Short Summary

Garber Park is a 13-acre wildland park owned by the City of Oakland located behind the Claremont Hotel in Claremont Canyon. Garber Park is home to significant stands of big-leaf maple, California buckeyes and regenerating coast live oak woodland and forest. The Garber Park Stewards vision is to safeguard the native wildland resources of Garber Park while reducing the risk of wildfire and improving the trail system.

Monday, January 10, 2011

WENDY TOKUDA CROSSES THE WUI

As 2011 begins to take shape in Garber Park, we could not resist this brief detour from restoration ecology. Among the riches offered in BAY NATURE'S current tenth anniversary issue--Jan-Mar 2011--you will find the arguably eponymous article, "The Crazy Broom Lady of the Oakland Hills" by the lady herself, Wendy Tokuda introduced by Lech Naumovich' s wonderful portrait.
http://baynature.org/articles/jan-mar-2011

Among many journeys detailed in the article, Wendy Tokuda has recently undertaken the eradication of French broom from Redwood Park and most recently from Huckleberry Preserve. She recounts with a sense of increasing awareness the distance from the newsroom where we first met her to the recesses of the East Ridge redwood stands and the noisy, irreverant pecking of the pileated woodpecker. Importantly, she has come to understand the wildland side of the interface as "home". As she has removed the broom she has been able to observe the resurgence of the native flora, sometimes very unexpectedly. Wendy's story is altogether inspiring.

Garber Park is fortunate to have few areas that are threatened by French Broom, but those areas need persistent attention so that eradication of this relatively small population can occur. Wendy Tokuda's dedication to the task of broom removal in much larger theaters serves as proof positive that this can be accomplished and also points the way to the personal rewards that may ensue.


She is certainly an outstanding mentor for the Garber Park Stewards.
*WUI - Wildland/Urban Interface

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Winter in Garber Park

Garber Park is beautiful in the Winter.  The Buckeyes and Maples are as beautiful without their leaves as they are in the Summer.  Enjoy the pictures below as we follow the Loop Trail on one of the first days of sunshine in Garber Park in 2011.
















First Garber Park Workday of 2011

Although Tuesday morning was clear and cool, we warmed up quickly by raking 20+ years of Eucalyptus duff out of Fireplace Plaza.  We thought our main task was simply to clean up after the eucs, but we quickly discovered a puzzle.  First, we uncovered a cement faced stone bench clearly meant for seating by the fireplace.  Then we noticed a tipped-over stone and cement drinking fountain and a cistern with a Doric pediment at one end.  Then we noticed that the plaza itself was ringed by a stone wall, and finally we figured out that the entire hillside where the fireplace stands is crosscut by terraced rock walls.  At this point it appears that the rock walls have to do with an old trail that ascends from Claremont Ave. up to a junction with the Lower Loop Trail near the Plaza.  If that proves to be the case, we could consider improving the old trail and covering up the deer trails that meander too close to the adjacent houses on Evergreen Lane.
Meanwhile, Bob continued his assault on the Himalayan Blackberry thickets near the Lower Loop Bridge.  A project first begun on Creek to Bay Day, Bob has continued clearing uphill and daylighting the creek.  As we watched the creek meandering and bubbling down the hillside we became aware of several birds taking a drink from the creek, and flying in and out of the newly freed willows and trees.   Following up the creek towards the Upper Loop Trail it appears that two springs are the source of Harwood Creek, which is beginning to emerge as the centerpiece of a significant wetland. For the time being, we are calling this whole area “The Springs”. 
We walked back along the Lower Loop trail satisfied with another good day in Garber Park, and excited about continuing these projects at our
Next Stewardship DaySaturday, January 15, from 10AM-Noon.  We will meet, as usual, at the Evergreen Ln. entrance.  
Directions: From Alvarado Rd, take Slater Lane, then turn right on Evergreen Ln. The entrance is at the end of the street.  This is in easy walking distance from Alvarado Road. Directions to Garber Park can also be found at http://tinyurl.com/GarberPark.

Wear shoes with good traction and dress in layers for all weather. 

Questions: Email:  GarberParkStewards@gmail.com   

We hope you can join us on January 15.  




Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Garber Park-2010 & Beyond

On behalf of Garber Park we are sending along this seasonal greeting with many thanks for your contributions and support, and this summary of our first year’s activities in pursuit of the restoration and preservation of the natural wildland character of Garber Park’s thirteen acres.  In December, 2009, the Stewards started out with the clear idea that these were 13 acres worth working for.  Throughout 2010, we have discovered many new dimensions of Garber Park’s value.

One year ago, hardly anyone, including near neighbors, knew that Garber Park existed.  Even as they stood at the end of Evergreen Lane looking directly into it, or driving under the overarching maples and buckeyes on the south side of Claremont Ave. east of the hotel, most people did not recognize an Oakland Open Space park.  As task number one, the Garber Park Stewards have worked to uncover and encourage the Park’s natural identity as a wildland riparian remnant of the Claremont and Temescal Canyon watershed.  We have tried to understand (and survey) the Park’s boundaries, to create a clear entrance at Evergreen Lane where there is now a sign (Thanks, Adopt a Creek folks), to improve the one mile Loop Trail for safe and pleasurable public access, to clear decades of rubbish and fuel load near the Evergreen Ln. entrance in order to establish a native watershed restoration zone, and to initiate the survey and mapping of native resources as well as numerous, threatening invasives. 

The Stewards have also focused on all the wildfire issues that are inherent in East Bay upland living, with the recognition that even a shady riparian woodland can contain substantially hazardous conditions.  In keeping with the wisdom of the new earth science of restoration ecology, we know that fire safety and native restoration can and must proceed hand in hand.

Over the past year we have removed mountains of trash and weeds; we have sunlighted the creeks by removing the Himalayan blackberry thickets; we have revitalized the long term job of French broom, Spurge, and Cape ivy removal; and recently, after nine months of planning and consultation, we have accomplished the removal from the Evergreen Lane entrance of three of the Park’s 17 fire prone 120-foot eucalyptus trees. These trees rained bark and leaves year round onto the hillside and into the old Fireplace Plaza causing a heightened threat of combustion in the dry season. In recognition of the the threat these eucalyptus trees represented, the Oakland Public Works Tree Services Division said in its letter of permission:  Thank you for volunteering to remove these eucalyptus trees from Garber Park, at the end of Evergreen Lane, to improve fire safety in your area and benefit the more desirable native trees growing on the property. 

The removal of the eucalyptus trees was the final step in preparing the Evergreen Lane entrance hillside for restoration, which we hope to begin in February.  Our twice a month stewardship sessions will resume on Tuesday, Jan. 4.  Our first focus will be to continue preparations for February plantings at our Restoration Site.  Other near-term goals for 2011 include our ongoing removal of invasive species, especially French broom, Cape ivy, Himalayan blackberry, and spurge.  We are working with the City of Oakland Wildfire Prevention Assessment District (WPAD) to secure a project for Garber Park that will reduce the risk in the fire vulnerable areas while protecting native plant restoration, a project that will maintain lower fuels and a safer park.  

We invite your support and participation.

See you soon,
The Garber Park Stewards

Monday, December 20, 2010

Big Leaf Maple in Winter

The Big Leaf Maple Forest in winter, as awesome without a leaf as in full foliage.



The "Garber" Oak, towering and scenic, exemplifies the basic riparian oak woodland ecosystem that underpins and unites Garber's 13 acres.


Friday, December 17, 2010

Looking Forward


2011 in Garber Park will be a year of discovery and direction. We will find out the many ways in which Garber Park is a gem among the various wildland remnants in the East Bay hills. We already have a glimpse of the great variety of natural resources that are literally packed into Garber's 13 acres: forests that we had not recognized, springs and watershed characteristics that we had not noticed, and orchids that we did not know were there.

Garber Park is home to a stand of California buckeye trees which are one of the few winter deciduous trees of the Central Coast.  Since buckeye groves are declining throughout the state and the range of the species, we will be taking efforts to help maintain, and possibly expand the existing grove.