Your favorite park along the Bay was once a dump
Chances are that your go-to spot on the San Francisco Bay was once a trash dump.
The San Francisco Bay Area is bejeweled with hundreds of parks and open space preserves as well as a rich set of laws and policies meant to ensure the survival of vulnerable species and ecosystems. Real people made this happen through a dedicated call to stewardship.
Chances are that your go-to spot on the San Francisco Bay was once a trash dump.
Looking for a way to commune with nature and others? Nature journaling might be just the thing.
We've got the Earth Day events roundup for you.
Officially, Mia Monroe is Site Supervisor of Muir Woods. But what she really does is serve as a passionate ambassador for nature.
Great Blue Herons are back again at Stow Lake in San Francisco for the 20th nesting season.
2013 Local Hero award-winner Seth Adams of Save Mount Diablo is a big-picture guy, but he also revels in the details of wildflowers, maps, building a trail, or building a...
What has more than two thousand legs and is converging on San Francisco’s Corona Heights neighborhood? A: The parents, children, insects and arachnids who collectively take part in Bug Day...
San Francisco wants to rebuild Alamo Square's irrigation system, but historian says leaks are natural springs.
In December 2012, the Bay Area, and the world, lost one of its most eloquent spokespeople for and about birds. Rich Stallcup, a cofounder of the Point Reyes Bird Observatory...
He's big, he's tall and he's an obsessive birder. WhyTed Eliot can't get birds out of his head.