Monday, March 31, 2008

Smart Houses for Birds


BIRDHOUSES by Francis Mangels:

When I bought my first table saw, I made birdhouses. I don’t like insecticides, and the birds did a much better job. I don’t have bug problems any more.

Any pine or fir board over 6” wide will do, nails, knots, and all, but unpainted because most birds hate paint and some paint is toxic. I’ll give you a pattern or make houses.

Many birdhouse designs are out there, but if you can make a box with a hole in it, most birds will use it locally under certain conditions. Audubon and bird websites can show you good basic models. Artsy designer models are often lethal to any birds that try to nest in them. A birdhouse must be made of standard boards.

I use the basic simplest and best type. The sides are identical, and therefore any other error in cutting is inconsequential. The front must be removed by screws every 2-3 years for cleaning. The box must have small gaps or holes in the floor for drainage/ventilation.

All local backyard birds like 6-7” boards and a house about 10-14” high with dry grass, leaves, or coarse sawdust floor.

The size of the hole determines which bird will use it. Locally, a 1¼“ hole is ideal for most birds. A bluebird uses a 1½” hole, but the house must be near a wet meadow area. A wren uses a 1” hole, but other birds usually widen the hole out to its preference.

Never put a perch on a birdhouse. This provides a platform to scrub jays and crows, which will eat the helpless fledglings inside the birdhouse. I’ve seen it done many times, so don’t put a perch on a birdhouse.

The box must be solidly mounted, not swinging on a wire. Most birds don’t like motion.

Location is everything. It must be where birds can see it, with food nearby, and somewhat safe from cats. Sun exposure is usually good, like the warm wall of a home.

Generally for Mt. Shasta, orient the hole to the north, east, or west. Our spring storms usually come from the south, and nesting birds don’t like rain in the front door.

Mounting a birdhouse under the eaves at a corner of your house/garage is the best place in town. This spot is cat proof and weather-safe. Birds prefer this place to trees.

You’ll get nuthatches, chickadees, tree swallows, and house sparrows in most cases. Maybe a wren, bluebird, or titmouse will use birdhouses in the right location.

Each birdhouse occupied will eliminate about 20,000 bugs per month. This is a good payback for 20 minutes building a birdhouse. This is a good deal for both of us.

Don’t feed the birds, but if you must, remove all feeders at the first frost, the fall equinox, or anytime in September. A bird has to eat on the way south, and if they are held here too long, they can’t find enough food on the way south. They eat well off you, but then they starve or get frozen in the first storm. This is not nice to the birds, so don’t kill them.

Birds need housing, not a handout. Suburban environments are loaded with bugs, but we cut down dead trees birds nest in. A birdhouse is a good substitute that helps the bird and helps us live sustainably together. Forget pesticides and let the birds do the job. It’s nice.

I’ll build the houses. Somebody find some old boards and call Francis at 926-0311. I’d like to make a mountain of houses by Earth Day and the migratory birds are arriving already. We need to kindly sustain these little feathered friends with new homes.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Who's On First

Lake Shastina Fire Safe Council
Minutes Pg. 1 of 2

Tuesday – 6 P.M. February 5th, 2008 Fire Dept. Conference Room

I. Call to Order - Present: Beverly Roths, LSCSD Board. Jack Everhart, LSPOA Board. Jamie
Lea, LSCSD Gen. Mgr. Marcia Gifford, LS Resident & Educator. Jeff Burns, CAL FIRE Batt. Chief. Jim Ward, Rancho Hills HOA. Josh Paulus, Lt., LSFD Jasmine Borgatti, Fire Prevention Tech., USDA Forest Service. John Kilburn, LS Resident & LSFSC Secretary.
II. --- Pledge of Allegiance
III. --- Public Comment
IV. --- Old Business

A. ---- LSFD Report ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Lt. Josh Paulus.
Lt. Paulus, as a LS resident sleeper, was one of the first responders to the recent Arson fire on Stag Mountain. Arriving on scene simultaneous as CAL FIRE Weed, which was engineered by Mike McWilliams also of Lake Shastina F.D., ascertained first Building was fully involved and lost. They than turned their attention to the nearest home exposure and discovered interior fire and after forcing entry were able to contain damage to one room.
Mutual Aid was in progress and the Stag Mt. fires command was turned over to Chief Baker of the Mt. Shasta Fire Dist. Chief Baker directed additional responding Mutual Aid units to stage at the L.S. Administration Building. Chief Melo of Mt. Shasta City, as that site Incident Commander, found the Admin. Building heavily involved. A good stop, despite extensive interior damage from heat and smoke, was executed. They had been benefactors of a fortunate early planning move on the part of Chief Baker, Mt. SF Dist., to establish central staging for “all next up” Mutual Aid units due to the, then unknown, number and locations of fires.
CAL FIRE, Batt. Chief Jeff Baker was roaming advisory leadership and with discovered fires under on going control went to the Golf Course building, which was the final site for the Arsonist to vent his irrational havoc on our community. By then several police agencies were involved and arrest was immediate.
· Chief Jeff Burns complimented Lt. Paulus for the excellent report. This was echoed by the entire LSFSC board and our united affirmation of the LSFD “Sleeper” program which houses students from the COS Fire Science course. In exchange they train and respond as LSFD Volunteers. The Community wins and the students win.

B. --- Chip vs. Burn ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Jamie Lea
Jamie reported the Burn Site, for disposal of flammable yard and lot waste, “with its rules and guide lines”, will stay in place to serve the community. The prime difference we will no longer have the Fire Dept. waste their time as a “training exercise” for material disposal. PUBLIC WORKS is now in charge. The site will be cleared to make a “Defensible Space” and the material will be allowed to dry. When the rainy season starts the piles of burnable material will be covered with poly to keep the rain off. Later when it’s safe the material will be burned. With a wet world around and dry trimmings they expect a quick hot fire with little smoke. This will reduce Air Pollution. “Can’t CHIP - BUT IT IS THE NEXT BEST OPTION. Win one for Bruce Batchelder.





Lake Shastina Fire Safe Council
Minutes Pg. 2 of 2

Tuesday – 6 P.M. February 5th, 2008 Fire Dept. Conference Room



C. --- CWPP - LSFSC position report preparation. --------------------------------------- Committee
Jasmine Borgatti, Marcia Gifford and Jeff Burns. Jane St Pierre retiring and may be interested. In the future, when office reestablished, we will see what help office staff can provide in determining remaining relevant past history and presented to committee for completion of the project. A “must “ for future grants.

D. --- Dead & Dying Diseased tree inventory - update. ----------------------------- Jamie Lea
Public Works mapped about 50 dead or dying Pine and Poplar trees, which require removal. Inventory of all relative species still being compiled. Report when complete

E. --- Tree Inspection Program. CAL FIRE & County.
What is L.S. most acceptable tree species? What is proper tree spacing to be attractive and yet
“Fire safe”? What is the CC&R relationship? Discussion introduced the idea of deciduous tree introduction to replace Junipers, where applicable, both for ascetic and fire safety reasons. Report when complete

A. ---- Timber harvest plan for lower cost tree removal. Tabled until completion of
item E.

VI. --- Adjournment

Fire Safe

Lake Shastina Fire Safe Council
Minutes Pg. 1 of 2

Tuesday – 6 P.M. February 5th, 2008 Fire Dept. Conference Room

I. Call to Order - Present: Beverly Roths, LSCSD Board. Jack Everhart, LSPOA Board. Jamie
Lea, LSCSD Gen. Mgr. Marcia Gifford, LS Resident & Educator. Jeff Burns, CAL FIRE Batt. Chief. Jim Ward, Rancho Hills HOA. Josh Paulus, Lt., LSFD Jasmine Borgatti, Fire Prevention Tech., USDA Forest Service. John Kilburn, LS Resident & LSFSC Secretary.
II. --- Pledge of Allegiance
III. --- Public Comment
IV. --- Old Business

A. ---- LSFD Report ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Lt. Josh Paulus.
Lt. Paulus, as a LS resident sleeper, was one of the first responders to the recent Arson fire on Stag Mountain. Arriving on scene simultaneous as CAL FIRE Weed, which was engineered by Mike McWilliams also of Lake Shastina F.D., ascertained first Building was fully involved and lost. They than turned their attention to the nearest home exposure and discovered interior fire and after forcing entry were able to contain damage to one room.
Mutual Aid was in progress and the Stag Mt. fires command was turned over to Chief Baker of the Mt. Shasta Fire Dist. Chief Baker directed additional responding Mutual Aid units to stage at the L.S. Administration Building. Chief Melo of Mt. Shasta City, as that site Incident Commander, found the Admin. Building heavily involved. A good stop, despite extensive interior damage from heat and smoke, was executed. They had been benefactors of a fortunate early planning move on the part of Chief Baker, Mt. SF Dist., to establish central staging for “all next up” Mutual Aid units due to the, then unknown, number and locations of fires.
CAL FIRE, Batt. Chief Jeff Baker was roaming advisory leadership and with discovered fires under on going control went to the Golf Course building, which was the final site for the Arsonist to vent his irrational havoc on our community. By then several police agencies were involved and arrest was immediate.
· Chief Jeff Burns complimented Lt. Paulus for the excellent report. This was echoed by the entire LSFSC board and our united affirmation of the LSFD “Sleeper” program which houses students from the COS Fire Science course. In exchange they train and respond as LSFD Volunteers. The Community wins and the students win.

B. --- Chip vs. Burn ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Jamie Lea
Jamie reported the Burn Site, for disposal of flammable yard and lot waste, “with its rules and guide lines”, will stay in place to serve the community. The prime difference we will no longer have the Fire Dept. waste their time as a “training exercise” for material disposal. PUBLIC WORKS is now in charge. The site will be cleared to make a “Defensible Space” and the material will be allowed to dry. When the rainy season starts the piles of burnable material will be covered with poly to keep the rain off. Later when it’s safe the material will be burned. With a wet world around and dry trimmings they expect a quick hot fire with little smoke. This will reduce Air Pollution. “Can’t CHIP - BUT IT IS THE NEXT BEST OPTION. Win one for Bruce Batchelder.





Lake Shastina Fire Safe Council
Minutes Pg. 2 of 2

Tuesday – 6 P.M. February 5th, 2008 Fire Dept. Conference Room



C. --- CWPP - LSFSC position report preparation. --------------------------------------- Committee
Jasmine Borgatti, Marcia Gifford and Jeff Burns. Jane St Pierre retiring and may be interested. In the future, when office reestablished, we will see what help office staff can provide in determining remaining relevant past history and presented to committee for completion of the project. A “must “ for future grants.

D. --- Dead & Dying Diseased tree inventory - update. ----------------------------- Jamie Lea
Public Works mapped about 50 dead or dying Pine and Poplar trees, which require removal. Inventory of all relative species still being compiled. Report when complete

E. --- Tree Inspection Program. CAL FIRE & County.
What is L.S. most acceptable tree species? What is proper tree spacing to be attractive and yet
“Fire safe”? What is the CC&R relationship? Discussion introduced the idea of deciduous tree introduction to replace Junipers, where applicable, both for ascetic and fire safety reasons. Report when complete

A. ---- Timber harvest plan for lower cost tree removal. Tabled until completion of
item E.

VI. --- Adjournment

Notes from the Fire Safe Council

Lake Shastina Fire Safe Council
Minutes

Tuesday – 6 P.M. November 6th, 2007 LS Conference Room

I. --- Call to Order
II. --- Pledge of Allegiance
III. --- Public Comment
IV. --- Old Business

A. ---- Fire Chief’s Report -------------------------------------------------------- Mike Montreuil
Recommend returning sleepers be compensated by LSCSD like
Amador Plan as Cal Fire personnel are not available this year.
“Status Quo” on operations.

B. --- Chip vs. Burn -------------------------------------------------------------------- Jamie Lea
“Agreed that private contractors should be utilized and recommend
to the HOA boards for a resolution and provide to the public a list of
preferred and certified vendors.” This has been accomplished. Jamie
also checking on options available to replace burn site for disposal of
flammable yard and lot waste.

C. --- CWPP - LSFSC position report preparation. ---------------- Jasmine & Jamie
Jasmine Borgatti provided copies of the MS CWPP and
evacuation handout as well as Fire severity Zones of The SRA.
Data shared with Marcia Gifford. Committee expanded to
include Jeff Burns. Jane St Pierre will be retiring and maybe
interested in overseeing the project. Jamie stated much of the
recorded history is extant for developing the CWPP and that he
will contact Jane to determine her availability.

D. --- Dead & Dying Diseased tree inventory ---------------------------------- Jamie Lea
Jamie reported that Jay, of Public Works Dept., Identified and
mapped about 50 dead or dying Pine and Poplar trees which
require removal. Jay was determining safe removal cost.

E. --- Tree Inspection Program. ---------------------------------- Jamie Lea & Jim Ward
What is L.S. acceptable tree species? What is proper
lot tree spacing to be attractive and yet “fire safe”?
What is the CC&R relationship? Discussion introduced
the idea of deciduous tree introduction to replace Junipers,
where applicable, both for ascetic and fire safety reasons.
Status report and/or discussion.
V. ---- New Business

A. --- Good of the order?

VI. --- Adjournment

Next meeting: 1st Tuesday – December - 12/4/07 6 P.M.
Admin. Conference Room.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Chili Dump Set for April 26


Lake Shastina's chili dumpers have announced plans for their 6th annual Chili Dump to be held Saturday April 26th at the Community Center.

Festivities this year will include a chili-tasting contest, drawings for valuable prizes, live music, and of course the by now famous Chili Dump itself.

Doors open at 6pm but seating is limited so make your reservations early by calling the RSVP line 938-0385 right away. Tickets are only $2 and you need to bring your own eating utensils, bowls, and beverages.

Please also bring enough chili to feed your group and, if you wish to participate in the chili tasting contest, a small amount in a separate container for that purpose.

This event is usually sold out every year so don't delay. Call 938-0385 and reserve your seats today.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Got Turkey !


For several months we have enjoyed watching a wild turkey in our neighborhood (Unit 7-3, Muskrat Rd. in Lake Shastina). We think it's a hen but we're not sure and I'm waiting for our neighbor Larry Harrison who is retired DFG to return from his annual 3 month winter sojourn in Mexico (which is another story) to ask.

Anyway, she wanders all over the 'hood pecking and scratching everybody's front and back yards, almost oblivious to people and dogs. Neck straight up, she'll keep an eye on you and if chased, she'll trot away and lift off out of harm's way.

So, that's cool. She even visited over Thanksgiving which upped my estimation of her chutzpah.

Larry had told me that DFG had planted some turkeys out by Hoy Road years ago and that this lady might be a remanent of that seeding. So it came as a great surprise this morning to see 8 or 10 of the birds in a group outside the fence.

Our loyal sheltie Oliver, of course had to dash over to the fence to protect us from them which threw them into flight but the upshot is that our original bird was not the solitary remenant that we thought. There are more of them and they are a treat to see.

I will try to shoot a picture next time.

Editor

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Mac and Cheese


Yes, I'm a mac victim. It's in my blood. If it were not for my my loving wife I would eat the darned stuff right out of the can. Probably heat the can on the stove, too.

But there is help. Chef Boyardee has a new Lo Carb version of my perversion. Whole wheat, no fat sauce, cutting edge culinary tech mac. It comes in a recyclable biodegradable paper container and tastes like. The container.

Cheese used to be good for us. Remember Daisy the cow? So why is all of it now No-No? Seems like somebody out there is just waiting to say "no, that's bad for you!!"

Now, here's the thing. My mom and dad came from the east coast. "Salad" to my mom was a slice of iceberg lettuce with sugar on it. Veggies? Well, we did boiled potatoes, beets, and well, you get the picture.

So when we moved west, California was a whole new culinary mystery. Dad never did figure out why people here liked avocados for example. "They don't have any taste" he used to say, this after boiled everything...

But now we are Californian. Avo is good. Sushi, calamari, sprouts. We're hip.

But dad was right. We don't know oysters here Out West. His favorite was blue point tinys from Long Island. Swallowed whole. Chewing them is / was well, not civilized. And I've done this. The "shooter" is the California version of dad's plan. With tequila, apparently.

So I have 'arrived' I guess, I really like California salads. And sushi. Maybe avocado does have a subtle taste, too ....

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Bruce Batchelder, Editor