Dear Pals of
the Putney Woods,
One of our group forwarded the below
to us.
These are tough times for parks. Please consider
doing what you can.
Your pal,
Ranger Kirk. The time is urgent to let our voices be heard in
support of State Parks. You may of read that ranger
and staff layoffs are pending, but you may not
have heard about how this will effect Whidbey Island
Parks. All four island
Sate Parks will remain open but with very, very
limited staff. South
Whidbey State Park will have NO rangers. It will
be managed by one Sr. Park
Aide and three summer park aides . . . a near
impossible situation. The
other three island parks will be equally slashed
of permanent and seasonal
staff.
It won't take long before our beautiful state parks
where both residents and
tourists walk and hike, have family gatherings,
bring their children
camping, and find a place of solitude will be
run down and vulnerable to
vandalism and theft. Safety and security will
likely become a major issue. You can help now by
sending an email to the Parks and Recreation Commissioners.
Please click
here and
respond today!
Feel free
to pass this message along to other friends
of our state parks. Thank you.
==========================
Here's some useful info on how to help our
feathered friends make it through the coming cold months.
As usual: thanks to Elliott Menashe !
Your pal,
Ranger Kirk.
Click here to download Winter Bird Feeding pdf
This is really cool -- our friend Bill Cusworth of the Cascade
Orienteering Club has created an incredibly detailed
topographic map of the Putney Woods and has graciously
agreed to share it
with us. Click here to download a pdf of the map.
Fall "To Do" list
from your backyard wildlife family
Your family may be making those fall outdoor
chore lists, as daylight hours shrink, temperatures drop,
and the urge grows to "batten down the hatches" in
the yard and garden.
Here's another "to do" list from your local wildlife "family" that
you may find easier to check off:
- Leave some "dead heads" on your flowering plants
to provide seeds for some of us birds and other animals
- If you must rake leaves off grass lawns, just
pile them under some shrubs, bushes or other
nooks and crannies to provide homes for those insects
that
we birds love to
eat; leaves make great
mulch to help your plants, anyway!
- Keep that dead or dying tree right where it is
(unless, of course, it's truly a hazard to you),
so we can feast on the insects in the rotting
wood or make winter roosts or dens in its cavities
- Give yourself and your mower a rest for at least
a portion of your lawn so we've got a patch of
taller grass to hide and forage in
- Save just a little of that dead bramble thicket
for us - it makes great winter cover and we don't
need much! Fall is a good time to plant shrubs,
so replace invasive, exotic Himalayan
and cutleaf blackberries with native plants of
higher wildlife value like blackcap (native black
raspberry) or red raspberry;
native
currants or gooseberries found in your area; or
native roses such as Nootka or baldhip.
- Pile up any brush or rocks you clear around your
place to give us another option for nests and dens
- Take it easy on yourself and
let go of the "perfect" garden
image; we wild animals like less tidy, "fuzzy" places
because there's usually more food and shelter there
- Get yourself a comfortable
chair, sit back, and congratulate yourself on having made
a home for
wildlife and a haven of relaxation for yourself!
SOURCE:
WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE
600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, WA 98501-1091
http://wdfw.wa.gov
Your pal,
Ranger Kirk.
Whidbey Camano Land
Trust successfully purchased the
Trillium property
“
I saw a quote yesterday that fits today,” says Whidbey Camano
Land Trust (WCLT) board member Joanie Boose. “‘To achieve
the incredible, we must attempt the impossible.’ That’s
what we did. What a community, what a team!”
More than 1,400 donations and the efforts of scores
of people brought the permanent protection of the
Trillium property within reach.For more information on the 664 acre
property, click the links below to check out the
Whidbey Camano Land Trust website and that of the
organization specifically tasked with saving this beautiful forest.
http://www.wclt.org/
http://savetheforestnow.org
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