Steve Smith’s Jazz Legacy, Sunday at the Bach

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Press release

By on Wed, October 1, 2008

Steve Smith’s Jazz Legacy plays a combination of their own original compositions plus arrangements honoring some of the great jazz drummers: Art Blakey, Buddy Rich, Elvin Jones, Tony Williams, Philly Joe Jones and others.
Bach Dancing & Dynamite Society
307 Mirada Road, Half Moon Bay, CA 94019
$35.  Tickets at the door. Reservations for members.
Doors Open at 3 PM, Music from 4:30 to 7:30 PM, with intermission.

Don’t flush your unused medication


By on Wed, October 1, 2008

Sewer Authority Mid-Coastside encourages Coastsiders to drop off their unused medications, rather than dumping them down the drain.

While the effects of "pill pollution" on humans are currently not fully understood, several studies have identified a demonstrated, negative effect of pharmaceuticals on certain wildlife—including fish and amphibians.  Measurable concentrations of prescription and nonprescription drugs, steroids, and reproductive hormones have been detected in 80% of the 139 streams across 30 states tested by the US Geological Survey (2002).  

You can drop off your old medications at one of the Coastside receiving stations. Disposal is available during normal business hours of 8:30 am through 5:00 pm.

San Mateo County Sheriff’s Sub-Station
California Avenue
Moss Beach

Half Moon Bay Police Department
537 Kelly Avenue
Half Moon Bay

Video: School board candidates debate

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Darin Boville
Montara Fog has posted a video of the school board candidates' debate at last week's Midcoast Community Council meeting. Click to view.

By on Tue, September 30, 2008

African Drumming at HMB Library, Friday


By on Tue, September 30, 2008

This Friday, October 3rd at 7:00PM, the Half Moon Bay Library will be hosting Onye Onyemaechi in an African Village Celebration.  Take a tour of the drumming culture of Southern Sudan through group dances and song.  This program is part of the San Mateo County One Book One Community celebration. 

SF warned over killing endangered species at Sharp Park Golf Course

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SF Public Utilities Commission
Press release

By on Tue, September 30, 2008

The Center for Biological Diversity last week filed a 60-day notice of intent to sue the City and County of San Francisco for illegally killing and harming two endangered species at Sharp Park Golf Course in Pacifica, in violation of the federal Endangered Species Act. Activities at the golf course have been killing federally protected California red-legged frogs, and recent studies show that ongoing course operations may be threatening endangered San Francisco garter snakes.

"The time is right to restore Sharp Park to its natural condition," said Jeff Miller, a conservation advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity. "San Francisco has a golden opportunity to save taxpayers’ money, preserve our endangered species, and improve recreational access to our coast."

The Center is calling on San Francisco to cease harming endangered species, restore Sharp Park to its natural state as a coastal wetland, and provide more diverse recreational opportunities for the public at the site. The Center opposes a flawed plan released recently by San Francisco’s Recreation and Park Department that calls for privatizing the mismanaged and financially failing golf course and illegally reconstructing flooded portions of the course at the expense of endangered species.

The operation and mismanagement of the golf course is undermining habitat-restoration work within the nearby Golden Gate National Recreation Area for the garter snake and the frog at adjacent Mori Point. In 2005, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service notified the Recreation and Park Department that golf course operations were illegally "taking" threatened California red-legged frogs (Rana aurora draytonii) by draining and pumping the frog’s aquatic habitats, which strands and desiccates frog eggs and kills tadpoles. New evidence has surfaced that extremely rare San Francisco garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia) have been killed by groundskeepers mowing grass in areas that the snake uses for basking.

Sharp Park Golf Course is owned by the City and County of San Francisco but is located to the south of the city on the coast, in Pacifica. Its ongoing environmental problems are largely due to poor design and unfortunate placement. To create the course in the early 1930s, the Recreation and Park Department dredged and filled areas around a lagoon known as Laguna Salada for 14 months. Not surprisingly, Sharp Park has had problems with flooding and drainage ever since. The course’s ceremonial opening day was delayed twice due to wet playing conditions, major coastal floods have on two occasions destroyed several holes, and normal winter rains flood the course nearly every year.

Letter: Documentary on grassroots environmental action, tonight

Letter

By on Mon, September 29, 2008

Tonight (M, 9/29) Holy Family Episcopal Church will hold a special screening of "Renewal," a powerful documentary that describes the actions of people of faith as they take on the environmental challenges facing our country today. The film begins with the story of Evangelical Christians in Appalachia bearing witness to the devastating effects of mountain top removal by coal companies. It then goes on to tell of a variety of environmental actions by Muslims, Buddhists, Jews, Native Americans, and Christians of every flavor. These narratives offer an inspirational look at the grass roots efforts by people of faith to heal and protect our planet.

The show begins at 7:00 p.m. at Holy Family Episcopal Church, 1590 S. Cabrillo Highway, Half Moon Bay [about 0.2 mi South of Cameron’s Pub].

The program is free and open to the public.

Album: Seton’s Teddy Bear Clinic 2008

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Cheri Parr
Click on any photo to see our album.
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Cheri Parr
Click on any photo to see our album.
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Cheri Parr
Click on any photo to see our album.

By on Mon, September 29, 2008

Click below for Seton Coastside’s compilation of memories from twenty years of Teddy Bear Clinics, or visit our albums from the clinics in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008.

Download: Guide to Coastside plants and habitats

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Toni Corelli
Click to download the pdf

By on Mon, September 29, 2008

Half Moon Bay botanist Toni Corelli put together a guide to some of the habitats and plants of the Half Moon Bay Railroad Right-of-Way for the Coastside Land Trust’s tour of that parcel. Every Coastsider wandering our open spaces should print out a copy to have on hand.

Click the image to download the booklet. It’s design to be printed on both sides of two sheets 8 1/2 by 11 paper and stapled in the middle as a booklet.

Letter: Join Breastfeeding Challenge at Ink Spell Books, Oct 11

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Quintessence Foundation
2004 challenge, somewhere in North America.
Letter

By on Mon, September 29, 2008

All breastfeeding moms and their supporters are invited to join the Quintessence Breastfeeding Challenge at Ink Spell Books on Saturday, Oct 11 at 10:45am. Ink Spell is at 500 Purissima St., Half Moon Bay.  We’ll also be unveiling the Breastfeeding support Logo at the bookstore.

Join us to celebrate breastfeeding in a fun "competition" where every child "wins" because they are breastfed! This fun event is a challenge for which geographic area has the most breastfeeding babies, as a percentage of the birthrate, "latched on." at 11am local time.

We’re celebrating breastfeeding and demonstrate promotion, protection and support for breastfeeding women and their families. It’s a chance for education and peer support done in a fun social way.

The local event is sponsored by Sara Russell and Chris Pritchard, of mama to mama, a doula service, and Cindi Whittemore of Ink Spell Books.  Doulas are women who help laboring women and postpartum women with the transition into motherhood.  Doulas offer breastfeeding support, newborn care and family support just before birth and for the weeks and months after the arrival of a newborn.

Teddy Bear Clinic at Seton Coastside, Sunday

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Cheri Parr
Click to see our album from last year's clinic.

By on Sun, September 28, 2008

The Teddy Bear Clinic returns Sunday to Seton Coastside, 600 Marine Blvd., Moss Beach, from 11am to 3pm. The event focuses on helping children not be afraid of the hospital. Ages 2-12 are invited to bring their favorite stuffed animal to the Clinic for "treatment".

To help create this positive experience, the children are encouraged to bring in their favorite toy stuffed animal as the "patient". The child and his or her toy then go through the entire process of the emergency visit in a non-threatening atmosphere.  First, they make an appointment, apply for "Teddy-Cal" insurance, and then have their toys’ vital signs taken along with the "patient’s" history.  From there, the children are directed to the radiology department (a copy machine), where an "x-ray" is taken, and onto the lab where a "blood sample" is taken. 

Then it’s on to the waiting room.  Of course at the Teddy Bear Clinic, there is hardly ever any waiting time. The doctor, upon examination of the "patient", orders appropriate treatments like a cast, a shot, or possibly surgery and consults with the child and their stuffed animal.  Apples are given (an apple a day keeps the doctor away) and then everyone gets a nutritional consultation followed by a visit to the Physical Therapy department.

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