Archive for the ‘Reno Parks’ Category

In walk with Councilmembers Sharon Zadra and Jessica Sferrazza, Lauren Scott shares great idea

July 27, 2009

Several people braved the impossible heat at noon today to join Sharon Zadra and Jessica Sferrazza on yet another Monday noon walk, a regular event started about a couple of months ago.  This event gives constituents an opportunity to bring their concerns and issues directly to their representatives on the city council.  Except now, future Monday walks may not happen at noon until our heat wave ends (which doesn’t seem to be anytime soon).  So, plans are to find either an early morning or early evening time to do this on the weekly Monday walks.  Still, people did show up at noon, gathering at the foot bridge at West Street Plaza.  And, thanks to that Facebook site, no one (except this one couple, unknown to me anyway) were strangers. 

Lauren Scott had already posted an idea on the Wall at Facebook and it’s a good one.  It addresses the wasteful and polluting practice of restaurants, etc. discarding their used cooking oil; she pointed out that all that could be used (after a fairly inexpensive processing of it) as biodiesel fuel (for our city buses, for example).  Jessica already knew Lauren was going to bring this up, so it was an easy matter for Lauren to brief Sharon and Jessica on this.   Examples were given of other cities that had programs to use the oil.  Both council members clearly want to follow up with an examination of this as a possible practice in Reno also.  (In addition to city buses, Don Clark also suggested that school buses could also be fueled with biodiesel.  He also had some news in regards to the possible use of fuel cells in city buses.  Clark and his wife Susan are the folks at Cathexes, btw.  See the recent article on the event that was recently held there.)

(Lauren’s Facebook wall post reposted at bottom of this article as an “addendum”.  Note the useful links provided.)

We ended up walking all the way to the spot under the Wells Street bridge where the walk labrynith is and then retracing our steps back to downtown:

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In above photo: Sharon, Don, and Lauren

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In above photo, couple whose names I don’t know, Donna at rear (she found us late in the walk!) and Jessica on the right.

On another note:  Since I lived and worked in Napa for a little over 20 years, I was curious about the road trip the Mayor and the City Council recently took to Napa (and San Francisco) to check out their open aired market plazas.  So I asked Jessica about that.  She reported that Reno and Napa have similiar flood control plans for the rivers running through our respective cities.  She also noted, that unlike Reno, their river trail (I think she’s probably referring to the downtown area of Napa) didn’t run immediately adjacent to the river.  (At one point, she pointed across the river and told me about that tall building across from the ballpark and how it should have had a set back so people could now have easy walk access also on the north side of the river along that stretch, just east of the downtown center.)

Another note: when I told Jessica about Paula McDonough’s effort to open up an affordable grocery store at the 2nd and N. Sierra St site, she was very enthusiastic….saying such a store was clearly needed.

Addendum:  Here is Lauren’s wall post at the Facebook event page set up for today’s walk.  Note the useful links.

I would like to discuss starting a municipal waste cooking oil collection program (from schools, hotels and restaurants) with the intention of recycling this useful product into biodiesel for private use and for use in the city and county buses and municipal fleets. This program would reduce the amount of oil in the waste stream and sewers, reduce the cities dependence on foreign oil and reduce the pollution from traditional #2 diesel. It might even save some money. For more information –

Used Cooking Oil—Harvesting an Urban Crop from Casinos
http://www.epa.gov/region09/waste/biodiesel/nevada.html#casinos

Producing Biodiesel for Municipal Vehicle Fleets from Recycled Cooking Oil
http://www.alabamacleanfuels.org/docs/AUMuncipalBiodieselGuideFINAL.pdf

Life Cycle Inventory of Biodiesel and Petroleum Diesel for Use in an Urban Bus
http://www.epa.gov/region09/waste/biodiesel/resources/DOE_DOAG_lifecycle.pdf

Third Eye viewings at Oxbow Park, part two: The scarred trees

November 29, 2008
Oxbow Nature Study Park, November 2008

Oxbow Nature Study Park, November 2008

More photos have been added to the Oxbow Nature Study Park photo set that I have established at Flickr as “The Rebirth of Oxbow Park”. 

Here you can see how the fire last April affected many of the trees there.  Also, note the new and expanded trail that they are building there.  Here’s the link to that photo set:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/28424275@N06/sets/72157609535220095/

More pictures will be added soon: Beaver Pond, shots along the river and along the main trail.

Third Eye viewings of a ravaged Oxbow (part one)

November 24, 2008
Oxbow Nature Study Park, Nov. 2008

Oxbow Nature Study Park, Nov. 2008

Yesterday I took a second trip (this month) to Oxbow Nature Study Park, a wildlife and forested reserve two miles west of downtown Reno.  The south end of the park is bordered by the Truckee River and the north by the railroad tracks running along West 4th Street.  This site is home to many species of birds and small mammals (like beavers, muskrats, and even minks).  Many Cottonwood trees, and various species of bushes, provide a dense cover of vegetation.

That vegetation was largely cleaned out this past April, when 18 of the 22 acres of this park burned.  Twenty large Cottonwood trees were lost right away and twenty more cut down in subsequent weeks due to the hazards they posed.  First sightings of the park (which had to be from across the river then for the park remained closed for some time) revealed a smooth, blackened surface where grasses and heavy brush had been.  Most of the Cottonwood trees appeared to be charred in varying degrees.  But, the grasses and brushes are now flourishing very healthfully.

So, yesterday I finished taking more pictures of the park in its current state.  I already have developed several photos taken during a first visit about a week or so ago: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/28424275@N06/sets/72157609535220095/

I’ll add the more recent photos soon to the above photo set posted at my “eurekamoksha” flickr account.

Care of the park is overseen by the Nevada Department of Wildlife, which has published online a great brochure (with a very clear map included):

http://www.ndow.org/about/pubs/pdf/brochure/oxbow.pdf

The NDOW this past August described restoration plans:
 
http://www.ndow.org/about/news/pr/081408_oxbow.shtm