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East Sacramento Preservation
- East Lawn Memorial Park Guided Historic Walking Tours 02/08/2025
- 20 Is Plenty Lawn Sign Available 02/04/2025
- 77 Volunteers, 16 Trees, and a Greener Future 02/03/2025
- Make a Date to Help the Tree Canopy 01/06/2025
- Insist on Trees (First published in 2015) 12/14/2024
Category Archives: Parks
Update: Capitol Park Historic Trees on the Chopping Block—How to Take Action
Many in the city are hearing about the State Capitol Annex Project for the first time. East Sacramento Preservation will continue to send updates. Below are links explaining the project and information about how to comment. ESP opposes two components of the project. First, the cutting and/or attempted relocation of dozens of healthy, historic trees and second, the building of an underground parking lot in Capitol Park. Both actions are environmentally unsound. If you would like to contact ESP directly, please write a comment to this post. (Comment link at the very end of the post.)
The report may be found here:
Look under Sacramento for Capitol Annex Project and the Recirculated-Draft Environmental Impact Report
Guidelines for writing responses to Draft Environmental Impact reports are here
https://www.patagoniaalliance.org/writing-comments-draft-environmental-assessments/
send all CEQA comments to:
This is an entire website on the State Capitol rebuild project but not user friendly and not advertised well to the public.
https://annex.assembly.ca.gov/
Of most importance is to look at this page and click on Project Overview and Sequence Report:
https://annex.assembly.ca.gov/content/hearings
and this power point, available directly here:
https://annex.assembly.ca.gov/sites/annex.assembly.ca.gov/files/POS%20powerpoint.pdf
Ducklings and Goslings: A Message from Judy McClaver
Spring is here and it’s baby season for wildlife. This includes waterfowl. Ducks and geese have made their nests and are hatching their eggs. They nest under shrubs, in high grass, up in trees, in your backyards, in parks, and along waterways. Not all nests are next to water. They can be blocks away.
If you see a mother duck with her ducklings crossing a street, she is headed to water. Help her by protecting her from car traffic but don’t chase her. She knows where she is going and can only go the speed of her babies. If the ducklings are in your pool, put a ramp in for the babies to get out or raise the water level way up to the lip of the pool. They have no protection other than their moms from cold and wet, though they can swim.
Please keep your dogs on leash when out and about to prevent them disturbing or injuring the nests or babies. If orphaned babies are found, please deliver to your local wildlife rehab organization (see below). It is illegal to keep wildlife more than two days and likely they will not survive without proper feed and care. Handling them will also cause enough stress to kill them. Gathering babies up or removing them from their parents and releasing them into a pond, canal, or river is a death sentence. Ducklings and goslings need parental protection. Wildlife are protected by Federal and State laws and there are fines for harassing or disturbing wildlife.
These organizations rehabilitate orphaned wildlife:
Gold Country Wildlife – https://goldcountrywildliferescue.org/wildlife-emergency/Sierra Wildlife – http://www.sierrawildliferescue.org/so-you-found-a/
Wildlife Care Assoc – https://wildlifecareassociation.com/found-animal/
Do not feed bread, chips or crackers to waterfowl anywhere (adults or babies).
Here are some tips to keep the feeding fun and the waterfowl healthy:
- Don’t overfeed. Take a small bag of treats.
- Explain to the kids that the ducks are on a special diet to help them stay healthy.
- Feed dark, leafy greens (not iceberg lettuce), some corn, carrots, and peas for extra treats.
- Western Feed carries fowl scratch and corn. This commercial food is nutritionally designed for birds. Pellets and crumble can be found at other stores.
- You can make small feed balls with brown rice, hardboiled eggs and greens.
- Avoid feeding goslings or ducklings.
Misfeeding waterfowl has heartbreaking consequences. Wings of baby fowl can become deformed from a processed-carbohydrate diet. The unusual deformity called ‘angel wing’ can be a symptom. Adults can also become sick if the bread gets stuck in their crops.
Posted in Animal Welfare, Bertha Henschel, East Portal, McKinley Park, McKinley Park Pond, Uncategorized
Tagged ducks, East Sacramento, East Sacramento Preservation, geese, judy mcclaver, ponds, sacramento wildlife
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