Watershed weekend

Posted on | September 18, 2009 | 1 Comment

Los Angeles River Watershed Map. Source: Los Angeles County Watershed ManagementACCORDING to the California Coastal Commission, last year more than 70,000 volunteers collected more than 1.6 million pounds of trash from beaches, lakes and waterways on Coastal Clean-up Day. They hope to best that this year on September 19th.

To volunteer or find future events, click here.

Or click here for a listing of Los Angeles-area watershed organizations from the Santa Monica Bay Foundation.

For Friends of the Los Angeles River, click here.

To find out about inland river clean-ups from the Sierra Nevada Conservancy, click here.

Or click here to be taken to a Watershed Wise Magazine tribute to Heal the Bay founder Dorothy Green.

Finally, if you missed it, click here for Ilsa Setziol’s account of her day on the bay in search of blue whales. She didn’t find one. She found two.
Mother and calf spotted off the Los Angeles Coast. Photo: Ilsa Setziol

The Dry Garden: A visit with Susan Gottlieb

Posted on | September 18, 2009 | No Comments

California buckwheat. Photo: Francine Orr/LA Times

Buckwheat in the garden of Susan Gottlieb. Photo: Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times. All rights reserved. Click on the florets to be taken to the Los Angeles Times Dry Garden column

Susan Gottlieb. Photo: Francine Orr/Los Angeles TimesThey say that beauty comes from within, but in the case of Susan Gottlieb, it seems to come from the world around her. She is, at 67, not pretty, not handsome, but storybook beautiful. The former nurse has such an Alice in Wonderland-like grace and lightness that as she hops around her 1-acre garden in Beverly Hills, enchantment sets in.

Is she quite human?

Her husband, lawyer Daniel Gottlieb, chuckles thinking back to when he first showed his bride-to-be the house in the late 1980s. “She looked at the back said, ‘It’s all covered with ivy. There’s nothing for the birds.’ I said, ‘Can’t the birds make do with ivy?’ ”’

By 1990, the ivy was on its way out and Susan Gottlieb began putting in a native garden chosen precisely because of the local flora’s unique benefit to local fauna. That act would in turn give rise to the visitors on Theodore Payne Foundation garden tours, to the garden’s certification as backyard habitat with the National Wildlife Federation and to the Gottliebs’ becoming patrons of the water conservation movement in Los Angeles. Click here to continue reading this week’s Dry Garden column in the Los Angeles Times.

Rambling LA: At sea and agog

Posted on | September 16, 2009 | 2 Comments

A pair of blue whales. Photo: NOAA Marine Sanctuaries, Channel Islands.

Click on the whales to be taken to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuaries page on blue whales. Photo: NOAA

By Ilsa Setziol

THE DINOSAURS are gone. So too the mammoths, saber-toothed cats and short-faced bears. Even California’s mascot, the grizzly, no longer roams the state. Megalopolis has replaced megafauna. Yet the largest animal ever still graces the California coast. This summer, I went looking for it.
Click here to keep reading

Trouble in paradise

Posted on | September 16, 2009 | 2 Comments

dsc00500dsc00500dsc00500dsc00500dsc00500

LOS ANGELES awoke fractious today, at least in the press. Los Angeles Department of Water & Power bills are arriving and a North Hollywood couple using an average 748 gallons of water a day, five times the Los Angeles County norm (150 gallons per day, down from 181 a year ago) is so mad, they wrote a seven-page letter to Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez.

For Lopez, the couple’s outrage was a jumping off point. Lopez himself is fantasizing about seeing Mayor Villaraigosa shot aloft by a geyser from one of the City’s seemingly endless water main breaks.

To keep reading about tantrums in the face of a water crisis, corruption and rotting infrastructure, click here

Interview: S. David Freeman

Posted on | September 15, 2009 | 8 Comments

IN APRIL 2009, a man of big hats, big talk and big reputation, S. David Freeman, was appointed Deputy Mayor of the City of Los Angeles for Energy and Environment. The job vaulted the Tennessean and former General Manager of the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power back into the forefront of water issues just as the State Legislature tried to pass a massive block of water bills. Last week, that legislation failed, and Freeman thinks that’s just as well for Los Angeles.
Click here to read Freeman on bonds, bills, conservation, Owens Valley and Cadiz

« go backkeep looking »
  • After the lawn


  • As you were saying: Comments

  • As I was saying: Recent posts

  • Garden blogs


  • Contact

    Emily Green by e-mail at emily.green [at] mac.com
  • Categories