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Friends of Five Creeks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friends of Five Creeks
Formation1996
TypeParent organization is a registered non-profit[1]
PurposeWildlife habitat protection
HeadquartersAlbany Community Center, 1249 Marin
Membership
Volunteer[2]
LeaderSusan Schwartz
Parent organization
Berkeley Partners for Parks
Websitewww.fivecreeks.org

Friends of Five Creeks is a regional community volunteer organization founded in 1996 by Sonja Wadman originally dedicated to the stewardship of creeks in northern Alameda County and western Contra Costa, California, United States.[3][4][5] Education about wildlife and restoration is also a major facet of the FFC's mission.[6][7]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Why Are Things Creepy?
  • VIDEO Nine dead and one missing in Arizona flash flood

Transcription

Hey, Vsauce, Michael here. Fear gives us life. Being afraid of the right things kept our ancestors alive. It makes sense to be afraid of poisonous insects or hungry tigers, but what about fear when there is no clear and obvious danger? For instance, a Teddy Bear with a full set of human teeth...or a smile.jpeg. There's something a little off about these images- too much mystery, and strange-ness, but no obvious threat, the way there is with a gun or falling rock. But, yet, they still insight fear, because they are creepy. But why? What gives us the creeps? What causes something to be creepy? We are now in my bedroom- the bedroom I grew up in, in Kansas. Like a lot of children my age, I was terrified of "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark." But the very first book that ever scared me was "The Curse of the Squirrel." To this day, I still haven't finished the book...but that's just me. Psychologist James Geer developed the "Fear Survey Schedule II" which he used to find out what scared us the most, combined with the results of a more recently Gallup poll, these are the things that scare most of us, the most. All of these things are scary, but are they creepy? Let's get more specific. I love the way Stephen King delineates three types of scary stuff. The first is the "gross-out"- this is something disgusting, morbid, diseased. The second is "horror"- horror, to King, is the unnatural- a giant spider, or being grabbed in the dark when you thought you were alone. The third: "Terror" is different, creepier. He says terror is coming home to find that everything you own has been replaced with an exact copy. Terror is feeling something behind you- it's breath on your neck. Knowing that you will be grabbed, but then turning around to find that there was never anything there in the first place. Not a lot of research has been done on that feeling- the creeps- but many theories and ideas involve vagueness, ambiguity. For instance, masks, and why clowns are creepy. Claude Levi-Strauss wrote that the facial disguise temporarily eliminates, from social intercourse, the part of the body which reveals personal feelings and attitudes. Part of the reason even a neutral or happy mask can be creepy may have to do with ambiguity. A mask hides the true emotions and intentions of the person underneath. I don't know if the person wearing that mask is a threat or not. Vagueness is creepy when it comes to the human form. This is the famous Uncanny Valley. On a chart of humanness there's a zone where something can be almost entirely human, but off by just a little. Not so wrong that it's clearly fake or funny, or so good that it's indistinguishable. Instead, it's just troubling. The creepiness of the Uncanny Valley is wonderfully demonstrated by John Bergeron's Singing Androids. Watch these videos when you're alone... A similar uneasy feeling comes from ShayeSaintJohn, a character created by Eric Fournier. Funny to some, nightmare fuel to others. Uncanny humanoids, like all creepy things, straddle a line between two regions that we can understand and explain with language. Francis T. McAndrew and Sara Koehnke describe being "creeped out" as an adaptive human response to the ambiguity of threats from others. Creepy things are kind of a threat, maybe, but they're also kind of not. So, our brains don't know what to do. Some parts respond with fear, while other parts don't, and they don't know why. So, instead of achieving a typical fear response, horror, we simply feel uneasy, terror, creeped out. Between the mountains of safety and danger, there is a valley of creepiness where the limits of our knowledge, and trust, and security aren't very clear. Will looking at this cause you to die one week later? Impossible, right? Maybe that's the terror of ambiguity. We don't do well with ambiguity. When it involves our own intentions, it can make us lie. And when it involves danger, but no recognizable threat, it can make us think and feel some pretty weird things. Have you ever peered over a ledge, a railing, way high-up, like, so high-up it made you feel nervous and dizzy, and felt something pushing you? Maybe even an urge to jump? Have you ever stood on the ledge with a loved one and realize that you could push them? It would be that easy. You really could do it, and maybe you do want to do it, or maybe it's just cognitive dissonance- the fact that your brain is having to deal with ambiguity. A recent study by Jennifer Hames at Florida State University dubbed this the High Place Phenomenon. When approaching a ledge and a dangerous drop, your survival instinct kicks in and you pull yourself away. But, your balance and motor systems don't get it. Nothing is pushing you, and you don't normally fall or leap randomly. So, what's going on? The part of your brain that processes intention might resolve this by determining that something must be pushing you. Or, that you might actually want to jump or push your friend, even if none of that is true. Now, we're not done with ambiguity yet because our language reflects the gray area of terror and creepiness. Take a look at the word "terror," itself. We have "horrible" and "horrific." "Terrible" and "terrific." Why is that? Well, through history, we never really figured out what to call powerful experiences, because they're both. They are full of awe...awesome. And, they are full of aw...awful. We need them to survive. We need fears, and the creeps, to understand our size, our weaknesses. But, on the other hand, avoiding them is pretty great too...The creeps is a physical reminder that the world is vague and full of ambiguity, but that we are cunning- always trying to figure things out. But, nonetheless, fragile. Is that terrible or terrific? Well, it's both. Which, as a creepy ghost would say, is kind of boo-tiful. And, as always, thanks for watching.

History

The organization is dedicated to improving creek habitats for environmental, flood control, pollution filtration, and beautification reasons. The original five creeks were Cerrito Creek-Middle/Blackberry, Marin Creek, Codornices Creek, Schoolhouse Creek and Marin/Village Creek, however the organization's involvement has expanded to all the creeks in the area including the communities of Berkeley, Albany, El Cerrito, Kensington, Richmond, and the surrounding unincorporated areas.[5][4] Susan Schwartz, the organization's leader, states that the organization like other "friends of" groups would not have gotten off the ground without help from the Urban Creeks Council.[8] The group holds up to 40 events a year where the volunteers work on refuse collection, graffiti removal, removing culverts in addition to plating native vegetation and removing invasive species.[9][4] There is a monthly work party to pick weeds and showcase the area's natural habitats with a new site each month.[6] The organization is registered with the California Coastal Commission.[3]

Creek work

Village Creek is maintained by FFC.

The organization organizes more than 40 work parties each year, providing direction and tools for groups of volunteers who work to restore a section of one of the creeks.[10]

Cerrito Creek runs from the El Cerrito hills to the San Francisco Bay. The organization has daylighted and restored a portion of the creek along the parking lot of El Cerrito Plaza Shopping Center.[6] Further down stream part of the creek runs through Pacific East Mall's parking lot, where it forms the border between Richmond and Albany.[11][12] This portion of the creek was daylighted and restored by the organization in 2003.[13][12] Berkeley Daily Planet columnist Ron Sullivan reports a statement from FFC's Susan Schwartz that Pacific East Mall landscapers in Richmond have used herbicides, and speculates that this could explain her (Sullivan's) observations of dead grasses, plants and trees along the creek path near the mall's property line. Furthermore, Sullivan reports allegations and concludes from seeing the results that small native shrubs were mowed, and reports allegations that the mall has not agreed to a written maintenance plan as required by its use permit.[12]

In 2001 the organization received two separate grants totaling $400,000 to work on the restoration of Codornices Creek.[14] In the 1990s the Friends of Five Creeks discovered the reappearance of steelhead and rainbow trout at Codornices Creek while performing restoration work.[15] The "Friends" are also lobbying for the creation of public space adjacent to the creek for a new Whole Foods supermarket and parking structure along the stream's banks in U.C. Village.[16]

The organization also helps to restore and work on some non-creek areas such as the Berkeley Meadow and Eastshore State Park in addition to blight abatement, and trash collection activities at local parks.[17][18][19] Working with Citizens for Eastshore Parks FFC is studying the possibility of daylighting a portion of Schoolhouse Creek.[20]

Education work

Friends of Five Creeks works with school groups to educate them about the creek and bay environments.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Articles of Incorporation of Berkeley Partners for Parks". 18 October 2007. Endorsed (1884392) and Filed in the office of the Secretary of State of the State of California on 18 Mar 1994.
  2. ^ The Right Shade of Green / We're being invaded by alien species[permanent dead link]. Kurt True. 29-04-2003. Retrieved 28-01-2011.
  3. ^ a b Friends of Five Creeks Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. California Coastal Commission. 2011. 27-01-2011.
  4. ^ a b c Environmental advocate nurtures a love for nature. Shellah Moody. San Francisco Chronicle. 05-10-2008. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  5. ^ a b "Worldwide Work Party" with Friends of Five Creeks  Archived 15 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. El Cerrito Patch. 2011. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  6. ^ a b c Creeks. El-Cerrito.org. City of El Cerrito website. 2011. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  7. ^ Kauffman, Turk; Puchall, Lauri (May 2006). "Paved Paradise in Berkeley". European Social Ecology Institute. Retrieved 28 January 2011. In recent years, grassroots groups such as... Friends of Five Creeks are attempting to daylight and restore the local network of creeks and bring back wildlife to the watershed.
  8. ^ Water warriors / United Creeks Council quietly fights to bring streams to light Archived 2 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Katherine Redding. San Francisco Chronicle. 03-04-2003. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  9. ^ Friends of Five Creeks Never Stops, Catch Up With Them Sunday Archived 15 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Albany Patch. 2011. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  10. ^ Environmental advocate nurtures a love for nature San Francisco Chronicle, 5 October 2008. Retrieved 1 February 2011]
  11. ^ Cerrito Creek watershed map Archived 8 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Museum of California. 2011. Retrieved 23-01-2011.
  12. ^ a b c Garden Variety: An Ecological Calamity Below Albany Hill. Ron Sullivan. Berkeley Daily Planet. 26-01-2007. Retrieved 23-01-2011.
  13. ^ Creek mouths along the Bay Trail in Berkeley, Albany, and south Richmond Archived 19 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Susan Schwartz. Friends of Five Creeks. 09-03-2004. Retrieved 25-01-2011.
  14. ^ Beth El decision set for Tuesday Berkeley Daily Planet, 21 July 2001. Retrieved 1 February 2011
  15. ^ "Friends of Five Creeks". Archived from the original on 7 November 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  16. ^ Crampton, Matthew; Martin, John (2007), A Re-design Proposal: Connecting Whole Foods Market and Codornices Creek, University of California, OCLC 657366554
  17. ^ Berkeley Takes Action Archived 9 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Global Work Party. 10-10-2011. Retrieved 31-01-2011.
  18. ^ Eastshore State Park’s Berkeley Meadow Restoration Nearing Completion Archived 16 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine. 2010. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  19. ^ Friends of Five Creeks Archived 8 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine. CalRotract. 16-02-2010. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  20. ^ Citizens for East Shore Parks (CESP) E-Newsletter. December 2004. Retrieved 27-01-2011.
  21. ^ Environment for learning / At one Oakland alternative school, lessons grounded in ecology help guide students onto the right track, San Francisco Chronicle, 14 November 2003. Retrieved 1 February 2011

External links

This page was last edited on 12 May 2024, at 20:44
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