Oct-Dec 2009
This issue looks forward to future challenges facing the East Bay Regional Park District at its 75th anniversary. We also celebrate the phenomenally successful restoration of Giacomini Wetland at the southern end of Tomales Bay and explore the effects of fire on the landscape—in the huge 2008 Basin Complex Fire in the Ventana Wilderness, the 2007 Lick Fire at Henry Coe State Park, and the 2008 San Bruno Mountain fire. Cover photo by Jerry Ting.
Issue Contents
Not all print articles and images appear online immediately.
GRAND PRIZE WINNER Jerry Ting: Coyote Hills Regional Park
In spring 2009, Bay Nature and Sarber’s Cameras announced a photo contest to commemorate the East Bay Regional Park District’s 75th birthday. We were thrilled to receive more than 350 entries, from which we have chosen the eight winners published with this article. Learn more
about our winners and see more finalist photos.
East Bay Parks Feature
by Richard A. Walker
In 1934, local voters created the East Bay Regional Park District, the nation's largest regional park district. Today, as the district celebrates its 75th anniversary, challenges abound: Sea level rise threatens shoreline parks, the recession and budget crises affect park operations, and a growing human population puts increasing pressure on open space. Nevertheless, the district continues to thrive, with strong public support for land purchases and an unsurpassed combination of diverse wildlife habitats and accessible parks that attract millions of visitors every year.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Feature
by Lester Rowntree
We know that wildfire is a key part of the ecology of the Bay Area and has played a major role in shaping our landscapes. Yet it's simply not possible to let fires burn naturally in an urban region such as ours. But just to the south, the 240,000-acre Ventana Wilderness near Big Sur is large and remote enough to allow for the return of a natural fire regime. That's what has happened over the past 30 years as a series of lightning-ignited wildfires has helped shape both a living laboratory of fire ecology and an increasingly diverse landscape.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

On the Trail
by Carolyn Longstreth
Just a year after the levees were breached, wildlife is thriving at Giacomini Wetland at the south end of Tomales Bay.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Dan Hill
On the Trail
by Ann Sieck
Hike along salt ponds, past a quarry, to the marsh at Coyote Hills in Fremont.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Ayesha Ercelawn.
On the Trail
by Ayesha Ercelawn
If you're wine-country bound but want to fit in a hike, Bothe-Napa Valley State Park, between St. Helena and Calistoga, might be just the place.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

On the Trail
by Rob Lehman
Visit the historic Picchetti Winery for leisurely hiking through the Picchetti Ranch Open Space Preserve in the foothills of Cupertino.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Charles Kennard.
Signs of the Season
by Aleta George
Cattails are hard to miss, yet often dismissed. Whether in solitary clumps in a ditch or spread out in marshy fields, the burnt umber rockets hovering above dark-green blades add texture and familiarity to the landscape. They also turn out to be quite useful, with pollen that can be used as flour and roots that might help wetlands cope with sea level rise.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Winslow Briggs.
Conservation in Action
by Daniel McGlynn
The 2007 Lick Fire was a firestorm that consumed 47,000 acres, most of it in Henry W. Coe State Park, east of Gilroy. Just days after the fire, park volunteers were on the scene. Two years later the "fire followers" of Coe Park are still at it, and even in the face of park budget cuts, they hope to keep their research going for years to come.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

First Person
by Dan Rademacher
In June 2008, when the Basin Fire burned through the Big Sur coast, California condors, and the biologists who monitor them, faced wildlfire for the first time in living memory. After a heroic rescue of juvenile birds, the scientists and the flock came out well. Now they face more insidious threats: lead shot in carcasses and deadly trash along roadways.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Naturalist's Notebook
by Jack Laws
A year after fire burned through two canyons on San Bruno Mountain, artist Jack Laws visited to see how different fire intensities left their mark on the plants of Buckeye and Owl canyons.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Families Afield
by Alan Kaplan
As summer turns to fall, thousands of shorebirds return to the shoreline and mudflats of San Francisco Bay, either for a pit stop on their way south or to stay for the winter. Sometimes many different kinds gather in one place. How can you tell them apart?
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Aleta George.
by Aleta George
Changes in the ocean are confusing scientists and devastating bird populations. Meanwhile the Ridge and Bay Trails take a few steps closer to completing the grand Carquinez Loop trail, and an upcoming art show features new work of Mount Diablo. But land trusts face tough times int he wake of California's bond freeze.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Ask the Naturalist
by Michael Ellis
The quicksand won't get you, but the quakes might.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Photo by Bob Baldwin.
Letter from the Publisher
by David Loeb
Let's celebrate 75 years of East Bay parks by keeping up the pressure on the state to fund our state parks.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue
Published October 01, 2009
Length:

Nona Dennis fills in a missing piece in the story of Samuel P. Taylor State Park, and Gary Austin worries that low summer flow on the Russian river, even if it might be good for fish, would devastate the local tourism economy.
From the Oct-Dec 2009 issue