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Jun 14
2010
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"A California Bestiary"Posted by Bruce Robinson in wildlife , salmon , open space , history , environment , California , author , art , animals |
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From the extinct California Grizzly to the omnipresent California ground squirrel, a carefully chosen 12 animal species are featured in the small, reflective and beautifully illustrated new book, A California Bestiary.
Rebecca Solnit drew on both personal experience and background knowledge, focused field trips with illustrator Mona Caron, and some updated research to prepared for writing this book.
Two of the dozen species featured in the Bestiary, are insects—both butterflies. Solnit says she chose the Monarch and the Mission Blue as a minor study in contrasts.
The full list of animals included in A California Bestiary is as follows:
Acorn Woodpecker
Bluebelly Lizard
California Condor
California Grizzly
California Ground Squirrel
Chinook Salmon
Desert Tortise
Elephant Seal
Misson Blue Butterfly
Monarch Butterfly
Mountain Lion
Tule Elk
In the additional illustrations by Mona Caron shown below, note how the background includes the human-created obstacles that have become a part of the landscape for the native species.

The burgeoning illegal trade in rare and endangered animals isn’t good for them, or their native eco-systems, and it’s often problematic for the people who want to own the creatures.
Who are the people who want to own illegal and sometimes dangerous exotic pets? West County-based journalist
Another issue that Laufer explores in his book is private, often illegal, breeding farms for endangered animals such as tigers, which raise difficult questions about the future of such species.
Despite the odd characters and sometimes shocking vignettes that are part of Forbidden Creatures, Laufer says he sees it overall as a sort of cautionary tale.
What’s the ultimate solution for replacing fossil fuels with affordable alternatives? A detailed study by the 

The gradual loss of her vision changed Susan Kreiger’s way of being in the world. So, she discovered, did the guide dog who is now her constant companion.
Blindness is not an all-or-nothing condition, Kreiger explains, and in her case, the vision losses have been especially irregular.
Fifty years of support and participation in the drive toward democracy in South Africa has earned some recent recognition for a new Santa Rosa resident, both here and there.
The South African award bestowed upon George Houser is named for Oliver Tambo (left) , the African National Congress' president-in-exile during the years that Nelson Mandella was imprisoned. Tambo died in 1994. Non-violence was a consistent theme throughout his lifetime of political involvement, George Houser recalls, starting with his early participation in the American Civil Rights Movement.
As Houser explains, South Africa was the only region on the continent that was claimed and colonized by the Dutch, who introduced the concept of apartheid, a state-controlled form of enforced segregation.