Observe the Devil’s Slide murres live

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USFWS
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USFWS
The common murre colony at Devil's Slide Rock.

By on Sat, July 2, 2005

You can observe the murres on Devil’s Slide Rock without risking your life on Highway 1. Video cameras are no beaming images of the murres to a monitor at Point Montara Lighthouse Hostel, and to a web page.  You can also visit the project’s home page.

The Chronicle also tells the story of the penguin-like murres, ravaged by human populations and by fishing and wiped off of the rock by a 1986 oil spill. Scientists lured new birds with decoys and mirrors until the population grew from six nesting pairs to 190 last year.

MROSD purchases Miramontes Ridge property

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POST
Miramontes Ridge and Driscoll Ranch as shown on POST's map of their lands. Light green areas are publicly-owned open space and dark green areas are owned by POST.

By on Fri, July 1, 2005

The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District (MROSD) voted to buy the 676-acre Miramontes Ridge property from Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST) as an addition to the District’s Mills Creek Open Space Preserve. Miramontes Ridge is located in the foothills west of Skyline Boulevard and north of Burleigh Murray State Park.

"Miramontes Ridge is important because the property’s roads and trails may provide future opportunities to establish a regional trail connection between the Bay Area Ridge Trail and the Coastal Trail," said Craig Britton, the District’s General Manager in the District’s press release.

Click "read more" to see the press release.

Santa Cruz researcher is modeling possible California tsunamis

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Steven Ward
An earthquake off the coast of Washington and Oregon could send a tsunami as high as 2.6m (8.5ft) down the coast of California.

By on Tue, June 14, 2005

This afternoon, a prescient friend sent me a link to a Santa Cruz Sentinel story about Steven Ward, a UC Santa Cruz researcher who models tsunamis  caused both by earthquakes and by meteorites. Ward researches possible tsunamis in Asia as well, but he has been modeling earthquake-induced tsunamis on the coast of California. Ward says a 7.5 magnitude quake could send a 15-foot tsunami to the Santa Cruz shoreline in minutes.

In 1946 an elderly man was killed by a wave while walking around the point from Cowell Beach from a 7.5-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Alaska. A Santa Cruz restaurant located at the entrance of the Municipal Wharf reported that water levels rose up to its floorboards.

There’s a ton of information, simulations, and presentations at Steven Ward’s Web site.

Tsunami warning for 9:23pm


By on Tue, June 14, 2005

UPDATE: The warning was cancelled at 9:09pm.

A tsunami warning is in effect for the coastal areas from the California-Mexico border to the north tip of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Estimated time of arrival in the San Francisco area is approximately 9:23pm.

There has been an earthquake of magnitude 7.4,  90 miles NW of Eureka and 300 miles NW of San Francisco at 7:51pm.

It is not known if a tsunami exists. But a tsunami may have been generated.  Therefore persons in low lying coastal areas should be alert to instructions from their local emergency officials. Persons on the beach should move to higher ground if in a warned area. Tsunamis may be a series of waves which could be dangerous for several hours after the initial wave arrival.

Source:

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SAN FRANCISCO CA
830 PM PDT TUE JUN 14 2005

Photo: Princeton sunset


By on Fri, June 10, 2005

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Jeff Hershman
On a gray afternoon, it’s nice to enjoy a sunset from sunnier time last week.

 

MROSD agrees to manage Rapley Ranch for POST


By on Thu, June 2, 2005

The Midpeninsula Open Space District (MROSD) has agreed to manage Rapley Ranch, a 151-acre property owned by the Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST). The ranch is adjacent to MROSD’s 1,827-acre Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve.

This is the first POST property that MROSD has agreed to manage on the Coastside and this announcement follows last week’s that the District is looking to buy two other POST properties on the coast.

For two year license the District will patrol, manage, clean, and secure the property—and plan for future use of the property as part of Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve. MROSD will seek grant funds to purchase the property from POST. 

The property be closed to public access, except for neighbors and docent-led activities with special permits.

Click "read more" to see the press release.

San Francisco garter snakes snack on California red-legged frogs

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US Fish & Wildlife Service

By on Thu, June 2, 2005

The Chron has a nice story on the return of the San Francisco garter snake to its eponymous city.  It covers some of the same territory as the press release Coastsider ran earlier, but it’s a lot more fun to read.  The reporter also goes to Mori Point in Pacifica to see some restored habitat, where one endangered species (said snake) dines on another (the California red-legged frog).

Coastal Commission protects agriculture, but sacrifices habitat, in monster house decision

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Copyright (C) 2002-2005 Kenneth & Gabrielle Adelman, California Coastal Records Project, www.Californiacoastline.org
Michael and Ana Polacek want to build 6,787-sq. ft. of residential development on an 18-acre farm along Bean Hollow Road. The coastal staff report for the Polacek project is at www.coastal.ca.gov/sc/5-2005-Th13a.pdf and you can see Bean Hollow State Beach at www.cacoast.org/6281
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Copyright (C) 2002-2005 Kenneth & Gabrielle Adelman, California Coastal Records Project, www.Californiacoastline.org
Keith and Cindy Waddell proposed to build 7,650-sq. ft. of residential development on a 153-acre ranch along Highway #1 at Tunitas Creek. The Waddell staff report is at www.coastal.ca.gov/nca/Th13b-5-2005.pdf and a 1972 photo of the Waddell property is at www.cacoast.org/7218028

By on Tue, May 31, 2005

This article is reprinted from the May 2005 issue of California Coastwatcher.

Two very large homes—more than three times the size of the average existing home—have been approved by the Coastal Commission for agricultural land on the southern San Mateo County coast. The Commission’s decision-making process regarding the two proposals was marked by aggressive concern for protection of agriculture, aggressive disregard for imposing any limits on the size of mansions and the adverse impact those monster homes have on rural agricultural land values, and a flagrant decision to allow a private driveway through ESHA that is patently illegal under the Coastal Act.

Michael and Ana Polacek want to build 6,787-sq. ft. of residential development on an 18-acre farm along Bean Hollow Road. The coastal staff report for the Polacek project is at www.coastal.ca.gov/sc/5-2005-Th13a.pdf and you can see Bean Hollow State Beach at www.cacoast.org/6281

Keith and Cindy Waddell proposed to build 7,650-sq. ft. of residential development on a 153-acre ranch along Highway #1 at Tunitas Creek. The Waddell staff report is at www.coastal.ca.gov/nca/Th13b-5-2005.pdf and a 1972 photo of the Waddell property is at www.cacoast.org/7218028

The positive step taken by the Coastal Commission to protect agricultural lands on the California coastline required the use of affirmative, permanent agricultural easements that were required to be established to insure the long-term viability of the agricultural operations on the properties. Thus, even if Polacek and Waddell do not wish to continue farming themselves, they are required now, by law, to lease their lands to other farmers to insure the agricultural lands outside the residential building area on each parcel remain actively farmed. Such requirements had never been included in a coastal development permit before.

The second important step taken by the Commission was to require that all residential development on each property be contained within a 10,000 sq. ft. "development envelope" insuring that the vast majority of each farm will remain solely for agricultural purposes. The limited residential building envelope for agricultural lands was also a precedent established by the Commission that will enhance future protection of agricultural lands throughout coastal California.

Click "Read more" to see the rest of the article.

MROSD looking to buy POST’s Miramontes Ridge and Driscoll Ranch on the Coastside

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POST
Miramontes Ridge and Driscoll Ranch as shown on POST's map of their lands. Light green areas are publicly-owned open space and dark green areas are owned by POST.

By on Fri, May 27, 2005

THE Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District (MROSD) will soon decide whether to acquire the Peninsula Open Space Trust’s (POST) 676-acre Miramontes Ridge property as an addition to the Mills Creek Open Space Preserve. In addition to its natural features, Miramontes Ridge offers views of the city of Half Moon Bay.

The District has begun considering the purchase of POST’s Driscoll Ranch property.  The approximately 3,700-acre ranch is adjacent to the District’s La Honda Creek Open Space Preserve. It features such special species as the California Red-Legged Frog, San Francisco Garter Snake, And Steelhead Trout, as well as former and now-capped oil wells. 

The District will hold a public workshop on the potential ranch purchase in late summer 2005.  Following the workshop, the District’s Board will consider and vote on the property’s purchase at a public meeting held on the Coastside.

Click "Read more" to see the District’s press release.

Pillar Point Harbor’s beaches among the most polluted in California


By on Fri, May 27, 2005

Pillar Point Harbor’s beaches are among the most polluted in the state, according to Heal the Bay’s 2005 California beach report card. This is Capistrano Beach’s the second year in a row on the organization’s "Beach Bummers" list.

Venice Beach at Frenchman’s Creek was the second-worst beach in the county, with consistent scores of D and F.  The County has been working on Frenchman’s creek and discovered a landowner storing a a large amount of manure next to the creek. This problem has since been cleared up. But after a relatively good summer in 2004, the high bacteria counts resumed in September and October.

There’s a good story by Amelia Hansen at the County Times, quoting Dean Peterson, the county’s director of environmental health services, as saying that because the issues with the storm drains at Capistrano beach have been cleared, he suspects that the high bacteria counts may be due to the large bird population in the Harbor.

Petersen says that Venice Beach is a higher priority for cleanup because a lot more people go into the water there. He’s also not sure it’s fair to compare tiny Capistrano Beach with some of the biggest beaches in Southern California.

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Heal the Bay
Click on the report card for an interactive version at Heal the Bay’s website.
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