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Ecology Center

Terrain

Archive for August, 2004

Mendocino Magic

Two things have become clear since the victory of Mendocino County’s anti-GMO ballot initiative in the March elections: One, that Measure H founders caught only the first wave of what looks to be a tsunami of US efforts to declare particular localities GMO-free, and two, that the wave represents grassroots politics at its most energetic.

By Linnea Due

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Poison with a Promise

This fall, the California Department of Fish & Game will begin poisoning a section of Alpine County’s Silver King Creek, home to the native Paiute cutthroat trout, the rarest trout in America. The idea is to eliminate the nonnative trout that pose dangers to the Paiute of hybridization and competition for food.

By Mary Vance

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Marooned in a Sea of Homes

Meandering creeks, shady canyons, historical sites, and rare species make the rolling foothills of the Black Diamond Mine Regional Preserve an East Bay treasure.

By Stephanie Pool

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Paradise Found (Almost)

Watching a snowy egret dodge trash along the shore, one finds it hard to imagine that Oakland’s Lake Merritt was once a paradise for fish and birds.

By Melissa Pamer

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Prescription Rice

The Brave New World of Pharma-Foods.

By Melissa Pamer

Summer 2004 | 1 Comment »

Farming for Black Gold

Can California sturgeon farms help preserve a species half a world away?

By Carol Hunter

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Nothing Beats the Real Thing

Farmers’ Market vendors’ donations connect young palates to local agriculture.

By Linda Graham

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Meat Is a Hot Potato

Making policy can be tough work, especially when those policies affect what we eat.

By Penny Leff

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Garbage Guru

Ever wondered what kind of person it takes to run a recycling program?

By Chris Terry

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Hard Choices

Elsewhere in this magazine, writer Christy Harrison profiles a cafe owner who struggles to provide a socially responsible sandwich. Multiply that quandary by a thousand and you can imagine what it’s like to be Jill Stapleton, who, with the help of EC staffers and volunteers, runs the Ecology Center bookstore on San Pablo Avenue.

By Amy Standen

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Dwellers on the Fringe

Birds—and the meaning of life—take center stage in Mark Bittner’s engaging and bittersweet tale, The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill.

By Joe Eaton

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Homesteading in the City

Extreme Simplicity:  Homesteading in the City Christopher and Dolores Lynn Nyerges Chelsea Green, 2002 $16.95 The Nyergeses live in LA, in a stucco house on a 150-foot-deep lot. On that lot are also a chicken coop, a house for Otis, their porcine composter; many citrus trees, a plant nursery; beehives, a bamboo grove and other […]

By Linnea Due

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Agent of Change

Last October, acting as mayor while Willie Brown was out of town, San Francisco supervisor Chris Daly appointed former Sierra Club president Adam Werbach to the city’s Public Utilities Commission, which oversees the city’s drinking water, sewer system, and power production.

By Jennie Rose

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Wal-Mart: What a Bargain!

70 million people shop at Wal-Mart each week. 

By Stephanie Pool

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Greenvesting

As you scan the news — Martha, Enron, Tyco — it’s easy to wonder whether anything good has happened on Wall Street since 2000.

By Lisa Stapleton

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Anatomy of a Sandwich

Berkeley’s Nomad Cafe, one of a small but growing number of local eateries to earn a “Green” designation from the Bay Area’s Green Business Program, serves only coffee that is certified organic and fair trade, with only organic milk to dilute it. 

By Christy Harrison

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

The Backyard Lowell Thomas

Slapstick, sweat, sustenance, and science: we garden for food and for beauty—and beauty is more than just decor.

By Ron Sullivan

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

Wild Card

Sneakers, streakers, jacks, and machos furtivos: males of some species have found more than one way to work the game of evolution.

By Joe Eaton

Summer 2004 | No Comments »

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