Read the full story here Web Link posted Sunday, June 21, 2015, 4:58 PM
Town Square
Woodside gives Stanford habitat award
Original post made on Jun 22, 2015
Read the full story here Web Link posted Sunday, June 21, 2015, 4:58 PM
Comments (7)
a resident of Menlo Park: Central Menlo Park
on Jun 22, 2015 at 10:32 am
The wooden posts seem to be only a veneer on the metal posts that support the barbed wire (visible in places when passing on a bike), but yes, the fence looks nice.
a resident of Woodside: Family Farm/Hidden Valley
on Jun 26, 2015 at 1:10 pm
So Stanford gets an award which "recognizes the presence of native plants, areas allowed to revert to a wild state, permissive fencing, unobstructed streambeds, and wildlife corridors" while at the same time they:
- Overgraze much of their undeveloped oak savannah with cattle, preventing oak regeneration, and promoting non-native annual grasses.
- Have a dam and reservoir full of non-native plant and animal species that spread throughout the watershed and negatively impact native wildlife.
- Won't let Jasper Ridge habitat revert to a wild state and instead support an unneeded dam.
- Have a huge, 8-foot tall cyclone fence with razor wire around Jasper Ridge impeding wildlife migration.
- Have obstructed the creek's streamed more than any other stakeholder in the watershed with multiple dams, diversions, and road crossings.
- Continue to block wildlife migration corridors around the campus, including threatened steelhead trout at their Searsville Dam.
Giving this award to Stanford would be laughable if the reality wasn't so dire.
a resident of Menlo Park: Allied Arts/Stanford Park
on Jun 26, 2015 at 1:31 pm
Very well said. Woodside was asleep at the switch in giving this award to what is, at bottom, a narcissistic and deeply capitalist enterprise.
a resident of Woodside: Skywood/Skylonda
on Mar 3, 2016 at 7:58 pm
This fence is gorgeous! Well done Woodside.
a resident of Portola Valley: Central Portola Valley
on Mar 3, 2016 at 8:14 pm
Congratulations to Woodside for recognizing Stanford as being a "good rural neighbor"!
a resident of Portola Valley: other
on Mar 4, 2016 at 12:06 pm
I am lucky enough to drive this stretch almost every day, and the artful way Stanford engineered this fence replacement preserves the scenic corridor. If they hadn't used the old posts as façades over the metal ones, the entire fence line would be shiny silver, and would have lost its charming country appeal.
I'm not a Woodside resident, but I am grateful for the work the Woodside people did to liaison with Stanford for this project.
a resident of Woodside: Mountain Home Road
on Mar 4, 2016 at 1:34 pm
This award is important, and meaningful to those who care about preserving the environment, but also recognizing the need to keep areas accessible to the wildlife that inhabits our special lands. Good on Stanford for upholding these standards, and good on Woodside for the recognition. Both entities are trailblazing!
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