Bobcat by Cleve Nash
Bobcat by Cleve Nash
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Snowy Egrets by Alan Schmierer
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Goats and Dogs at Point Buchon
by Jeanie Greensfelder
Peregrine Falcon image on banner by
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A Bird's Eye View by Mike Stiles
If you had the time and the money, you could attend a bird festival every month of the year, and travel the entire continent doing it. Many festivals are timed to coincide with migration periods, or to showcase a certain habitat or region. Most offer a wide variety of field trips, workshops, and lectures, and there are even bird festivals dedicated to specific birds like the Lesser Prairie Chicken Festival in Oklahoma or the Kirtland's Warbler Festival in Michigan. Read More
Coastland Contemplations by Michele Oksen
February on our Slo Coast of California is a great time to emphasize the importance of relationships. And, as luck would have it, Mother Nature has, with lichen, provided a wonderful example of how to have a successful one. Lichen? Yes, lichen — the result of a mutually beneficial partnership between algae and fungi. Read More
Elfin Forest by Jean Wheeler
Looking out from Bush Lupine Point or Siena's View, Morro Bay National Estuary is covered with ducks, geese, and other birds, as it normally is in February. They are flying over the water, swimming or sleeping on the water, or diving down under the water after food. Virtually all of our winter visitors are still here, but some will begin leaving before the end of February. March will see a much larger exodus. Read More
Exploring the Coast by Ruth Ann Angus
Whalers and sealers hunted them for their blubber. By the end of the 1880's they were thought to be extinct. But a small colony — between 20 to 100 individuals — managed to survive and took up residence on Guadalupe Island, off Baja, California. All of the elephant seals on the West Coast of the continent are descended from this group. Read More
Marine Sanctuaries by Carol Georgi & Karl Kempton
Imagine a San Luis Obispo (SLO) County Heritage Fishing Area encompassing both Morro Bay and Port San Luis with its heritage fishery as protected waters from the coast to 45 miles offshore for the local fishing community. Heritage fisheries can be carefully maintained aquatic areas where the habitats within the ecosystems surrounding fishing are protected from today's modern hazards. The goal of preserving fishing for the future can be achieved by using sustainable fishing methods. Read More
Sweet Springs Reflections by Holly Sletteland
It's been a good year for monarchs at the preserve. We've seen dozens of them fluttering around the tops of the eucalyptus trees near the ponds in the morning sun. We've even had a couple of small clusters. Ryan Slack, who is conducting a formal survey of monarch (Danaus plexippus) activity on both the central and eastern sections of the preserve, discovered a cluster of about 35 monarchs on one tree and another with about 50 butterflies. Ryan works with the Monarch Alert Project, a citizen-based research project conducted by graduate students and faculty from Cal Poly. The project monitors overwintering monarch populations in San Luis Obispo and Monterey counties by conducting weekly surveys from the first week in November through the last week in March. Read More
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Female Elephant Seals in
Dispute Over Space by Kevin Cole
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The Business of the Journal
—About the Slo Coast Journal
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The Business of Our Towns
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It's Our Nature
—A Bird's Eye View
—Coastland Contemplations
—Elfin Forest
—Exploring the Coast
—Marine Sanctuaries
—Sweet Springs Reflections
Slo Coast Arts
—Genie's Pocket
—Great Shots
—Morro Photo Expo
—One Poet's Perspective
—Opera SLO
—Shutterbugs
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Slo Coast Life
—Behind the Badge
—Best Friends
—California State Parks
—Double Vision
—Feel Better Forever
—Go Green
—The Human Condition
—Medical Myth Busting
—Observations of a Country Squire
—Slo Coast Cooking
Surfing Out of the Box
—Under the Tongue
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News, Editorials, & Commentary
—Diablo Canyon Seismic Safety Conference Provides Cold Comfort —MB/CSD Reactivate Controversial Lobbyist to Push WWT —National Physicians Group Weighs in on Risks to Health from Wireless Technology —Public Blamed for MB/CSD Sewer Plant Delays, Wasted Costs —The Similar Effects of Low-Dose Ionizing Radiation and Non-Ionizing
Radiation from Background Environmental Levels of Exposure —Two Groups Who Make Giving a Yearlong Event
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