“Superb Environment Without Excessive Cost”: Some Early History of the Hollywoodland Subdivision, March-June 1923

by Paul R. Spitzzeri

This morning, I had the privilege of meeting residents and property owners in the Hollywoodland Tract to discuss the history and take a tour of the community, which celebrated its centennial last year. The community, on the south slope of the Hollywood Hills portion of the Santa Monica Mountains between Hollywood Reservoir and Griffith Park, was established in 1923, the peak year of a massive real estate boom in greater Los Angeles and when the Town of Temple (Temple City) was founded by Walter P. Temple and associates. MORE

 

Red Shouldered Hawk family in Hollywoodland Gifted Park nesting on Rogerton Drive Photo courtesy ©Eric Smith Images

Red Shouldered Hawk family in Hollywoodland Gifted Park nesting on Rogerton Drive Photos courtesy ©Eric Smith Images

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These images were created by professional photographer and Hollywoodlander Eric Smith. He is documenting the Red Shouldered Hawk family that nests each year at a private property on Beachwood Drive. More to come after the babies hatch. Eric’s visuals demonstrate and substantiate why all of tract 6450 must be in a SEA ( Significant Ecological Area). Please support our cause.

Theodore Payne Foundation October 2022 Classes

October 2022 Classes at the Theodore Payne Foundation.

The Theodore Payne Foundation inspires and educates Southern Californians about the beauty and ecological benefits of California native plant landscapes.

We are located on 22 acres of canyon land in the northeast corner of the San Fernando Valley. Our full-service native plant nursery, seed room, book store, art gallery, demonstration gardens, and hiking trails are open to the public year round. We offer garden tours and classes for adults and families, as well as field trips to TPF and in-classroom programs for children. Friendly on-leash dogs are welcome and there is no admission charge!

Our extensive Adult Education Program inspires and supports nature lovers and gardeners ‘both experienced and novice’ with top-notch training by expert TPF staff and guest instructors.

The curriculum includes core courses on native plant horticulture, garden design, maintenance, and propagation, plus classes on lawn alternatives, container gardening, botany, California natural history, and attracting wildlife. Our popular three-part garden design course provides the basics for building successful native plant landscapes for the home. We also offer adult and family art workshops inspired by native flora and the TPF landscape.Classes are held at TPF in our La Fetra Nature Education Center, on TPF grounds, and at various off-site locations.

Sign up for classes here!

Hollywoodland Gifted Park celebrates its 75th anniversary

Hollywoodland Gifted Park celebrates her 75th anniversary

Expressing Hollywoodland and it’s Gifts!

On Sunday, October 20th the Hollywoodland community held a 75th year celebration honoring the Sherman Company’s gift of 444 acres to the city of Los Angeles.

This acreage, the largest single donation (other than the Griffith land donation) was part of the original Hollywoodland tract 6450. It surrounds 3 sides of Hollywoodland residential, covering 85% of its perimeter, including the Main Communication tower at the top of Mt. Lee, the former Hollywoodland sign, the western border of the Lake Hollywood Reservoir and the eastern border of the Bronson Caves.

Our celebration invited Angelenos to share their inspirations and expressions associated with the Hollywoodland open-space. Submissions were categorized and judged by Peter Desberg, Hope Anderson and Susie Karasic. The three categories included: visual 2, 3 D (drawing painting, collage, sculpture), written words (poems, prose, essays story telling, historical artifacts and images) and/ or video, photography. Prizes were given in each category and attendees selected the Best Of Show.

Prizes for visual 2 and 3 D works were shared with Brian Burchfield, “Cactus on Durand” (oil painting) and Anne Mansour “The Hills of Hollywood” (oil painting). Written words, historical artifacts, storytelling award went to Soren Kerk for her poetry books and selections.The video, photography, audio, music category prize was shared by Sarajane Schwartz with her video titled: “Paradise Lost, The Next Paradise, a Plea for Help”and George Abbott Clark for his video “Hollywood Wild Life” a compilation of animal images filmed at his hillside residence between 2018-2019. He also won Best of Show.

The recreated Hollywoodland Orchestra, headed by Doug Tornquist played tunes from the 1940’s. Dinner was underwritten by Mike Fahim, the new owner of the Beachwood Cafe with a festive celebration cake provided by The Committee to Save the Hollywoodland Specific Plan. Other sponsors included, Beachwood Market, Beachwood Cleaners, Hollywoodland Realty and Compass.

View Best of Show Video HERE

 

 

 

 

 

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Expressing Hollywoodland and her Gifts!

Celebrate the Sherman Company’s 444-acre open space gift to the City of Los Angeles 75 years ago and its association with Hollywoodland residential for 96 years!
To demonstrate our appreciation of this land gift, we ask for art submissions that affect/inspire how we live, see, feel and enjoy Hollywoodland and her open-space. All forms of expression encouraged!
Categories are:
1.       Visual 2 and 3 D (painting, drawing, collage, sculpture)
2.       Written words (poems, prose, essays, story telling)
3.       Video, photography
4.       Music
Celebration/Display/ Reception
Sunday, October 20, 2019
4-7 PM
Hollywoodland Village
Criteria for submissions
•  All visual works (including photography) Maximum 36” X 36”. Place submissions in a secure, protective format that can be transported and displayed easily and safely. 3-D submissions should include a safe stand/displays.
•  Written words should be submitted on an 8.5 x 11-inch paper. These can be typed or handwritten. Published work is also welcome.
•  Videos and music can be submitted on CD or thumb-drives.
•  If the artist is interested in performing at the reception, it is encouraged! Please advise us so we can allocate adequate time for performances. You must be at least 18 years old
•  Submission deadline is October 6, 2019
Submissions are to be delivered to 2700 N. Beachwood Dr. 90068 on Oct. 5 10–12 A.M. or Oct. 6 4–6 P.M. Entries not requiring hanging etc. can be mailed with entry data to HHA, 2700 N. Beachwood Dr. LA , CA 90068
Other arrangements can be made by emailing hollywoodlandgiftedpark@gmail.com subject line: ART DROP OFF.
Questions? hollywoodlandgiftedpark@gmail.com  with subject line: ART ENTRY Artist’s submission should include the entry data below:
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Name (please print ____________________________________________
HHA Member? Yes   No
Address___________________________________________________________
Phone_______________________email:________________________________
Title of the submission:______________________________________________
What category should submission be judged under? (see above)
1, 2, 3, 4
There is no charge for HHA members. Non-members fee is $10. There may be no more than 2 submissions per applicant.
The submitted works can be sold to attendees at the reception.
No fee will be taken from proceeds.
Prizes will be given in each category.
Insurance is the responsibility of the artist.
HHA assumes no liability for loss, theft, or damage.
If non HHA member, please drop off or mail a $10 check written to
HHA 2700 N. Beachwood Dr. LA , CA 90068 with a brief statement how your submission relates/affects Hollywoodland and her gifted park land.

Painted lady butterfly migration sets Californian skies aflutter

Photo of Painted Lady on Westshire Drive courtesy of Jean Clyde Mason

By Phil Helsel, Reporter for NBC News

Painted lady butterfly migration sets Californian skies aflutter thanks to an annual migration of butterflies known as the painted lady. In recent days, the skies of some areas have been filled with the winged creatures.

People took to social media to document the insects fluttering around California. The butterflies travel from the deserts in Mexico and fly as long as their fat reserves last before breeding. Generations of the insects can reach all the way to the Pacific Northwest.

“We’ve been waiting for them to get up here, but they haven’t shown up yet,” said Arthur M. Shapiro, a professor at the University of California, Davis’ Department of Evolution and Ecology, College of Biological Sciences, which is near Sacramento.

“Years of tremendous wildflower blooms typically are really big painted lady years,” he said, adding that the last really big one was in 2005 with estimated billions of butterflies.

Shapiro said he’s gotten reports of the butterflies, Vanessa Cardui, in Temecula, north of San Diego, and in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, as well as in Pasadena and in the Coachella Valley.

The entire North American population of painted lady butterflies migrates to west Texas and northern Mexico during the winter. As caterpillars, they feed on desert annual plants — their favorites are the families of mallows, borages, and thistles and their relatives — and then once butterflies, they begin traveling north.

They can live up to six weeks, but most don’t live that long. There will be waves of migration as the first generation makes it to northern California, they breed and then the next generation makes the trip to the Pacific Northwest, Shapiro said.

On the way back, the next generations of butterflies will begin making the trip south. In Calfornia, the largest number of butterflies are expected on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada, Shapiro said.

By Phil Helsel, Reporter for NBC News

Argentinian Ants invade and attack: A non toxic remedy.

Argentinian Ants invade and attack: A non toxic remedy

At first I thought maybe we lacked cleanliness, then I worried about termites, since some ants have a symbiotic relationship with termites, then I started asking neighbors if they also were being invaded, and many were. Our invasion extends to more than half the rooms in our house: the kitchen, one bathroom, 2 bedrooms and the pantry.

Argentine ants came like a lot of other non-indigenous insects, by hitching a ride on boats. They infiltrated the US and Europe about a hundred years ago, and they made some behavioral changes that have helped them proliferate. In their indigenous environments they warred with other colonies, but here, they’ve learned cooperate instead. The other thing that separates Argentine ants from other ants is that they have distinct, multiple colonies and several queens in each colony. If you have multiple queens and cooperating colonies, you up your chances for survival and you can usurp the territory of other kinds of ants. So the good news is that Argentine ants don’t conspire with termites; the bad news is that they are very hard to get rid of.

Argentine ants have a bite that is like a little pinch and leaves no welts…uncomfortable and nothing compared to the bite of a fire ant. Nevertheless, if they happen to like your bed, they can keep you awake by biting and crawling on you and they are busy 24/7. They are mostly looking for water, but will exploit any available food and will swarm around any kind of food left out, or accidentally dropped. They seem to like honey more than sugar—me too.

So how do you get rid of them? One friend (in Silverlake) told me she had an exterminator come, spray and afterward, no Argentinian ants. From what I’ve read, spray extermination works, though only for a short time. A neighbor, who was similarly plagued, used boric acid (recipe below) and seems to have been successful, but it takes time and diligence. On average, it takes a month to six weeks for the boric acid formula to reach all the colonies and kill all the queens, but it works, and it does not kill other animals. And here’s an odd observation: Argentine ants will not walk on paper towels, though I don’t know why. I thought about flooring and wallpapering the entire house with paper towels on sleepless, creepy crawling, bite-pinch nights. These kinds of invasions can drive a person bonkers.

Squirrel tip: I’m not the only one with a squirrel problem in the canyon and I recently hit upon a fairly easy fix: the hottest chili power you can find (India Sweets and Spices has the super hot variety.) All you need to do is sprinkle the chili powder around your plants so that when the squirrel gets the chili on its paws, while headed for your plants…well, it’s no fun for the squirrel but it does not kill them either. You can also mix the chili powder with water, dish soap and spray it on the plants. If you make a spray you will need to sieve the concoction through a coffee filter or a bit of tightly woven fabric so that the chili does not clog the spray nozzle. You will have to be careful to wash or peel any fruits or veggies you plan on eating, or suffer the consequences. If you or your gardener use a blower, you will need to issue a warning, since getting airborne chili in your eyes or breathing it into your lungs is painful. Obviously, you would not sprinkle chili where your pets tread, since they will lick their paws.                              

   HERE IS WHAT YOU WILL NEED

Boric acid (very inexpensive, can be found at most pharmacies and is generally used as an eyewash.) Borax in not the same as boric acid, you want boric acid, not Borax, which is boron.
Sugar or honey
Cotton balls
Small jars with caps (as few a five as as many as 10.) ideally, small glass jelly jars with screw on caps.
  • 8 tsp sugar
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tsp boric  acid

mix 8 teaspoons of sugar with 1 cup of water and 1 teaspoon of boric acid; use warm or hot water to dissolve the boric acid and sugar (adjust to the amount you will need.) Argentine ants likely prefer honey to sugar, but sugar works. If they don’t like the solution, there’s either too much boric acid or not enough sweet stuff. Some recipes call for more boric acid than the one here—experiment. Punch holes in the lid of jars to allow ants easy access and to keep out other animals. Place the dissolved mixture into a small glass jars, place a cotton ball in the mixture so that the top of the cotton ball is above the liquid (allows ants to access the solution with drowning; if they are drowned they can’t get the solution into the colony.) Try to locate areas where ants are entering your home and place the jars where they can have easy access. If you can find the outdoor location, place them outside. Check the jars weekly and refill as needed. If the jars get a lot of sun they may be prone to quicker evaporation. Be careful of young children that are capable of unscrewing the jars and drinking the solution…it would not kill them, but it would be very unpleasant.

Expect the process to take four to six weeks, or you can weather the invasion by waiting for cooler weather, when the ants will return to their own territory and cease to invade yours!   Yvonne Westbrook, MFT

NEW! The Botany of Intoxication with Nick Jensen and Sandy Namoff

DATE AND TIME

Sat, June 23, 2018

10:00 AM – 11:30 AM PDT

Add to Calendar

LOCATION

Theodore Payne Foundation – Classroom

10459 Tuxford St

Sun Valley, CA 91352

View Map

REFUND POLICY

Refunds up to 7 days before event

DESCRIPTION

Many seeds, leaves, roots, and stems contain chemical compounds that may help plants avoid being eaten by animals, including humans. In some cases, we have co-opted these plant defenses for the sake of recreational enjoyment, and there is often a fine line between poison and pleasure. This unique new class explores plants as intoxicants from two perspectives: how past and present-day humans have used them and what role this use plays in our society; and why plants produce these chemicals, and what roles these compounds play in their evolutionary history.

Sandy Namoff received her PhD from Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden where she studied evolutionary processes in Calystegia(morning glories). She is currently the Laboratory Coordinator for introductory biology courses at the Keck Science Department at the Claremont Colleges.

Nick Jensen received his PhD from Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden where he studied the flora of Tejon Ranch and evolutionary patterns in Streptanthus (jewelflowers). Nick is currently employed as Southern California Conservation Analyst for the California Native Plant Society.

Image of Datura wrightii (Sacred Datura or Jimsonweed) by Madena Asbell.

Share your images and experiences with our new group!

NEW TPF FACEBOOK GROUP

Attention:Urban and suburban
Southern California native plant gardeners!
You’re invited to join our new Southern California Native Plant Gardeners group on Facebook.
This public group is a forum for shared images and experiences. Show like-minded gardeners what you’ve done at home. Discuss your successes and challenges, new plants and old favorites, the joys of habitat gardening, and how you save water and other resources.
See you on Facebook!

Summer is here with longer, warmer days, and when early mornings and evenings feel like the best times to garden.

Dear Friends of The Thomas Payne Foundation
Summer is here with longer, warmer days, and when early mornings and evenings feel like the best times to garden. Not that much to do, though, as even weeds slow down with the heat.
Abutilon palmeri (Indian mallow), an easy-to-grow desert shrub that thrives and flowers with summer heat.
Things slow down at TPF, too. On July 3, we start “summer” hours and are open to the public three days a week, Thursday through Saturday. Please visit then for plants, classes, seeds, books, and gifts. In spite of the heat, we can promise flowers, fragrance, butterflies, bees, birds, and lizards galore. Happy Summer!
In the issue:
  • Our New Facebook Group
  • Garden Tour Application
  • Upcoming Classes
HOURS
Now: TuesdaySaturday8:30am-4:30pm (Closed SundayMonday)
Summer Hours begin July 3ThursdaySaturday8:30am-4:30pm
                                               (Closed SundayWednesday)

APPLY TO BE A GARDEN TOUR HOST  16th Annual Theodore Payne Native Plant Garden Tour Saturday & Sunday, April 6 & 7, 2019 

APPLY TO BE A GARDEN TOUR HOST

16th Annual Theodore Payne Native Plant Garden Tour
Saturday & Sunday, April 6 & 7, 2019
Applications are being accepted now.

 

Brutsche Garden, Long Beach

Be part of the region’s best garden tour. Being a garden host is a lot of fun and a great way to support TPF. 

We will review applications and visit gardens for the 2019 tour beginning August 2018 and ending October 1, 2018.
The online application lists all of the garden criteria.
The goal of our tour is to inspire Angelenos by providing real-world examples of California native gardens that are beautiful, functional, and possible for every type of landscape, large and small. We are seeking high-quality, well-established (at least three years old) native plant gardens within LA County.
Don’t be shy – apply

Mr. & Mrs. Mallard enjoying the rain while preparing for the 7th season of their hit Reality Show The Mallards of Hollywoodland Gifted Park!

Mallard ducks: It seems like they’re everywhere, and they’re familiar to most of us. but what do you know about them? Here are 15 fabulous facts about the Mallards!

1. MALES AND FEMALES LOOK VERY DIFFERENT.

Only the male mallards have the iridescent green head feathers, white “collar” on the neck and dark brown breast. The females are comparatively drab, with mottled brown and tan plumage all over. Both sexes, though, have a dark blue-black band of feathers, bordered by white, on their wings.

2. THEY DON’T SOUND ALIKE, EITHER.

Male mallards don’t sound much like what we think ducks sound like. They don’t quack, and instead produce deeper, raspier one- and two-note calls. They can also make rattling sounds by rubbing their bills against their flight feathers. The females make the stereotypical quack, and often produce what’s called a “decrescendo call”—a series of 2–10 quacks that start loud and get softer and shorter.

3. THEY’RE VERSATILE—AND EVERYWHERE.

Christof Stache/AFP/Getty Images

Mallards can live in nearly any wetland habitat, natural or artificial. They’ll make themselves at home in and around lakes, ponds, rivers, marshes, estuaries and coastlines, as well parks and backyards. That versatility (and a little help from humans, who likely introduced them in various locations) has allowed them to span across the globe, and they can be found across North America, Eurasia and New Zealand, and in parts of Central and South America, the Caribbean, Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, Japan and Australia.

4. THEY’RE THE ANCESTORS OF ALMOST ALL DOMESTIC DUCKS.

Only two species of wild duck—the mallard and the Muscovy Duck—have been domesticated by humans. The vast majority of domestic duck breeds descend from mallards and were developed by selectively breeding different domestic birds (and sometimes domestic and wild individuals) for desired traits like plumage, growth speed, and high egg production.

5. THEY’RE DABBLERS.

Mallards are “dabbling ducks,” a cute term that means they feed by floating on the water and tipping themselves forward, butts in the air, to graze on underwater plants or grab insects. They’re as cosmopolitan in their diet as they are in their habitat choices, and will eat plants, worms, snails, other insects and their larvae, and shrimp. On land, they’ll also eat agricultural grains and seeds, especially during migration. And, of course, they’re happy to take bread and other handouts from people in parks (though this isn’t always good for them). Their diet is generally two-thirds plant matter and one-third animal protein.

6. THEY’LL MATE WITH DUCKS FROM OTHER SPECIES.

The mallard’s wide range puts them in contact with plenty of other duck species, and they’ll readily mate with them, producing a number of hybrids like the Mallard X American Black Duck and the Mallard X Northern Pintail.

7. THEIR FAMILIES CAN BE A LITTLE COMPLICATED.

Mallards form pairs in the fall, court throughout the winter, and then breed in the spring. These pairs are generally monogamous, but “extra-pair copulations” can still happen because both paired and unpaired males sometimes mate with paired females whose partners aren’t keeping an eye on things, leading to broods with multiple fathers.

8. THEY FLY FAST AND HIGH.

Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

Migrating mallards have been clocked flying at 55 miles per hour, slightly faster than the average waterfowl. While they usually cruise at an altitude of less than 10,000 feet, they can get much higher. In 1962, a mallard was struck by a commercial airliner at 21,000 feet—a record altitude for a bird-aircraft collision at the time.

Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

 

9. THEY CAN LIVE A LONG TIME.

When a mallard was shot by a hunter in 2008, a band on its leg revealed that it had been tagged by biologists in 1981, making it at least 27 years old and the oldest known mallard on record. That bird was a lucky duck, though—the average lifespan is just 3–5 years in the wild and about a decade in captivity.

10. THEY’VE BEEN ON THE BOOKS FOR A WHILE. 

The mallard was given its scientific description and species name, Anas platyrhynchos, back in 1758 by Carl Linnaeus, the “father of modern taxonomy.” He derived the name from the Latin word for “duck” and an ancient Greek term for “broad-billed.”

11. THERE ARE A LOT OF THEM.

Mallards are among the most abundant ducks in the world, and in the U.S. alone, the mallard population is estimated to be 11.6 million birds. That’s good, because they’re also one of the most heavily hunted ducks, and account for one out of every three ducks shot in North America.

12. YOU CAN FIND THEM IN A LUXURY HOTEL.

The Peabody Memphis

In 1933, the general manager of The Peabody Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee came back from a hunting trip and thought it would be funny to place some of his live decoy ducks in the hotel’s fountain. The stunt was a hit with the guests, and since then, “The Peabody Ducks”—a group of one male and four female mallards, borrowed from a local farm and retired after three months to live wild again—have lived in the “Royal Duck Palace” on the hotel’s rooftop and are brought down daily for a swim in the lobby. The hotel Duckmaster looks after them during their stay.

13. ONE MALLARD IS FAMOUS FOR AN UNFORTUNATE POSTHUMOUS EVENT.

In 1995, Kees Moeliker, a curator at Rotterdam’s Natuurhistorisch Museum, documented the first case of homosexual necrophilia in mallards after he found one male mallard attempting to mate with another that had died after flying into a museum window. As Moeliker wrote in a paperabout the incident—which won an Ig Nobel Prize in 2003—the mallard “mounted the corpse and started to copulate, with great force, almost continuously picking the side of the head” for nearly an hour and a half before Moeliker intervened.

14. THAT SAME DUCK IS CELEBRATED WITH AN ODD HOLIDAY.

The dead mallard that Moeliker discovered has been commemorated every year since with a holiday called, obviously, Dead Duck Day. On June 5, the anniversary of the duck’s death, Moeliker holds a brief ceremony outside the building that the duck struck (usually holding the unlucky duck, which the Natuurhistorisch Museum had stuffed), talks about animal behavior, and discusses ways to prevent bird-window collisions. The museum also has a “splat”-shaped memorial plaque designating the spot where the duck hit the glass.

15. THEIR BEAKS ARE ORANGE TO MAKE THEM LOOK GOOD.

Evolutionary biologists think that mallards and other ducks have yellow or orange bills and legs to show off for the opposite sex. The bright colors suggest that a duck has been eating right and has a strong immune system, making them attractive mates.

Hollywoodland Wildlife Groups mission is to encourage, guide and help Hollywoodland homeowners to document wildlife on the their property using game trail cameras. Wouldn’t you like to know what critters are using your property?

HOLLYWOODLAND WILDLIFE GROUP

MISSION

 Our mission is to encourage, and help guide, Hollywoodland homeowners to document wildlife on the their property using game trail cameras. Would you like to know what critters are using your property? It is fun, interesting, and maybe valuable information to wildlife biologists and conservationists. People are learning P-22 was on their property as well as bobcats, raccoons, and deer among others wildlife. If you have kids, this project may also be a great way for them to learn about nature, video, and conservation. The images you collect can be shared with naturalists and the group.

BACKGROUND

 Griffith Park is a unique urban “city” park. We have deer, bobcats, fox, a mountain lion, raccoons, hawks, owls as well as other critters inhabiting a fragile hilly desert landscape. This area is surrounded by residential neighborhoods with homes that have habitat in their yards that also offer these animals places to roam, feed and even den. These places are a “buffer zone” into the park before more dense urbanization takes place that is dangerous to wildlife. Many people’s yards offer a valuable resource to the larger ecosystem of Griffith Park. In Hollywoodland there are 575 homes and 100 vacant lots comprising 640 acres and 444 acres of parkland. In 1944, it was originally a gift by the Sherman Company to the city. The “open space” gift that is now part of Griffith Park, identified as a SEA, or Significant Ecological Area, is also located in a high fire hazard zone per state fire code #49. It is also the only Los Angeles hillside residential area bordered by three sides of Griffith Park. So, Hollywoodland is especially valuable as an ecosystem in its own right and as “buffer” to Griffith Park. Over the last few years we’ve heard anecdotally that many people are seeing fewer deer and other wildlife. What kind of future do we want for Hollywoodland and Griffith Park? Do want it to become like Central Park in NYC that has only pigeons and rats and tons of people? Maybe some do, but surely many want to preserve Hollywoodland, and our 444 acres of “open space” within Griffith Park, so our unique habitat and wildlife can be enjoyed for future generations. Experts have already graciously guided us from the Museum of Natural History, the State Park and the city wildlife officer who are excited by our mission. We hope you’ll join our group! If you want to join us, please contact us, and we’ll help you get started. To get a jump-start see the Action Plan below.

ACTION PLAN

  • Buy a game trail camera. Our experts suggest the Bushnell trophy camera HD essential E2 12 MO trail camera. “Amazon” is not necessarily the cheapest and some have used B&H in NYC. So, shop around! The camera needs batteries, and rechargeable is a great way to go.

They need a 32 GB SD card. Check the class & speed needed for your camera. If theft is possible, then buy the cable and housing. Most of us are just putting them in our yards out of view. Use 1080 HD “video” mode for 12 seconds. So, we catch behavior. Then, if desired, take still snapshots from the video. Always use the date and time stamp! If you need tech help, Bushnell has a great help line; we are here for you too.

  • Place the camera in a likely spot. Look for game trails on your property. A game trail, aka wildlife corridor, is a padded down trail of vegetation due to frequent use. DO NOT “bait” (water, food) the camera to draw in wildlife. If you have a pool or spa, so be it. But don’t add a water bowl, etc.
  • How often you use the camera is up to each person/family. Some of us have filmed, deer, bobcats and even P22, but these are rare events so be patient and consistent!

    On September 30, 2017  3:20 AM, Moses Sherman, aka P22 was caught wandering in the 3000 block of Beachwood Drive of the Hollywoodland residential area adjacent to HGP .  Archives from the HOA indicate he is not the first puma in Hollywoodland with sightings in the 1960’s, 1990’s and early 2000’s

  • CLICK TO SEE P22 caught on a trail camera here in Hollywoodland

Some are setting them up on Sunday, and the next Sunday downloading the images to see what wildlife was recorded, putting the images into a folder, recharging the batteries, and setting the camera back up to be checked the following Sunday. It becomes part of an interesting and fun ritual.

  • What to expect on video? You will have leaves blowing triggering the camera, or birds, lizards, etc. Except for leaves, this is all useful data! There are naturalists interested in just lizards, others birds, even rats!

For example, if you post on “iNaturalist.org” experts and regular folks will see it. It’s run by the Museum of Natural History, and the L.A. Nature Map allows citizen scientists to map biodiversity in the L.A. area. This platform accepts photos only. On iNaturalist experts may notice you have an endangered specie, they want to know about! You’d probably never realize it. Even lizards and rats are important to them. Did you know we have kangaroo rates? Never seen one, but we hope to.

  • Record the location, and the duration the camera was set there. For example, one property has 3 game trails. So, each trail will have the camera trained on each trial for four months of the

Over time, you may find you have P22, or a just a nutty squirrel, who like selfies and keeps coming back to pose.

A sassy squirrel caught on video!

  • If you want to share your video or stills with the group, you can post them to the HHA Facebook
  • The Hollywoodland Wildlife Group wants to help you with any questions, and for you to share your images & stories with each other and the professional wildlife folks!

Also, images taken from security cameras are welcome. Contact info: info@hollywoodland.org

February 20, 2018 Wall Street Journal: A Vintage MG That Still Turns Heads in Hollywood. Inspired by the movie ‘Rebecca,’ a Los Angeles designer and Hollywoodland resident Jean Clyde Mason and her late husband Spencer bought the stylish car and she has enjoyed for half a century!

A Vintage MG That Still Turns Heads in Hollywood

Inspired by the movie ‘Rebecca,’ a Los Angeles designer and her husband bought the stylish car she has enjoyed for half a century!

When Ms. Mason took possession of this MG in 1963, she was the second owner, she says. The first was an MG dealer. ‘So technically,’ she says, ‘my husband and I were the first public owners of this car.’ Emily Berl for The Wall Street Journal

Jean Clyde Mason, 84, an artist and designer from Los Angeles, on her 1937 MG SA, as told to A.J. Baime.

My late husband Spencer and I always loved cars. Soon after we married in 1955, we were on a game show called “You Bet Your Life,” and Groucho Marx asked the questions. We won some money and bought our first car: a three-wheeled Morgan. Soon after, we bought a used Jaguar and while I loved the look of it, I always joked that it was like being in love with an actor. It never worked.

According to the official MG website, the British company was founded in 1924 and named for William Morris, the owner of Morris Garages. The company is still in existence today. Emily Berl for The Wall Street Journal

Around 1960 we were watching the 1940 film “ Rebecca, ” starring Laurence Olivier, when we saw this British car move across the screen. It was a 1937 MG SA. We both thought: That is a beautiful car.Soon after, my husband saw an ad for one for sale in England. The British pound was weak at the time, so he bought it for very cheap.

The car came by boat and my husband picked it up at the dock. He drove home and said, “Come down and see your new car.” I was blown away. I was working as an advertising artist and I had graduated UCLA with a design degree. To me, this was the epitome of fine design. My husband put big white-wall tires on it and I thought, this is the most glamorous car I had ever seen.

The car ran beautifully, and I started driving it from our home in the Hollywoodland neighborhood [near the Hollywood sign, which originally read Hollywoodland] to my advertising job downtown. We had owned English cars, so it did not bother me that the steering wheel was on the right-hand side. One of the things I loved about the MG was how it looked in our neighborhood. Many of the original homes in Hollywoodland were built before World War II, so the car fit right in.

Jean Clyde Mason’s 1937 MG SA, which she calls ‘the epitome of fine design.’ Emily Berl for The Wall Street Journal

All these years later, I still live in the same house and still drive this car. On Sundays I will drive to the top of the hill near my home and enjoy the view. Then I will drive to the Tam O’Shanter, which is a stylish English restaurant founded in 1922. They let me park in front so people can see the car.

I have had a magical life and this car has been a wonderful part of it.

Animals Are Losing their Ability to Roam Freely.

Animals Are Losing Their Vagility, or Ability to Roam Freely
www.nytimes.com
Pronghorn antelope along a fence northwest of Casper, Wyo. A study has found that wildlife move far less in regions where humans are present, ultimately threatening the viability of a species. Alan Rogers/Casper Star-Tribune, via Associated Press

HELENA, Mont. — Snow comes early to the Teton mountain range, and when it does the white-bottomed pronghorn that live here get the urge to move.

Following an ancient rhythm, they migrate more than 200 miles to the south, where the elevation is lower, winter is milder and grass is easier to find. Come the spring green-up, they make the second half of the round trip, returning to the Grand Teton National Park.

After thousands of years, biologists are concerned about the future of this migration pattern. While there have been efforts to protect the journey, such as highway overpasses and antelope-friendly fences, some new barriers are looming. Most immediate is the prospect of 3,500 new gas wells planned on federal land at the southern end of the pronghorn’s migratory path. And then there’s the nearby Jonah Natural Gas Field, which is already intensively developed.

“The challenge is understanding how many holes you can punch in the landscape,” said Matthew Kauffman, a professor of wildlife biology at the University of Wyoming, “before a migration is lost.”

Room to move is critical for a wide range of species, but it has long been difficult for researchers to capture where and when they travel.

But a new and growing field called “movement ecology” is casting light on the secretive movements of wildlife and how those habits are changing.

A global study of 57 species of mammals, published in the journal Science, has found that wildlife move far less in landscapes that have been altered by humans, a finding that could have implications for a range of issues, from how well natural systems function to finding ways to protect migratory species.

A herd of mule deer near Gunnison, Colo. In the west, the acceleration of oil, gas and other development on public lands could increase the loss of migration. Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post, via Getty Images

The large study brought together 114 researchers from across the globe who had gathered information from 803 individual animals. They ranged from the smallest animals that can be collared — pocket mice — to the largest, elephants. Using the GPS collars that updated an animal’s location regularly and other data, the project found that vagility — the ability of an organism to move — declines in areas with human footprints by as much as half to two-thirds the distance than in places where there is little or no human activity.

“It is important that animals move, because in moving they carry out important ecological functions like transporting nutrients and seeds between different areas,” said Marlee Tucker, a biologist at Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Center and Goethe University, Frankfurt and the study’s lead author. The ability to move and find food helps keep some imperiled species viable.

There has been exponential growth in data on wildlife movement as technology has evolved, opening new windows into the secret lives of animals. “We used to have one dot on a map twice a day,” said Roland Kays, a biologist at North Carolina State University who participated in the study. “Now we have a point as much as every second and know exactly where they are going, how they are avoiding people, how they are crossing the road and catching prey. It’s big for determining how animals die or where they die and how that affects populations.”

In fact the science has advanced so much, it’s clear that the protection of these critical corridors is lagging. Ryan Zinke, secretary of the Interior Department, just announced a new effort to account for long-distance migrations that cross federal lands.

“We all know that animals go where animals want to go, and more often than not that’s dependent upon natural features like watersheds,” Mr. Zinke said, rather than whether the land is publicly or privately owned. He signed an order to foster cooperation on migrations, “working with ranchers to modify their fences, working with states to collaborate on sage brush restoration, or working with scientists to better understand migration routes,” he said.

The new migration study was made possible by Movebank, a global repository of scientific research on animal movement that has cast much new light on vagility. Records of where animals move can be shared with other researchers, and combined with data on vegetative cover, elevations and temperature, anywhere on the globe, from NASA and other sources.

“It’s an example of open data and data sharing that allows you to answer new questions and give data a second life,” said Dr. Kays, who is also a director of Movebank.

More research is needed to determine the reasons for the decline in vagility and what that means to a species.

Pronghorn antelope wandering through the Jonah natural gas field near Pinedale, Wyo. Anacleto Rapping/Los Angeles Times, via Getty Images

Development threats led to the creation of the Wyoming Migration Initiative, which seeks to identify, study and protect pronghorn, mule deer and other animals’ migrations, which are increasingly at risk on the high plains because of new housing tracts, oil and gas development, roads and other barriers.

Blocked or hampered migrations can mean animals can’t access food sources they need. In 2011, researchers discovered that mule deer in Wyoming make a 150-mile long, twice yearly journey following a wave of green, nutritious grasses from the Red Desert to Hoback.

“It’s like a spring salad mix,” said Dr. Kauffman, founder and director of the migration initiative and an author on the new paper. “They go to the first patch of green-up, but as those plants dry up they move to the next spot and keep doing that.”

In the West, the acceleration of oil and gas and other development on public lands under the Trump administration could increase the loss of migration.

Many wildlife routes have disappeared. Development in Jackson Hole, Wyo. and Pierre’s Hole in Idaho, has deprived a bighorn sheep herd of their traditional winter range, and now they live solely in the Teton mountains, where they have less food in the winter and are threatened by avalanches.

Less movement among an animal population may also be caused by new food sources created by humans that animals can take advantage of. A study of fishers, a member of the weasel family, looked at movement of the animals in a variety of habitat scenarios near Albany, N.Y., from fragmented to intact areas. “The animals in suburban Albany have tiny home ranges, while the animals in state parks and forests had larger home ranges,” Dr. Kays said. “Animals in cities were more likely to get hit by cars, but also seemed to have a lot more food in terms of the rabbits and squirrels in suburbia.”

Predators may suffer more than other animals from restricted movement because they range over wider areas and encounter more development as they roam. “Wolves are caught in a pinball game, stuck between fences and highways and they can’t get around as much as wolves in wilder situations,” said Mark Hebblewhite, a wildlife biologist at the University of Montana who has a long running study on wolves and elk in British Columbia and contributed data to the new paper.

Understanding the movement of species is especially important as climate change drives species to seek more habitable terrain. Parks and preserves may offer less protection as animals migrate, and increase the need for protection of corridors so some animals can move elsewhere.

“Wild animals on an intact landscape move in sync with their needs,” Dr. Kauffman said. “When you develop the landscape, that leads to less movement and they are less in tune with the naturally occurring pulse of the landscape.”

Be on the alert for Coyote thieves!

 

Stolen food being reported on Durand Drive ridge line.  In the last two weeks workman witnessed a rather bold coyote stealing their lunch bags.  A similar incident happened when a property owner unloaded his car, turned his back and saw a coyote snatch a doggie bag with a steak from Musso and Franks.   Please be on the alert for these animal thieves  The description of the culprit is the same:  healthily bushy, bold, cocky, ear buds and a swagger.

Councilman Ryu’s $120,000 report can doom HGP and Hollywoodland. Its recommendations put Hollywoodland in grave danger of extinction

Mullholland Drive and Canyon Lake illegal vista sites attracting thousands of tourists.

Sarajane Schwartz, member of Hollywoodland Gifted Park and Homeowners on Beachwood Drive United (HBDU) spoke before the Recs and Park Commission on January 17,2018 regarding Councilman Ryu’s $120,000 report that can doom Hollywoodland. The recommendations put HGP and Hollywoodland in grave danger of extinction.

I am here representing Hollywoodland Homeowners Association and we are opposed to almost every suggestion in this plan that involves Hollywoodland.  What’s most disappointing and actually devastating is that the thrust of these suggestions are how to literally transform, redesign, and defacto rezone a fragile, hillside residential neighborhood into an amusement park.  Most of these suggestions have already been considered in the past and found to be illegal or unsafe.  And for example, there was not even consideration given to something as basic as street widths and standards.”

“During the recent holidays we had a preview of some of these ideas when our neighborhood was flooded with extra enforcement funded by City Council, and at various locations the personnel kept begging their supervisors to shut it all down–that it was unsafe.  This plan contains more band-aids trying to force a square peg into a round hole instead of keeping residents and visitors safe, preserving the passive state of the western side of Griffith Park for plants and animals, and funneling visitors to access points, possibly new ones in the northern perimeter of Griffith Park away from residential neighborhoods.”

“Real SOLUTIONS for these problems will be found away from fragile, hillside residential neighborhoods.”

Read the report here!    

Read The Data Collection and Analysis Here!

In HGP and Hollywoodland there are no legal entrances into Griffith Park, they have all been illegally bootlegged in.

Sarajane Schwartz, member of Hollwoodland Gifted Park and Homeowners on Beachwood Drive United (HBDU) spoke before the Recs and Park Commission on January 17,2018. This is factual information that needs to be acted on by the city.

“I’m here speaking for the Hollywoodland Homeowners Assoc which represents the almost 600 homes in this almost century old neighborhood—the only one that juts into Griffith Park as a bottleneck and is precariously surrounded on three sides by parkland in this very high severity fire zone.

Councilman Tom LaBonge’s office workers digging in the park and removing greenery to make an unauthorized view site. These people were not RAP employees.

Our infrastructure of narrow, winding, blind curved, dead end streets with no sidewalks is so substandard that even before our neighborhood was inundated with tourists, a resident died in a house fire because the firetrucks could not navigate our narrow streets.  This was one of the impetuses for starting The Red Flag Program.”

“There are no legal entrances into the park.  They have all been bootlegged in.  By bootlegged, for example, we have footage of office workers digging in  the park and removing greenery to make an unauthorized view site. These people were not RAP employees.  This is no way to run a park. “

“The one at the end of Beachwood was the subject of recent litigation, and in the court findings the City stipulated that this never was an official entrance into the park.

1994 Switchback.

Several years earlier without any proper process a switchback and parking lot had been put in. RAP removed the parking lot, but not the illegal switchback.  We are demanding that it be removed.”

“This dubious access point was closed because of safety reasons, but the switchback is still there that acts as a magnet that attracts hundreds of people  literally into our streets. ( There is a SAFE access

2015 Switchback.

to this same trail from the official entrance to the park at the end of Canyon Drive. ) Also unlike all of the other real entrances to the park in residential neighborhoods that are locked—usually at sundown–this one, that is not a public access point, remains open as an exit always.  It never closes.”

“Get rid of the switchback and restore this area back to what it had been for 80 years before these unauthorized features were added.”

The City of Los Angeles continues to allow thousands of hiker/visitors that view the Hollywood sign to trample the area surrounding the Tryolean water Tank. The Tyrolean Tank Plateau is the main water source for the residential Hollywoodland community.

Direct results of park abuse. The overuse of HGP at the end of Deronda and Mulholland Hwy. The city allowed the Tyrolean Tank Plateau to be denuded from its original native chaparral.

Mudslides in HGP 1/9/2018
Photo courtesy Alexa Williams

They have allowed thousands of hiker/visitors to trample the area to “view the sign”. All this activity occurs just yards away from the DWP Tyrolean Gravity fed water tank. That tank is the primary water source for the residential Hollywoodland community.

Area beneath the Tyrolean Plateau. Photo courtesy Alexa Williams

The misuse of this area is unsettling and unsafe in many respects. The  photo above right shows how the trampled HGP cause mudslides into the residential area. The  photo above left shows the area beneath the Tyrolean Plateau.

Theodore Payne Foundation Garden Tour Tickets + 2018 California Native Plant Society Conservation Conference

Dear Friend of TPF:
 
We appreciate all you do to promote native plants. Because of your support last year – including an amazing $55,000 in year-end donations – we are able to educate and inspire countless Angelenos about the beauty and value of native plant landscapes. You know that sustainable native gardens make a difference in people’s lives and enhance the well-being of our natural habitat.Thanks to you, we’ll continue our work in 2018 and beyond.
This week, the first storm of the season arrived, causing great losses in Montecito. Closer to home, we’ve had mudslides and road closures in La Tuna Canyon, but nothing that compares…our hearts go out to our neighbors to the north.
At TPF, our sales yard and store have been hopping with gardeners who know that it’s planting time! We hope you’ll visit soon – to shop, learn, hike, relax, and enjoy all that TPF has to offer.
Lastly, it’s not too late to pick up your Theodore Payne 2018 Conservation Calendar with 12 original posters by our Artist in Residence Edward Lum – available online or at our Sun Valley HQ.
In this issue:
  • Winter Sale
  • Volunteer News
  • Garden Tour Tickets
  • 2018 CNPS Conservation Conference & Upcoming Classes
  • Employment Opportunity at TPF
HOURS 
TuesdaySaturday, 8:30am-4:30pm (Closed SundayMonday)
WINTER SALE
Rhus ovata, Sugar Bush .
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JANUARY 26 & 27
8:30am-4:30pm
 
Discounts to all on the best and most interesting selection of native plants in the region, with expert advice from TPF staff and volunteers.
Members: 15% off plants, seed & TPF gear
Non-members: 10% off plants, seed &TPF gear
(Not yet a member? Join here or at the door!)
View sale offerings on our online nursery inventory, updated each Thursday.
VOLUNTEER NEWS
TPF Executive Director Kitty Connolly (L) with
Volunteer Louise Olson
When a need arises, our TPF volunteers are there! We especially want to thank Louise Olson, our terrific seed program volunteer, who rose to the occasion at the start of the Creek Fire in December, when, once again, we evacuated our precious archives, seed, artwork and other valuables. Having “practiced” evacuation procedures during the La Tuna Fire in September, our van and staff cars were loaded up in minutes. And this time, almost everything was moved to a single, nearby location provided by Louise. This greatly simplified storage and return of the materials. Yes, our volunteers are the best.
Volunteer activities abound at TPF, with events and projects for volunteers of every age. Our great new online system lets you specify your interests and availability, and track your volunteer hours that can be traded for classes..
We need volunteers for our upcoming Winter Sale, January 26 & 27. Duties vary, lunch is provided and hours are DOUBLED! This sale is the perfect opportunity for high school students who need to complete service hours.
We’re also taking Garden Tour Docent signups (with 45 gardens on the tour, we need around 90 volunteers). View and register for EVENTS here.
But, wait, there’s more! We need help in the bookstore and sales yard, and with K-12 field trips. Apply for PROJECTS hereThank you!
GARDEN TOUR TICKETS
Illustration by Gene Bauer
15th Annual Theodore Payne
Native Plant Garden Tour
Saturday & Sunday, April 14 & 15. 2018
 
The Garden Tour is our biggest outreach event of the year and a source of inspiration for Angelenos looking to create sustainable landscapes that save water and support wildlife.
 
Save with early bird ticket prices!
 
PURCHASE TICKETS

This year’s event includes 45 amazing native plant gardens in neighborhoods throughout Los Angeles County, including 21 new to the tour.

A huge thank you to our Garden Tour sponsors, including:
Susan & Dan Gottlieb 
2018 CNPS CONSERVATION CONFERENCE
We’re excited that 10 TPF staff members will be making a strong presence at the 2018 CNPS Conservation Conference to be held February 1-3 in Los Angeles. We’ll be greeting more than 1000 attendees at our exhibit booth, building alliances, attending talks and workshops – and five TPF staffers will be making presentations and creating posters.
You, too, can attend. Registration for the conference ends January 14. Details.
UPCOMING CLASSES 
TPF members save 20% or more on classes. Join.
Three-Part California Native Garden Design 
– Saturdays, beginning Feb 10, 9:00am-1:00pm, with Andreas Hessing
– Saturdays, beginning Feb 17, 9:00am-1:00pm, with Carol Armour Aronson
 

More Classes 

– Native Plant Maintenance Basics, a walk and talk with Steve Singer, Fri, Jan 19, 2:00-3:00pm
– Propagating California Native Plants with Jordan Isken, Sat, Jan 20, 9:00-noon
See all classes and register here.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY 
Always wanted to work at TPF? Here’s your chance. The Theodore Payne Foundation is accepting applications for a Bookstore Assistant. The position is part-time and reports to the Bookstore and Front Office Manager.
Click here for complete information and to apply.
THEODORE PAYNE FOUNDATION
FOR WILD FLOWERS & NATIVE PLANTS, INC.
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Theo Payne himself with Fremontodendron (flannel bush)
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