 2008 season with landscape paintings of the
varied and majestic backcountry of the Los Padres National
Forest. This exhibition, titled "Backcountry Majesty," will
begin with an artists' reception on Friday, March 28th, and then
run through Sunday April 27th. Both the reception and exhibit
will be held at the Marcia
Burtt Studio
in Santa Barbara, and the exhibit will be on display on weekends
from 11 AM till 5 PM. Proceeds from
the sale of the artwork will benefit Los Padres ForestWatch.
Through both the sale of their artwork and
increased public awareness of the threats to natural lands
throughout California, The Oak Group, in its 20 years of
existence, has raised nearly $1.5 million for nonprofit
organizations and helped preserve numerous ecologically-valuable
lands, including the Carpinteria Bluffs, the Douglas Family
Preserve, and the Sedgwick Ranch. We hope you will be able to
join us for the reception on March 28th, and will find artwork
that encourages and inspires the continued protection of the Los
Padres National Forest.
APR
16, 2008
Rare Plants and Fire
Part Three in a Series on Fire Ecology in the Los Padres
7:00 p.m.
Botanic Garden Blaksley Library
1212 Mission Canyon Road
Santa Barbara
Free!
Los Padres ForestWatch, in conjunction with the
Santa Barbara Botanic Garden,
is pleased to sponsor a three-part series: Fire Ecology in the
Los Padres National Forest.
The first presentation in this series, Conifers and Fire,
was held on February 20, 2008, and included talks by Dr. Bob
Haller, Botanic Garden Research Associate and expert on conifer
forests in California, and Mark Borchert of the US Forest
Service, who has conducted extensive research on conifers in the
Los Padres National Forest.
The second presentation in this series,
Chaparral and Fire, featured a talk by Richard Halsey,
director of the
California
Chaparral Institute.
The final presentation in this series,
Rare Plants and Fire, is scheduled for April 16, 2008 and
includes talks by Dr. Dieter Wilken, Vice President for Programs
and Collections at the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, and Dr.
Lloyd Simpson, Forest Botanist for the Los Padres National
Forest.
SAT, MAR 15, 2008
Habitat Restoration - Microtrash Cleanup in Condor Country
Whitaker
Peak, near the Sespe Wilderness and the Ventura/LA county line
at 10:00am
Biologists are
concerned about large amounts of trash recently discovered in an
area frequented by endangered California condors. Several
condors have died or required surgery after ingesting these
small trash fragments.
ForestWatch has
organized a volunteer trash cleanup day on Saturday, March 15 at
Whitaker Peak. We've already removed more than 400 pounds of
tiny trash from this site - but there's still more work to be
done. Join us! Call (805) 617-4610 or use our on-line
volunteer form to sign up
today.
Click here to read about
last year's successful cleanups at this site!
NOV 11, 2007
PATAGONIA'S 14th ANNUAL SALMON RUN
A BENEFIT FOR LOS PADRES FORESTWATCH
Runners, walkers and families are invited to join Patagonia,
Great Pacific Iron Works, Real Cheap Sports and a long list of
co-sponsors for a 5K run/3K walk benefiting Los Padres
ForestWatch! This morning of fun will include great prizes,
post-race entertainment, environmental exhibits and refreshments
for the whole family. The run takes place on a certified course
along the Ventura River.
WHEN:
Sunday Nov 11. Check in at 7:30am
Race begins at
8:30am.
WHERE: Patagonia's upper
parking lot
(Main & Olive
St), Ventura
COST: Adult pre-reg $25
Students 17 & under $20
Day-of-race $30
Children 8 & under FREE
Paid registration includes a
beautiful 100% organic cotton Salmon Run t-shirt, runner's bag
and drawing ticket. Make checks payable to ForestWatch.
ANOTHER OPTION: A $35 contribution
will cover your registration and also pay for a one-year
membership with Los Padres ForestWatch. You'll get a race tshirt
and runner's bag, and we'll kick in another 10 drawing tickets
for some great prizes.
DEADLINE:
Pre-registration must be postmarked by Wed, November 7.
Click here to download and
print the entry form.
PRIZES: Patagonia gear
awarded for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place finishers in each age/gender
category.
REFRESHMENTS: Yes, yum!
SILENT AUCTION & RAFFLE: An amazing
array of offerings!
Preview the beautiful artwork that will be auctioned off on
race day by clicking
here.
Everyone is
eligible to win great prizes after the race. Entrants receive a
ticket for the drawing. You may also purchase tickets. Proceeds
will benefit ForestWatch.
INFO: Call Great Pacific
Iron Works at 643-6074 for more info.
REGISTER TODAY! Click here for the
entry form.
MON,
NOV 19
LECTURE: Chaparral Fire Ecology
UCSB Marine Science Auditorium, Rm 1302, 6-7pm
The Cheadle Center for Biodiversity and Ecological Restoration
continues its Fall restoration ecology seminar with a series of
lectures on Chaparral Fire Ecology and Wildfire Management
Issues in Southern California.
Lectures in the series include:
October 8 - Wayne Chapman,
CCBER: Chumash use of fire to manage landscapes
October 15 - Rick Halsey, Ph.D. Chaparral
Institute: Firefighting in
the chaparral: where scientific truth meets the fireline and
Chaparral Ecology
October 22 - Jon Keeley,
Ph.D, UCLA & USGS; Fire as an Ecosystem Process: Past,
Present and Future. Plants have evolved over hundreds
of millions of years with fire.
October 29 - Scott Stephens, Ph.D.; UC
Berkeley: Prescribed Fire and mastication in Northern
California chaparral. Plant, invasive, and bird responses to
treatments in three different seasons.
November 5- Marti Witter, Ph.D.; Fire
Ecologist: Santa Monica Mountains Wildfire Management Plan
Design and Considerations
November 19 - Jan Beyers; USFS - Responses of invasive and
native
plant species to mechanical fuel reductions
November 26 - Lloyd Simpson; USFS: Zaca fire management,
future and lessons learned
December 3 - Max Moritz, Ph.D.; UC Berkeley: Spatial patterns
of fire in southern California shrublands and lessons learned
WED
NOV 14
PRESENTATION: Return of the Condor
Borders Books, Santa Barbara
7:00pm
Return of the Condor is a riveting
account of one of the most dramatic attempts to save a species
from extinction in the history of modern conservation. Join the
author, John Moir, for a book talk and signing. Downtown Santa
Barbara, 900 State Street. For more info, call (805) 899-3668.
Support ForestWatch - buy the book
from our Trading Post by clicking here.
SUN, NOV 4
FIELD WORK: Microtrash Cleanup in Condor Country
Where:
Sespe Wilderness,
Mt. Pinos Ranger District
When: all day
Biologists are
concerned about large amounts of trash recently discovered in an
area frequented by endangered California condors. Several
condors have died or required surgery after ingesting these
small trash fragments.
Click here for more
info...
SAT
& SUN, NOV 3-4, 2007
FIELD WORK: Arroyo Toad Habitat Conservation
Hardluck Campground, Los Padres National Forest
Our annual work in this special habitat takes place after the
toads are hibernating for the winter. Visit beautiful Hardluck
Campground, closed to the public, while day hiking the rugged
and gorgeous Piru Creek drainage, in search of the invasive
tamarisk plant, which we shall slay where we find it. The
starry-starry night sky, toasty fire and live blue grass music
will reset our souls for the holiday season ahead.
Off the I-5 Corridor in northern Ventura County. Sturdy kids and
up welcome. Directions come out a few days before to registered
participants. For more information, visit the
Habitat Works
website.
SAT,
OCT 20, 2007
FIELD WORK: Tamarisk & Barbed Wire in Los Lobos Canyon at the
Wind Wolves Preserve
We’ll be whacking tamarisk in Los Lobos Creek and
modifying fences for pronghorn reintroduction at the Wind Wolves
Preserve, the largest private nature preserve on the West Coast
(adjacent to the Los Padres National Forest in Kern County). We
will provide drinking water, a barbeque dinner, and a warm
campfire. Those who wish may camp at "The Crossing" in San
Emigdio Canyon on Saturday night.
MEET AT 9:00am, at The Crossing. Please bring your lunch, a
water bottle to keep hydrated, leather work gloves, sturdy
boots, a good hat, and layered clothing.
YOU MUST RSVP BY THE MORNING OF October 18th, IF YOU WANT TO
PARTAKE OF THE BARBECUE!! Call (661) 858-1115 or (661) 747-0374
to RSVP. Sponsored by Wind Wolves Preserve.
WED, OCT 10, 2007
PRESENTATION: THE EFFECTS OF THE ZACA FIRE
Faulkner Gallery, Santa Barbara Public Library, downtown SB
7:00pm, free
Join
us for an evening of vivid photography and firsthand accounts of
firefighting and restoration efforts in the aftermath of the
Zaca Fire. On Wednesday, October 10th at 7:00 PM, Los Padres
ForestWatch, a local nonprofit working to protect the Los Padres
National Forest, is sponsoring a town meeting on the effects of
the Zaca Fire on our local backcountry, wildlife, and
watersheds. The event will take place at the Santa Barbara
Public Library’s Faulkner Gallery, at 40 East Anapamu Street in
downtown Santa Barbara.
The event will include talks by Ray Ford, one of our region's
most noted backcountry enthusiasts, who documented the Zaca Fire
first-hand in a series of captivating news reports. Forest
Service wildlife and watershed experts will also discuss the
impacts of the fire. This event is sponsored by Los Padres
ForestWatch. For more information, call us at (805) 617-4610.
THU, SEP 27, 2007
PHOTO EXHIBIT: CONDORS ON THE COAST
Big Sur Lodge, 5:00 - 7:30pm, free
Join
us for Condors on the Coast, a photographic exhibit by Daniel
Bianchetta at the Big Sur Lodge, featuring 40 photographs of the
California Condor along the Big Sur coastline. The reception at
the Big Sur Lodge is hosted by Heller Estates Winery of Carmel
Valley. Joe Burnett, Senior Biologist with the Ventana Wildlife
Society, will talk about the condor reintroduction project at
the reception. Nature photographer Daniel Bianchetta will also
be present.
SUN, SEP 30,
2007
BENEFIT: VENTURA HILLSIDES MUSIC FESTIVAL
Arroyo Verde Park, Ventura, 1-5pm (gates open at 11:30am)
Join ForestWatch at our booth at the fourth annual Ventura
Hillsides Music Festival, an all-afternoon benefit concert for
the Ventura Hillsides Conservancy. The reggae band Toots and the
Maytals will lead an all-star lineup of musical talent,
rounded out by Jack Johnson, Robert Cray Band, and Chris Pierce.
Features family fun with food, drinks, educational displays from
ForestWatch and other conservation organizations, and a
children's area. For more info, visit the
Ventura Hillsides
website. This event is SOLD OUT!!
THU,
OCT 4, 2007
LECTURE: CHUMASH ETHNOBOTANY
Fleischmann Auditorium, SB Museum of Natural History, 7:30pm,
$10
Jan Timbrook is one of the leading experts in Chumash studies
and ethnobiology. The publication of her book, Chumash
Ethnobotany: Plant Knowledge Among the Chumash People of
Southern California, (available at the
ForestWatch Trading Post) represents a lifetime achievement.
Based on three decades of research and illustrated with
botanical watercolors by Oak Group artist Chris Chapman, this
long-awaited book explores the fascinating relationships between
native plants and the first people of the Santa Barbara region.
Ms. Timbrook will describe some of the plants used by the first
people of the Santa Barbara region. In one way or another,
everything the Chumash people made involved plants. Traditional
foods, medicine, clothing, tools and utensils, religious
paraphernalia, and other items essential for existence were
derived from the natural world. For tickets, call 805-682-4711
ext. 170 or go online to
www.sbnature.org/tickets . Tickets will also be available at
door.
SAT, SEP 22, 2007
Habitat Restoration - Microtrash Cleanup in Condor Country
Where: Whitaker Peak, near the Sespe Wilderness and the
Ventura/LA county line.
When: 10:00am - ?
Cost: free!
Biologists are
concerned about large amounts of trash recently discovered in an
area frequented by endangered California condors. Several
condors have died or required surgery after ingesting these
small trash fragments.
ForestWatch has
organized a volunteer trash cleanup day on Saturday, September
22 at
Whitaker Peak.
Click here for more
info...
SUNDAY, AUG 26
BENEFIT CONCERT - WILCO
Santa Barbara Bowl, 7:00pm
Los
Padres ForestWatch, a nonprofit forest watchdog organization
based in Santa Barbara, has been selected as the charity
recipient for the Wilco concert on Sunday, August 26th, 2007 at
the Santa Barbara Bowl.
Wilco is
an American rock band formed in 1994 and based in Chicago. The
band's latest (and sixth studio) album, Sky Blue Sky, was
released by Nonesuch Records in May of 2007 to their highest
debuting U.S. chart position at #4 on the Billboard album chart
and held the #1 spot on college radio for six straight weeks.
Sky Blue Sky follows the band’s 2004 record—the two-time Grammy
Award-winning A Ghost is Born.
The "Wilco
Show Posters for Charity" program donates all proceeds from
sales of limited edition posters to local charities in select
cities on the 2007 Sky Blue Sky Tour. Posters specific to the
Santa Barbara show will be on sale at the concert and afterwards
on the Wilco website at
www.wilcoworld.net
FRI, JULY 13, 2007
Thank Goodness It's Friday (the 13th)!
A Happy-Hour Gathering for ForestWatch Members and
Supporters
Where: EDC Courtyard, 906 Garden
Street @ Canon Perdido, downtown Santa Barbara
When: 5:30pm to 7:30pm
Cost: $10, includes two drinks,
food, live music, and good company!
Come celebrate the return of long,
sunny Santa Barbara days by joining ForestWatch as we
sponsor EDC's second Thank Goodness It’s Friday (TGIF)
celebration.
Guests may also enter a raffle for the chance to win
great items donated by Horny Toad, Transformative
Healing Arts, Scott Chatenever, and Wilson Environmental
Landscape Design, Inc.
SAT, JULY 14, 2007
Habitat Restoration - Microtrash Cleanup in Condor Country
Where: Whitaker Peak, near the Sespe Wilderness and the
Ventura/LA county line.
When: 10:00am - ?
Cost: free!
Biologists are
concerned about large amounts of trash recently discovered in an
area frequented by endangered California condors. Several
condors have died or required surgery after ingesting these
small trash fragments.
ForestWatch has
organized a volunteer trash cleanup day on Saturday, July 14 at
Whitaker Peak in Ventura County.
Click here for more
info...
LECTURE
& SLIDE SHOW:
RETURN OF THE CONDOR
Wednesday, May 23 at 7:30pm, free
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Farrand Hall, 2559
Puesta del Sol, SB
Award-winning science writer John Moir
will tell the riveting story of the California condor's dramatic
rescue from the brink of extinction. By 1982 the bird's numbers
had fallen to just 22 individuals. Moir, who is author of the
new book Return Of The Condor: The Race To Save Our Largest Bird
From Extinction, will recount how a remarkable team of
scientists carried out a plan to save the species that flew in
the face of traditional condor conservation methods. The
presentation includes rare photos that take you deep inside the
world of the condor and the biologists who are working to save
this iconic bird. Moir will also discuss the current effort in
California to require the use of alternative ammunition to
replace lead bullets that are harmful to condors, other
wildlife, and humans.
John Moir has written about the condor
recovery effort for years and is a member of the National
Association of Science Writers and the Northern California
Science Writers Association. For more information, visit
www.returnofthecondor.com
This book is available for purchase
at the online ForestWatch Trading Post.
Click here to buy. Proceeds help
protect condor habitat in the Los Padres National Forest.
PUBLIC HEARING: DIAMOND ROCK SAND &
GRAVEL MINE
Wednesday, May 30 at 9:00am
Santa Barbara County Planning Commission
Betteravia Government Center, 511 E Lakeside Pkwy, Santa Maria
At this special public hearing, the
Santa Barbara County Planning Commission will consider approving
the controversial Diamond Rock Sand & Gravel Mine and Processing
Facility. The proposed mine could send up to 138 trucks per day
through the heart of the Los Padres National Forest on Scenic
Highway 33. Help us pack the hearing room with concerned
residents and forest users during a lively and exciting hearing!
EARTH DAY 2007
Visit us at the ForestWatch
booth during one of the following Earth Day events around the
forest:
Ojai
- Sunday, April 15 from 11am to 4pm
The Oak Grove School, 220 W. Lomita Ave
Join us for environmental, educational and wellness exhibits, an
arts & crafts marketplace, and hands-on art and action
activities—like a climbing wall and bio-balloon toss, and
petting zoo. Visit the sustainable demonstration gardens, learn
about solar energy, and enjoy live entertainment from two
stages. Meet the Ojai Green Coalition and learn how Ojai is
thinking and acting green. Plus you’ll find world foods, massage
& yoga, a silent auction, student art market, an eco-vehicle
showcase and much more!
San
Luis Obispo - Saturday, April 21 from 10am to 4pm, Mission Plaza
Earth Day Alliance invites businesses, government agencies,
schools, nonprofit groups, artist, authors, and individuals to
join the celebration with an exciting fun-filled educational
fair for the community. We invite you to present your concerns
and offer solutions as an exhibitor or vendor. Event includes
kids' zone, food booths, entertainment, and information booths.
Santa
Barbara - Sunday, April 22 from 10am to 5pm, Courthouse Gardens
The best of the fest returns again this year, from a fun and
educational children's activity area to live music from the
solar-powered stage. Event includes a green car show,
alternative energy village, booths and informational displays,
live music, free bike checkups, and more.
Ventura
- Sunday, April 22, 2007 from 11am to 3pm, Patagonia's Great
Pacific Iron Works
The Great Pacific Iron Works store is hosting several
informational booths for their 2006 grantees, including
ForestWatch. Join us during store hours, find out more about our
work, and grab some gear or clothing to prepare for your summer
adventures.
MARCH 31 - APRIL 1, 2007
Habitat Restoration Work
Bittercreek National Wildlife Refuge
The
Bittercreek National Wildlife Refuge is a condor sanctuary along
the northern boundary of the Los Padres National Forest in the
Cuyama Valley, and is an integral part of the California Condor
Recovery Program. We have the opportunity to work in this
spectacular habitat, removing old cattle fencing so wildlife can
run free, posting new signs on existing poles, and clearing a
section of vital watershed of tamarisk, an invasive weed.
This is a good one for your 4WD vehicles, (though 4WD is not
required) camping gear and desire to help wildlife on this
significant refuge. We'll be camping under the stars in a
beautiful, rugged canyon, catching wildlife on the run and
taking in nature's wildflower passion.
Between Pine Mtn. Club & Maricopa. Directions come out a few
days before the event to registered participants. Sturdy teens
and up welcome. This event is sponsored by
Habitat Works of Southern
California.
MARCH 24, 2007
BUS TRIP: CARRIZO PLAIN NATIONAL MONUMENT
Leaving Santa Barbara at 8:00am, returning around 6:30pm
Leaving Los Olivos at 9:00am, returning around 5:30pm
Cost: $60 members, $80 nonmembers, includes bus, picnic, and
assorted snacks and beverages along the way.
Travel
with other friends of Los Padres ForestWatch and the Wildling
Art Museum in an air-conditioned bus from either Santa Barbara
or Los Olivos to visit the Carrizo Plain National Monument, a
unique desert-like ecosystem of some 250,000 acres adjacent to
the Los Padres National Forest in southeastern San Luis Obispo
county. The trip will include a stop at the Salisbury Canyon
Ranch in Cuyama, a stop at the CPNM Visitor Center where we will
enjoy a picnic lunch, a visit to Painted Rock, "one of the more
significant examples of Native American rock painting in the
world," as well as a visit to the historic Goodwin Ranch, now
managed by the Nature Conservancy, as well as unscheduled stops
along the way for photographing wildflowers and other
interesting flora and fauna.
This trip is full. Call the Wildling Museum at (805) 688-1082 to
get your name on the waiting list.
MARCH 24-25, 2007
Pronghorn Antelope Protection
Carrizo Plain National Monument,
Camp Selby campground
Join
us in this remote area by removing fencing to benefit the
beautiful pronghorn antelope. Work hard Saturday, enjoy the
Carrizo Plain National Monument on Sunday. Bring food, water,
heavy leather work gloves, camping gear. Potluck dinner Saturday
night. Contact project leaders and ForestWatch members Cal &
Letty French for more information at
ccfrench@tcsn.net
JANUARY
30, 2007
TOWN MEETING: STOP THE TRUCKS!
Chaparral Auditorium, 414 E. Ojai Ave, Ojai
7:00pm, free
You’re
invited to come learn about
plans to add hundreds more
sand & gravel trucks on
Highway 33 through our towns
and forest.
*A
short photo presentation on
Scenic Highway 33
*Speakers,
including representatives
from:
Ojai
Valley Chamber of Commerce
Los Padres ForestWatch
Highway 33 residents
Local Decisionmakers
School Representatives
Cuyama Valley Farmers
Forest Users
…and more!
*Learn how you can help make
a difference!
Please RSVP to ensure that
we print enough materials!
Call (805) 252-4277 and
leave a message stating your
first and last name and the
number of people (if any)
coming with you. This event
is free and open to the
public.
JANUARY 27, 2007
CARRIZO PLAIN NATIONAL MONUMENT
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Carrisa Elementary School, Hwy 58 in SLO County
10am to 5pm
The
Carrizo Plain National Monument Advisory Committee will meet
January 27, 2007, at the Carrisa Elementary School to discuss
management planning for the monument and other issues.
The school is located approximately two miles northwest of the
Soda Lake Road turn-off on Highway 58. The meeting will run from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. There will be a public comment period from 3
to 4 p.m. Please bring a sack lunch.
The nine-member committee advises the Secretary of the Interior,
through the Bureau of Land Management, on a variety of public
land issues associated with the public land management in the
Carrizo Plain National Monument in Central California. At this
meeting, monument staff will present updated information on the
progress on the draft Carrizo Plain National Monument Resource
Management Plan, and discuss other coordination opportunities.
This meeting is open to the public, who may present written or
verbal comments.
JANUARY 27, 2007
REMEMBERING WILLIAM STAFFORD: A
COMMUNITY READING
First Crossing Day Use Area,
Paradise Road, Santa Barbara, Los Padres National Forest
2:00
pm, Saturday, January 27, free
Featured Readers: PERIE LONGO and JACKSON
WHEELER
Members of the audience are also invited
to read their favorite Stafford poems.
Sponsors: The Friends of William Stafford,
Westmont College, and Poets & Writers, Inc.
Host: Paul Willis (willis@westmont.edu)
Directions: From Hwy. 101 in Santa
Barbara, turn onto Hwy 154 and travel N over San Marcos Pass;
2.7 mi beyond the pass, turn right on Paradise Road and continue
5.3 mi E to the day use area, which is on the left. The site is
just 0.1 mi past the entrance to the Los Prietos Boys Camp, 3900
Paradise Road, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. The reading will take
place at a large collection of picnic tables on the far side of
the day use area.
Driving time from Santa Barbara: 30
minutes. Bring cushions and blankets, as seating will be on
concrete benches. Hot drinks will be provided. The reading will
last about an hour.
By arrangement with the USFS, no Adventure
Pass is needed for this event.
William Stafford (1914-1993) was born in
Kansas and spent most of his adult life as a poet and teacher at
Lewis and Clark College in Oregon. He won the National Book
Award in 1963 and served as Poet Laureate of the United States
from 1970-1971. As a conscientious objector, he also served his
country for the duration of World War II in civilian public
service camps, spending much of that time at the Los Prietos
camp in Los Padres National Forest, where he built trails and
fought fires. The First Crossing Day Use Area is located on the
site of the old Los Prietos camp.
Each year, the Friends of William
Stafford rolls out the red carpet to celebrate the late poet's
birthday (January 17, 1914) with a full month of Birthday
Celebration Readings. These events are held in communities
throughout the country, and each year more are added. Free and
open to the public, they offer literary friends, old and new, a
chance to share in the spirit of William Stafford. Most events
feature guest poets.
For further information about William
Stafford and for samples of his work: