Get prepared for disaster, Tuesday in HMB


The Coastside is subject to earthquakes, tsunamis, severe weather and wild fires. Coastsiders can learn how to prepare at home or away for these disasters Tuesday night from 6:30 to 9pm at Adcock Center, 535 Kelly Ave, in Half Moon Bay. 
   
Representatives from the City of Half Moon Bay, Coastside Fire Protection District, San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services and the U.S Geological Survey will be on hand to provide helpful information on how Coastside residents can prepare themselves and their families for these various hazards. 

RSVP:  Half Moon Bay Police Department (650) 726-8288 

You’re invited to walk across the new bridge to the Devil’s Slide Tunnel


The public is invited to walk across the recently-completed bridge at Devil’s Slide, Friday, September 26 at 10am.

The bridges have been finished and Coastsiders are invited to come join CalTrans and some “dignitaries” for the morning’s event and walk across.  There’s no on-site parking. Shuttle service will be provided from the Park-and-Ride lot in Pacifica, on Linda Mar Blvd.  Shuttle vans will run beginning at 9:30 a.m. 

RSVP’s to at Caltrans are suggested.

Coastside Democrats’ Fall Party, Sunday


Volunteers are needed for the Princeton Harbor Circulation Study


The San Mateo County Resource Conservation District (RCD) needs volunteers to conduct a circulation study to understand how pollution travels within and out of the harbor September 27, 28, or 29.

What would I do?

Volunteers in kayaks, rowboats, canoes, jet skis, or small motorized boats will collect water samples at a series of buoys that will be set up in the harbor.

What supplies or equipment would I need?

A beach coordinator will provide volunteers with tools to collect water samples and record observations. Volunteers are encouraged to provide their own kayaks/ boats/ jet skis, protective clothing, and safety gear if possible. If that is not possible, the RCD will provide a kayak, paddle, and personal flotation device. The RCD will provide snacks and drinks as well.

How long will it take?

Volunteers will arrive an hour before their first shift for training and to get to the first buoy. Water sample collection will take place over a two-hour period. Why not sign up for more than one shift and enjoy a break at a local waterfront restaurant? ?

Where do I sign up?

Visit the project web page, http://www.sanmateorcd.org/harbor.html. Email the RCD at . Or call the RCD at (650)712-7765. 

Film Society screens three humorous polical documentaries, Friday


Want to understand California politics?  The three locally produced films that the Film Society will be screening this Friday may not cast much light on our current budget impasse.  They will, however, throw some light on our disfunctional political system—and provide a few laughs along the way.

The feature is an investigation of why it has taken almost two decades to repair a problem everyone agrees needs to be fixed immediately. This film is simultaneously hilarious and disturbing, which is probably why it won two Emmys. One of the shorts is even more amazing - a tale of a problem that had to be fixed quickly—and was! The other short asks 108 voters for their opinion on a single subject. Of course this results in 108 different answers.

Film makers behind all three films will be at the screening.  Please come and give all three films the audience they deserve. 

Three films about the California experience.
Friday, Sept.19 at 8:00 pm
Coastside Film Night is open to the public of all ages.
Methodist Sanctuary, 777 Miramontes, Half Moon Bay (Corner of Johnston & Miramontes)
$6.00 per person

Short: Textilis108 (15 mins) Filmmaker Jander Lacerda asked 108 people in San Francisco’s Mission District to explain why America is the “land of opportunity”. Lacerda will be at the screening to help explain why a filmmaker from Brazil came to make a film about American possibilities.

Short: Amazing: The Rebuilding of the MacArthur Maze (30 mins) David L. Brown presents the remarkable story of the fiery collapse and rebuilding of a key connector in the Bay Area. 

The MacArthur Maze is that stretch of highway where three major freeways meet just east of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.  We have all driven it, and those forced to navigate its path everyday had to be amazed and grateful when it was replaced in just 26 days.

How was this Herculean feat accomplished so quickly? Brown tells the story in the words of all of the main players in the drama: the legendary contractor C.C. Myers; Caltrans Director Will Kempton and the engineers working for him; the Arizona steel fabricator whose company built the steel girders; the fire fighters who responded to the accident; and the reporters who covered the story.

Feature: The Bridge So Far—A Suspense Story (1 hour) Everybody agrees that the Eastern span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bridge is in danger of falling into the Bay. Why has it taken almost two decades to replace?  In this humorous Emmy Award winning documentary film maker David L. Brown explores the subject through interviews with engineers, bridge builders, architects, lawyers, seismologists, comedians, and a couple of California’s better-known politicians. 

“A documentary that is very funny. And as a bonus, you’ll find yourself learning something - almost against your will.” Sacramento Bee

“That producer-director David L. Brown was able to create a snarky and compelling documentary - leaning more toward Michael Moore filmmaking territory than Ken Burns - is surprising in itself. See, Brown’s project was sponsored by the Professional Engineers in California Government, an organization that represents Caltrans workers.” Sacramento Bee

Brown won an Emmy Award for his work on this documentary (Outstanding Achievement in Documentary). So did animator Charlie Canfield (Outstanding Graphics and Animation in a Program).  Both will be at the screening. 

For more info see: http://www.HMBFilm.org

Please show up for Coastal Cleanup Day, Saturday


People of all ages can help make San Mateo County cleaner and greener by scouring beaches and watersheds on September 20 during California Coastal Cleanup Day, the largest volunteer event of its kind in the state.

Coastal Cleanup Day is sponsored by the San Mateo Countywide Water Pollution Prevention Program and California Coastal Commission. This is the 24th year thousands of Californians will work together along beaches, shorelines and inland waterways to clear cigarette butts, cans, bottles, plastic bags, grocery carts, old tires and other debris.

Last year, more than 2,000 volunteers in San Mateo County removed 19,983 pounds of trash and 4,050 pounds of recyclables. Statewide, more than 60,000 volunteers hauled off nearly 1 million pounds of trash and recyclables that would otherwise soil the state and threaten the health of wildlife.

The vast majority of the debris wasn’t dropped on beaches or tossed into a watershed. Instead, most of the debris started out as garbage on urban streets and was carried by storm drains or blown by the wind.

Volunteers are encouraged to show up at any of the following cleanup locations in San Mateo County at 9 a.m. on September 20. Most cleanups end by noon.
For more information about the San Mateo Countywide Water Pollution Prevention Program or clean-up sites within San Mateo County, visit http://www.flowstobay.org or call (650) 372-6200. For information on statewide locations and this year’s corporate sponsors, visit the California Coastal Commission at http://www.coast4u.org.

Click below for a list of Coastside locations

Click here for the full story.

Coastside Land Trust Restoration Day, Francis Beach, Saturday


Coastside Land Trust
Coyote Bush (Baccharis pilularis): female plant on the left, male plant on the right.

The Coastside Land Trust is holding our monthly restoration event at our Francis Beach properties this coming Saturday, September 20, 12:30 to 3 pm.  We will spend the day identifying native and invasive plants, discussing the strategy for fall blooming by some native species, pollination strategies, and methods used for seed dispersal, as well as removing invasive plants to help our natives thrive.

Did you ever think of Coyote Bushes as sexy?

Coyote Bush (Baccharis pilulari) is the brush that covers our coastal hillsides and terraces. It is also called tick or deer brush, and is the primary plant in our coastal chaparral. It is the first plant to colonize grassy fields, and is host to many plants and animals. Coyote bush provides shelter and cover for animals and creates an environment welcoming to other plants. If you look closely, you will see blackberry vines, reeds, aster, dock, and other plants taking advantage of the shade and wind protection provided by the sturdy coyote bush.

This time of year, September to November, it becomes apparent that not all coyote bushes are alike. Some have blooms with tight flowers that stick to the plant (this is the male) while others have a fuzzy bloom that, when mature floats to the ground and through the air much as thistle seeds do (this the female). Plants like the Coyote Bush with separate plants for the male and female are called dioecious, a Greek/Latin word meaning two houses—specifically having the male and female reproductive organs borne on separate individuals of the same species.

Please join us. Check in at the Francis State Beach kiosk at Kelly and the Pacific Ocean, and proceed north on the maintenance road to the maintenance sheds. Our properties are on the east side of the maintenance road. Refreshments, good humor and appreciation are provided for all ages and abilities.

Jo Chamberlain

Cleanup at Montara State Beach, Saturday


There will be a cleanup at Montara State Beach Saturday September 20, from 9am to noon.  Visit http://www.montarabeach.com for full details.

Surfrider will be at Poplar Beach on Coastal Clean-Up Day, Saturday


Surfrider San Mateo County and the Live105 Action Team Beach Cleanup

California Coastal Cleanup Day!
Saturday, September 20
10 a.m. to Noon
From Highway 1, turn west on Poplar Ave. (south of Highway 92) in Half Moon Bay.

We’ll be stationed at the Poplar Beach parking lot.  The LIVE 105 Action Team will be onsite with the latest Jack Johnson CD ‘’Sleep Through The Static’’ (courtesy Universal Republic) and other LIVE 105 goodies for the biggest garbage picker-uppers!

Please wear comfortable clothes, closed-toe shoes and sunscreen. Bring gardening or work gloves, or, we are happy to provide you with latex gloves. We also provide the bags, hand sanitizer, and other essentials for cleaning up trash. 

All volunteers are welcome to participate and must sign a liability waiver, but volunteers under 18 MUST have a parent or guardian, present at the beginning of the cleanup, sign the waiver before the minor can participate.

Pre-registration is NOT required unless your group has more than 20 people. 

For more info, catch a wave via Surfrider San Mateo County website, or email.

Taste of the Coast benefits Senior Coastsiders, Sunday


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