Ojai Earth Day Coming to Libbey Park April 20 11am-4pm

We are excited to announce that the Ojai Valley Green Coalition will again be hosting Ojai Earth Day on April 20, 2019 from 11am-4pmat Libbey Park in downtown Ojai.

Libbey Park offers a beautiful setting, perfect for community celebration, that will be ideal for continuing the conversation about advancing a green, sustainable, and resilient way of life for the Ojai Valley. Just as last year, there will be a variety of interactive activities, demonstrations, dynamic speakers, talented performers, and environmentally-friendly exhibitors. This popular and highly publicized is free to the public.

Read more on our Ojai Earth Day web site.

Ojai Community Demonstration Garden Community Work Day and Potluck: Sat, May 4th – 10 am – 3 pm

Ojai Valley Green Coalition, City of Ojai and Bee’s Sustainable Landscape Design are hosting our monthly community work party at the Ojai Community Demonstration Garden.

Come out Saturday, May 4th, 10-3pm for an afternoon of fun. Join us for an hour or the whole day!!

Our focuses this month will be on:
– Pruning
– Plant Identification 
– Garden Shed Inventory

Please bring a dish to share, plate/utensils, cup, gloves and comfortable shoes.

We give a big thank you to Amber Beeson w/Bee’s Sustainable Landscape Design and Consulting for running the show.

**If there is a light rain we will still meet. If it is a heavy downpour event will be canceled.**

Thomas Fire 1st anniversary: Before and After photos

This evening one year ago, my wife called me outside to see the full moon and the ominous orange glow on the eastern horizon. It was my first glimpse of the Thomas Fire and we evacuated the following day. At the time I was working as interim executive director for the Green Coalition and my week was full of travels in and out of the valley, information sharing on social media and the many other fire related tasks that consumed us all. I had very little time to take photographs. A year later I have begun to remedy that and I’m glad to share these photos from before and after the fire from around the valley that show its impact and recovery.

Kennedy Ridge overlook

The trail up to Kennedy Ridge through the Ventura River Preserve has been one of my favorite hikes since moving to the valley six years ago. In 2014 I this photo of my father looking north and east from the rocks by the first mile marker bench just after the spot where the trail first crests the ridge. It shows the beautiful oak tree (on the right edge of the photo) that nestled among the boulders and shaded the overlook. It was an especially welcome rest spot on hot days.

DSC_0257

Here is the same view with a landscape crop showing some of the oaks in Kennedy Canyon just north of the ridge.

I returned with a friend to this spot for the first time last week and the oak tree that was nestled in the overlook is charred and fallen. While a few sumac and other plants in the chaparral below the overlook are recovering, the difference in the plateau below the overlook is dramatic.

IMG_1038

Here is a wider panorama of Kennedy Canyon (looking north from the ridge) running all the way from White ledge peak to the valley below:

Kennedy Ridge panorama

Wills Canyon

Early on a September morning in 2013, I biked up Wills Canyon and captured one of my favorite photos from around the Ojai Valley. The canopy of oaks branches intertwine with each other to greet the rising sun.

Wills Canyon Trail sunrise

When I returned to this spot Thanksgiving weekend, the changes were so dramatic it was hard to find the right spot from which to take the photo. I realized that the two most prominent trees in the foreground of the photo had been taken by the fire. I had to use the trees in the background of the original photo to orient myself.

DSC_0321

Oak on Dennison Grade

My final before and after photos shows one example of the remarkable resilience I have seen in oaks all over the valley. Many of these magnificent trees were reduced to blackened silhouettes by the fire. I captured one of these oaks along the 150 coming down Dennison grade on Wednesday, December 6, 2017, less than 48 hours after the fire started. OVGC board present Severo Lara and I were driving around the valley checking in on the impact of the fire and acrid smoke which was everywhere.

Burned Tree on Dennison Grade

When I returned to visit this oak a year later, its trunk was still blackened, but half its crown was a vibrant green and I could see other oaks around it recovering as well.

DSC_0043

May we all continue to find resilience and recovery in the coming year.

The Ojai Valley Green Coalition Presents: Workshop Series at the Ojai Community Demonstration Garden

Catching Water w/Connor Jones

Saturday and Sunday
Dec 1 + 2, 10am- 3pm

This permaculture water catchment workshop is a part of a series of waterwise design workshops at the Ojai Community Demonstration Garden. Workshops will be hosted first weekend of every month.

Learn how to manage stormwater at the Ojai Community Garden. We’ll be designing and building a series of basins to receive road runoff, slow it down, spread it out, and sink it into the soil. This is an opportunity to learn techniques that can be used all over the Ojai Valley to improve the infiltration of rainwater and increase the availability of groundwater. Every garden in Ojai should incorporate this crucial design element.

Where: Ojai Community Demonstration Garden

When: Saturday and Sunday December 1 + 2, 10am-3pm

Biking: There is a bike rack to lock up your bike.

Parking: Please Park in the lot on S Blanche S and W Santa Ana St.

What to bring: Pad of paper, pen/pencil, refillable water bottle, work gloves, and wear comfortable shoes.

We will be providing lunch and will have a water bottle refill station.

The special $15 cost for this two day workshop is being generously underwritten by the City of Ojai, Ventura River Water District, and Ojai Mayor Johnny Johnson

Click Here to Register

Why Ojai is moving towards state water in April 2018

by Kit Stolz

On the last day of February this year, the meeting room at Casitas Municipal Water District in Oak View was filled to capacity, with dozens of residents and local officials buzzing in anticipation of a new proposal — dubbed the “Three Sisters” plan — to be offered to connect Lake Casitas with the State Water Project.

If implemented, this would be the first time in the history of the region that Ojai  — and Casitas which supplies the town and the west side of Ventura with water  — has moved to connect its water supply to the rest of California.

Lake Casitas, a reservoir that collects rain and snow from a mountainous watershed well over 200 miles square, supplies approximately 67,000 farmers and residents in Ojai and western Ventura with water. Since the recent drought took hold in 2012 in Ventura County, and became “extreme” in 2016, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, water levels in aquifers and in the reservoir have fallen rapidly. Despite conservation efforts by farmers and residents over the last four years, the lake has fallen to just over one-third of capacity. Water levels in the aquifers of the Ojai Basin, from which farmers pump water for their citrus orchards, are at their lowest levels since 1964, according to the latest report available from the Ojai Basin Groundwater Management Agency. Growers, realtors, businesses, elected officials and citizens in Ojai repeatedly express alarm about the prospect of running dry.

castias-storage-768x600
Trend of lake storage levels falls towards historical lows alarming local experts

Continue reading “Why Ojai is moving towards state water in April 2018”