Sunday, February 23, at the Green Tent:
Come by with your gardening questions, and pick up a free plant (lovingly grown for you by the Master Gardeners) and some free seeds, while they last.
Where Nature and Humanity Connect
David King, Gardenmaster of the Venice High School Learning Garden |
Harlequin Beetle |
Earth Glow |
Why?! |
Stranded |
Who will lead us? |
Wreckage |
On Sunday, July 24
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Wild Birds Unlimited of Santa Monica's Julie Hanson
will greet shoppers at the Mar Vista Farmers Market's Green Tent and talk about “The Wilderness in Your Backyard.” For the wild birds around the neighborhood, a typical backyard is their wilderness, the place where they find food, water and shelter, and raise their babies.
For fun, kids can stop by and learn how to make a pine cone bird feeder. The local birds will delight in finding your backyard offering of a nutritious treat and the whole family will enjoy seeing who stops by for a visit.
Come and learn how you can enjoy the numerous wild birds living in your own backyard by putting out the feeders, food, and water that the birds love.
Ms. Hanson will show Green Tent guests the typical wild birds that visit their backyards and neighborhoods, and how to view and recognize them.
Learn how you can support and protect the birds and their nests in the neighborhood's trees and bushes.
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You may have heard about the 600+ acres of the Ballona Wetlands just to the south and west of Mar Vista. But have you visited this wild habitat where so many wildlife species and rare plant populations still thrive? One imperiled bird species that our former neighbor and beloved Councilmember Bill Rosendahl loved, is the beautiful White Tailed Kite, which needs the upland areas where small mammals live just beneath the surface and provide great meals for the Kite, as well as for Great Blue Herons and several raptors.
Image Courtesy of Craig Butler |
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Great Egrets* |
Biologist Roy Van de Hoek (perhaps you know him from the Feathers & Foliage walks in Mar Vista or have seen his Blue Bird houses in our trees) and Marcia Hanscom, Executive Director of the Ballona Institute ,will be on hand to talk with you. Ballona Institute is known as "The Voice for Nature on the Los Angeles Coast."
Image Courtesy of Craig Butler |
Let nature help with the holiday menu. Use locally grown seasonal produce.
Thanksgiving can be a time of coming together and strengthening bonds. Sometimes that means setting aside differences and focusing on inclusion. This often means making sure that there are foods for everyone. If you are a guest at someone's home, why not offer to make one side dish where you can introduce the other guests to some of your favorite vegan delicacies? A hearty root vegetable puree or tofu or tempeh stew will be very welcome this as we experience a California winter. Maybe you can provide a dairy-free dessert ... great for folks who also keep Kosher.
But it's not just about the food. Consider how you will shop and deal with leftovers to shrink your carbon footprint. Get support year-round from the Zero Waste Chef.
Perhaps the biggest share you can offer is preparing your own heart. We are living in times of change, chaos and stress, and no act of kindness is wasted. I will leave you with a quote attributed to Mahatma Gandhi which I found in, of all places, the astrology section of the Los Angeles Times! (Hey, it's right next to the crossword puzzle.)
"To give pleasure to a single heart by a single act is better than a thousand heads bowing in prayer."
Happy Thanksgiving and Beyond!
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Harlequin Beetle |