Happenings On the Bay

The Experience, Sausalito: Sausalito Boat Show News

The Experience:

Sneak preview of Sausalito Boat Show!

Here are a few of the awesome exhibitors for this brand new boat show happening October 13-15, down at the Clipper Yacht Harbor on the Sausalito waterfront.

Club Nautique is exhibiting at the Sausalito Boat Show, both on land and water. On the docks, there will be two new boats on display including the beautiful Jeanneau 2022 Sun Odyssey 440. You can learn more about classes, membership and sailing the Bay! (Featured photo – out on the water)

Rifkin Yachts is a full-service yacht brokerage.All staff work within the marine industry and their  vast collective experience as captains and marine techs provides a vast understanding of boats, creating a unique experience for buyers and sellers.

H and M Marine Services is a sponsor, exhibitor and driving force behind the Sausalito Boat Show. A family owned and operated business providing high quality marine products and services in the San Francisco Bay. Boat sales, service, repair, upgrades and more with a boat yard and shop in the heart of Sausalito.

Silver Seas Yachts will be showing off some beautiful boats at the Sausalito Boat Show, like their 2023 Tiara Yachts 43 LS. Entertain from the galley, while below deck, comfortable accommodations for four await. (Blue beauty  photo below)

An extraordinary experience celebrating the sea, local culture, and community awaits you.

Besides new sailboats, luxury yachts, power boats and boating gear, “This inaugural event is designed to be a celebration of maritime excellence and Sausalito’s local culture – food, live music, and art,” said show manager Mitch Perkins.

Extending beyond boats, this event will feature local food vendors offering seafood specialties and classic California cuisine, accompanied by live music from Bay Area favorites including Fog City Swampers, Juke Joint Band, The Millionaires, The Cruz Boys and Matt Bolton. This truly is an event for the whole family, including activities and crafts for kids.

Details to come. Stay tuned!

About Sausalito Boat Show

Hours: Fri/Sat, Oct 13/14 10am-6pm; Sun. 10/15 10am-5pm. Contact show manager Mitch Perkins at [email protected], 415-272-4130 with any questions you may have.

Clipper Yacht Harbor is the largest and only full service harbor in Sausalito  with over 700 slips and dry storage spaces.

Photo/Courtesy of Clipper Yacht Harbor Facebook page.

 Where:

310 Harbor Drive
Sausalito

https://www.sausalitoboatshow.com

By |2023-09-14T15:07:20-07:00September 14th, 2023|Tags: , |0 Comments

All Aboard for Baykeeper’s Annual Celebration of a Healthy San Francisco Bay!

Join Baykeeper on the Bay!

They’ll travel around the Bay and share stories about their latest victories to hold polluters accountable and make the Bay more resilient for the future.

Meet, Mingle, and Party

In this unique interactive event, you can mingle with other guests at virtual tables. Say hello to old friends, chat with Baykeeper staff, or bring friends along to join your table!

Sip, Nibble, and Slurp

Add on delectable treats that will be shipped to you to enjoy during the event. Thank you to these local businesses for supporting Baykeeper!

  • Hog Island Oyster Co. Clam Chowder Meal Kit
  • Poseidon Vineyard’s Rosé for the Bay – Exclusive – last of the 2019 vintage
  • Cici’s Cookies

Win Big in the Auction

Bid on amazing prizes in Baykeeper’s online silent auction, opening soon. You can win United Airlines tickets good for travel through spring 2022; a private sailboat tour on the Bay; an exclusive tasting with Anchor Brewing; Warriors and Giants memorabilia; plus, wine and much more!

Sport Your Baykeeper Pride

Since 1989, Baykeeper has advocated for the health of San Francisco Bay. They use science and clean water laws to improve habitats and communities reliant on a thriving Bay ecosystem. Baykeeper will honor the local community partners who help Baykeeper protect the Bay. Cheer on their support for keeping the Bay thriving!

Register now and order your treats! https://baykeeper.org/2021event

More information about Baykeeper: https://baykeeper.org

SF Bay photo – Mary Lou Thiercof, SF on the Bay

Sunrise on the Bay photo – Fish Emeryville

Folkboats on the Bay – Courtesy of San Francisco Bay Folkboats Association

By |2021-08-12T16:17:37-07:00March 4th, 2021|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Happy World Oceans Day!

Pictured is the Blue Whale, once on the endangered species list but brought back to fruition due to the  undying efforts of many individuals and organizations since the 1970s, including General Whale, Greenpeace and  World Wildlife Fund. When the ocean is healthy, the ecosystem is healthy and whales, sea creatures and fish thrive. And then we thrive.

Today is Happy World Oceans Day! We have made some progress in cleaning up our waters, but our commitment must be greater here on land. Now. Join the global #WorldOceansDay community to take action for our ocean!

Why celebrate our oceans?

  • Oceans cover 71% of Earth’s surface and hold 97% of our planet’s water.
  • The oceans help feed us and provide most of the oxygen that we breathe.
  • Oceans also play a key role in regulating the weather and climate. Water evaporating from the oceans falls inland as rain, which we then use to drink and grow crops.
  • A variety of life-saving medicinal compounds including anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer drugs have been discovered in the oceans.
  • The oceans provide us with abundant opportunities for recreation and inspiration (worldoceansday.org)
  • Did you know there are more than 250 species of water turtles in our oceans? And 61% of them are near extinction? (worldwildlife.org)

Deanna Conners, writer for Earth Magazine suggests that on World Oceans Day  you “…plan or find an event. Participate on social media. Or … just go to the beach!” And while at the beach or other waterway, pick up the plastic trash that others leave behind. Reducing plastic use is the number one need and promise to move this effort forward. Remember the huge Great Pacific Garbage Patch? And recent studies showed there is even more plastic pollution in the deep see than in the garbage patch.

Threats to the oceans include pollution, overfishing, invasive species, and rising ocean acidity due to the extensive use of fossil fuels. And we are all aware of the threat to the ocean due to plastic waste. Find your own way to help protect your oceans. .More from the Climate Action Summit.

A few ways you can celebrate Happy Oceans Day. 

  • Pack a picnic & take some bags for capturing trash and head to your fav waterway or bay or beach. Be inspired by the water and pick up any trash.
  • Make a promise to Climate Action. At SF on the Bay, we did. We committed to cutting back our plastic use by 75% last year. And now we want to cut out plastic bottle use  entirely except when necessary when traveling. You can make your promise now and let us know. Samantha Mackiewicz, above, did her part by kayak in March 2019.
  • Recycle and use reusable water bottles and grocery bags to help reduce plastic pollution
  • Reduce your carbon footprint by turning off lights and appliances when they are not in use and purchasing energy efficient products in the future.
  • Make sustainable seafood choices to protect marine life, and there are now sustainable seafood guides available for many countries around the world.

About World Oceans Day

Canada first proposed the concept for World Oceans Day in 1992 at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. In December 2008, a United Nations resolution designated June 8 of each year as World Oceans Day.

NOTES:
More information about what you can do to reveres the climate change effects – coming soon  Join our community and let’s pick up that plastic we see laying around.

By |2020-07-08T21:01:23-07:00June 8th, 2019|0 Comments

Sonoma Farms Open Their Gates!

Saturday/Sunday, October 13/14 meet your Sonoma County farmers & vintners, shop from delicious farmstands, see how cheese is made, pick pumpkins, meet farm animals, learn about beekeeping, sample delicious food & libations and discover some of Sonoma County’s best kept

Bohemian Creamery Photo/Dawn Heumann

secrets! Register here!

Most of the stops are FREE. All you need is transportation, the program and online map, a cooler to keep your purchases fresh, and a sense of adventure!

CHOOSE YOUR ACTIVITIES & FARMS:

  • Find the perfect pumpkin
  • Take a farm tour
  • Meet farm animals
  • Grab a farm picnic from a food truck
  • Shop from delicious farmstands
  • Sample fabulous food & libations
  • Take a hands-on floral workshop
  • Learn from farmer panels
  • Enjoy an intimate farm-to-table meal
  • Dance to live music
  • …and so much more!

    Redwood Hill farm Capracopia Creamery Kids Photo/Dawn Heumann

TIPS FOR THE TRAILS:

  • Plan your route using the program & online map. Keep in mind, the nearest distance between locations ranges from 3 – 15 miles.
  • Use a trusted map or GPS, as cell reception is not reliable in some areas.
  • Read itinerary closely. Some destinations are only open one day.
  • Bring a water bottle to stay hydrated during the warm weekend, & bring protection from the sun.
  • Bring a cooler and basket or bag for purchases. Please carry out anything you bring with you.
  • Absolutely no pets allowed, even in cars, please.
  • Wear good walking shoes.
  • Registered guests will receive the list of participating farms and a detailed program along with a link to an interactive online map in their inbox.
  • Register here!

    Photo/Samantha Harmon

Learn more about Farm Trails in Sonoma County.

Ever witness the Dairy Cow Pumpkin Stomp?
Photo/Stan Grady

By |2020-02-22T17:15:49-08:00October 12th, 2018|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Taking Climate Action as One World. ARE YOU IN?

Taking Climate Action as One World. ARE YOU IN?

Over 4,000 credentialed delegates (SF on the Bay honored to be one) descended upon San Francisco Sept. 12-14 for the Global Climate Action Summit to renew and expand upon their commitment to the historic Paris Climate Change Agreement and celebrate their own city, county, company, citizens and country’s extraordinary achievements. The approach to the solution is as one world, taking commitment to the next level  – everyone doing what they can within their means to hail the decarbonization of the world.

Sights are on zero emissions by 2050. No more deforestation. No more fossil fuel emissions. Clean energy a must. Strategic control of manufacturing, the use of plastic and food-waste. Integration of technology, AI and innovation to contribute to emissions control and propel us forward. And most of all, commitment to action.

A Few Highlights

On the city level

  • As cities are getting more congested, how can we have healthier streets as we increase density? Three cities pledged to have zero emissions by 2030.  Three mayors committed to have all electric buses by 2025. Mayor Giuseppe Sala, Mayor of Milan, Italy, exclaimed, “The bus is not a sexy transport vehicle, but if you add FREE WIFI, it becomes sexy.” Transportation’s future is zero carbon with the substitution of electric and hydrogen vehicles and the use of shared bikes.
  • Mayor Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz, Warsaw, Poland’s Mayor, is taking 6,000 parking lot spaces out of downtown and making room for housing/new development. She currently has 500 km for cycling with 400 shared city bikes and is adding 600 km more for bicycles.
  • According to London Breed, Mayor of San Francisco, there are now more recyclables than trash going to the landfill. SF is trying to educate and reduce organic waste to zero in their landfills, which reduces the methane produced, reducing CO2 emissions. Mayor Gronkiewicz-Waltz was impressed by SF’s labeling on the garbage container and is taking it home with her to Warsaw. Instead of waste or garbage, it says ‘Landfill.’ Top of mind.
  • Mayor Mukta Tilak, from Pune, 2nd largest city in the state of Maharashtra, India, after Mumbai with about 3.5 million people, says her city produces 2,000 tons of waste per day, They started segregation of waste and they are now at 60% households participation. They instituted a door-to-door program where 3,000 women, who need jobs, deliver bins to homes and collect them.

On the state level

  • Governor Jay Inslee of Washington State explained how CO2 goes into the water and creates acidic conditions. Oyster beds and other seafood are dying.  WA is investing $1 million into resources for the shellfish and crabbing industries. They are also farming kelp. On the global level he stresses growing clean energy jobs across the planet.
  • Hawaii’s Nainoa Thompson, President, Polynesian Voyaging Society, flew 4.5 hours to get to the summit, and said, “We are here to honor, thank and celebrate the vital work of this summit. Because we depend on it.” Meanwhile, Lehua Kamalu, Captain of the Polynesian Voyaging Society, spent 23 days navigating the Pacific Ocean on a traditional voyaging canoe with her crew of 12 trainees through The Great Pacific Garbage Patch  (now more than 600,000 miles of plastic, twice the size of TX), through winds and storms to the shores of Half Moon Bay. A journey of almost 2,900 miles.

Lehua explained sailing in the ‘old way’ following the stars, memorizing where you came from. Her main focus was to make sure the canoe is healthy from beginning to end and that her crew thrived amidst the 500 decisions they had to make.  Lehua explained, “Through this practice, we connect with the ocean – connect with the food that feeds us and the wind that propels us.”

  • One way to look at it is that the ocean connects all things – land to water to sky to people.

On the country level

  • Indonesia, three times the size of the continental US, is highly threatened by the changing ecosystem in their waters. They depend on fishing for their food, livelihood and work. In some parts of the world over-fishing has wrecked the ecosystem as well as the carbon emissions that end up in our waters.
  • Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, Republic of Fiji, first to ratify the Paris Agreement, challenged the cities that globally touch the ocean to take action. They must take action. “The Ocean is everything.” Their coral reefs are dying creating great sadness.
  • Africa, one of the developing countries at the summit, has their own Climate Change issues. “Africa has so many droughts, floods and severe storms, the reality of Climate Change is stark,” according to Ambassador Macharia Kamau, Minister for Principal Secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kenya. They are trying to create response systems to CC, one of which is the mangroves. His biggest fear is that as Africa industrializes, they will be forced to use old dirty technology in manufacturing. “When poor countries rise, this is what happens.”
  • The Arctic. Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Activist, Former Chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Council, who grew up the first ten years of her life travelling by dog sled, said the world knows more about the arctic wildlife than about their people. “We are very connected to land, water, ice through hunting. We love our land – it feeds us culturally and spiritually. The ice is a huge part of our identity, our life.” They face the issue of safety and security when the ice starts to go, as it is. They fear losing tradition too as the ice teaches them patience, courage, persistence and to have wisdom and sound judgment. “We have much to offer the world about sustainability.” And told us to remember, “What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic.”
  • All agreed that sharing knowledge with each other was very important – how to do things and how to finance them. One world.

THE OCEAN – Take a look.  A NDRC video narrated by Signoyey Weaver

The global ocean is our biggest ecosystem, according to Julie Packard, executive director of Monterey Aquarium. “Ocean issues are central to the Climate conversations.” Globally we are dependent upon oceans for food, transportation, recreation, work, and livelihood. 50% of our oxygen is produced by the ocean and 25% of carbon dioxide is absorbed by it. Sea levels are rising. Water temperatures are rising, acidity increasing. If we continue to not address Climate Change effect on our waters, and continue to pollute with plastic, there will be more plastic than fish in our oceans by 2050.

According to the Blue Carbon Initiative, a global program working to mitigate climate change through restoration and sustainable use of coastal and marine ecosystems, 83% of the carbons worldwide are circulated through our oceans. Coastal areas comprise less than 2% of the ocean area; yet absorb 50% of the carbon. Blue Carbon is the carbon stored in our coastal and marine ecosystems –mangroves, salt marshes and sea grass – plants and sediment.

Dr. Jane Lubchenco, Dept. of Integrative Biology, Oregon State University, said that we currently protect 4% of the oceans and only highly protect 2%. She stressed the need to commit to highly protecting 30% of our oceans by 2030. How? By reforming the fisheries, which provide livelihood to 10% of the world. She calls for improving fishery management and reserving more marine areas.

We need bold leadership and purposeful action. The ocean is fixable. A few implementable actions:

  • Monitoring deforestation – forests store carbon emissions
  • Planting mangroves – our ocean and coasts provide a natural way of reducing greenhouse gases by absorbing and storing carbon with mangroves, salt marshes and sea grasses
  • Growing kelp – kelp draw in so much carbon dioxide that they help de-acidify the water
  • Tracking fisheries
  • Putting marine protection reserves (non-fishable areas) in place

Get on board. Get inspired. Look at all the news announcements coming out of the summit – over 500 commitments. For example, Apple partnered with Blue Carbon Initiative to plant 30,000 mangroves along the coast of Columbia.

Summing up the summit Governor Jerry Brown announced a partnership with Planet Labs Inc. to track and counter the pollution caused by Climate Change – from a satellite. “With science still under attack and the climate threat growing, we’re launching our own damn satellite,” said Governor Brown. “This groundbreaking initiative will help governments, businesses and landowners pinpoint – and stop – destructive emissions with unprecedented precision, on a scale that’s never been done before.” (excerpt GCAS news). Technology will continue to play a large part in getting ahead of the effects of climate change.

Over and over again we heard how though the US administration has backed out of the Paris Agreement, the American people, their cities, counties, states and companies have not.  Are you in? What can you commit to today and every day to change your sustainable practices?

Read about the summit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By |2020-07-08T20:56:25-07:00September 21st, 2018|0 Comments
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