Chief Ken Pimlott was appointed Director of CAL FIRE by Governor Jerry Brown in 2011 after an outstanding, 30-year long career in state re protection programs. As Chief of CAL FIRE and also California’s State Forester, Mr. Pimlott is responsible for 237 fire stations, 39 conservation camps, 12 air attack, and 10 helitack bases.
Annual Meeting November 12 at the Claremont Hotel
RSVP: info@ClaremontCanyon.org or call 510-843-2226
Dear Friends and Neighbors
Please join us on
Sunday, November 12, 2017, 4-6 PM The Claremont Hotel
Sonoma Room
Annual Meeting
Reception 4:00 PM
Presentations 4:30 PM
Open Forum 5:30 PM
Invited Speakers: Robert Doyle, General Manager of the East Bay Regional Park District Chief Ken Pimlott, Director of CAL FIRE
“Protecting our public lands, local and state”
Refreshments and wine bar. Invite a friend or neighbor.
The Annual Meeting of the Claremont Canyon Conservancy will be held again at the Claremont Hotel in the Sonoma Room, second floor. All are invited to attend free of charge. After light refreshments and brief updates from the board, we will hear from our two invited speakers, both East Bay residents who have risen to leadership positions in key agencies that have direct impact on the management of public lands and protection of residents. We will first hear from Robert Doyle, General Manager of the East Bay Regional Park District, followed by Ken Pimlott, Director of CAL FIRE. They will update us on their agencies’ efforts to improve fire safety in the East Bay Hills, and the role of the coordinating body, the Hills Emergency Forum, in fostering interagency communication.
Please come hear what these experts have to share with us, and stay for the questions and answers afterward. Be sure to RSVP, as we expect a strong turnout.
Report of the Grizzly Peak Fire from Glen Schneider
We had some big excitement last week. Because of the Grizzly Peak Fire on Wednesday afternoon, we had to cancel our workday. We did get back to Skyine on Sunday and almost finished with Scattergrass in the Bay Grove. Perhaps one more good session will finish that off . . .
Botanists tend to love a fire, because the aftermath is so fascinating. Seeds not seen in decades may sprout. In the early days of California botany, when Jepson was at Cal in the early 1900's, he and others found scores of interesting natives on the slopes of Grizzly Peak. Will they return? How will UC manage the burn area (let's hope they do nothing besides remove the Eucs and Pines)?
Tom Klatt writes to Councilmember Susan Wengraf
"I attended the 8/2/2017 fire Oakland Hills fire scene during operations today and observed conditions and took photos. The City of Berkeley Fire responded, as did many other agencies. The fire would have threatened Berkeley, except that the winds were blowing onshore from the ocean. Imagine if the winds were blowing down the canyon (off-shore), as we see during Diablo Wind condition days. The most effective response came from helicopter water drops, taken from lake Anza, by EBRPD, Cal Fire and other attending helicopters. Most of the firefighters stayed on Grizzly Peak, as the hills are too steep and littered with dead eucalyptus and pine fuel."
Daughter fights fire, by Gerry Keenan
August 2-3 Grizzly Fire media archives
New life for a not-so-hidden trail, guest post by Jim Rosenau
A heavily used foot path into the Claremont Canyon Regional Preserve was recently upgraded by a volunteer trail crew, Take To The Hills. T3H was formed two years ago by Steve Glaeser and myself to build stairways and make the trail safer for travel. Though the trail does not appear on any existing Park District or UC map, was never formally engineered, and was scarcely maintained, it has, for years, attracted both casual and experienced hikers traveling between Dwight Way and Panoramic Hill. Often misunderstood as belonging
What's going on in the canyon this spring, by L. Tim Wallace
This spring, we cover a new group, Take To The Hills, working on trails in the little canyon that runs parallel to Claremont Canyon. That canyon, and the foot path or “social trail” traversing it, have variously been called Derby, Dwight, Clark Kerr and even (at least once) Rattlesnake Canyon/Trail. Along with T3H, we are asking the agencies that own the land to settle on a name that will stick. For now, we agree with T3H that the historic name of Derby, in honor of Derby Creek whose headwaters begin in that small canyon, makes sense.
Volunteers make the canyon beautiful, by Jon Kaufman
Newest Lichen for Claremont Canyon, by Kay Loughman
At the invitation of the Conservancy, in 2009 members of the California Lichen Society surveyed lichens at sixteen sites in Claremont Canyon. Read a report of the survey in the Conservancy’s Fall 2009 Newsletter. In all, 81 lichen species were identified. The results of the survey . . .
Winter Bird Walk with Dave Quady, December 11, 2016, by Kay Loughman
Know your neighbors, create defensible space, a disaster plan, insurance, by Sue Piper
"My Word," reprinted from East Bay with permission from Sue Piper.
"Take action like your life and those of your loved ones depend on it. " This is not just to be sure that Oakland residents living in the hills won’t have to flee for their lives when the next firestorm hits — as it surely will, given five years of California drought, the growing numbers of dead and dying trees, and the unusual topography of the Caldecott Tunnel that leads to small fires every year and major wildfires every 20 years.
Homeowners are key to preventing wildfire losses, by Dr. Robert Sieben
It’s Time to Wake Up and Get Real About Wildfire Risk
We are experiencing a perfect storm as record heat, drought, massive numbers of dead trees, and dying forests are leading to the spread of wildfires like we have never seen before throughout the western United States and Canada. Instead of naively thinking your homeowner’s insurance is going to make up for the trauma of losing your home, or that overwhelmed firefighters are going to be able to save it, it’s time you woke up and got real.
Building trails in Claremont Canyon, by Jon Kaufman
Through its stewardship program, the Claremont Canyon Conservancy has been building and maintaining fire trails in upper Claremont Canyon. Working with the landowners, in this case the University of California, our volunteers have improved the fire trail from Signpost 29 to Four Corners and named it the Summit House Trail (after the old inn that once stood at the top of the canyon).
View from the top of Gwin Canyon, by Tamia Marg-Anderson
FEMA Grants Withdrawn, by L. Tim Wallace
You have probably heard by now that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has withdrawn $3.5 million in wild fire hazard mitigation grants previously awarded to the University of California and the City of Oakland. As a result, both agencies will be postponing much needed vegetation management programs in their parks and open spaces throughout the Oakland Hills, including in Claremont Canyon.
Annual Meeting of the Claremont Canyon Conservancy
Conservancy supports UC's fire plan addendum, by Jon Kaufman
In response to a request for public comment, the Conservancy has written a detailed, five plus page letter in support of the University's plan to implement its grant from FEMA to make the hills above our homes more fire safe. The plan is extremely detailed and addresses all the concerns that have been raised during the years long federal environmental review process.
June 30 2016 fire along Grizzly Peak, by Tom Klatt
Screening of the movie “Bring Back the Oaks,” by Janis Bankoff
On June 6, 2016, at Hiller Highlands Country Club, the Conservancy hosted the premier screening of the film “Bring Back the Oaks: Managing vegetation to reduce fire risk in the East Bay Hills.” Inspired by the controversy surrounding the FEMA grants for wildfire hazard mitigation, and in an effort to address public concerns, the making of the film was co-sponsored by the Sierra Club and the Conservancy, with a grant from the Sustainability, Parks, Recycling and Wildlife Legal Defense Fund.