Fire breaks out at deck of SF home in Portola neighborhood
No reports of injuries or displaced residents were mentioned by SFFD. Officials say crews have contained the fire that was on the back deck floor of the residence.
Video of SFFD's response to the fire can be viewed in the media player above.
Marina District gastropub shuts down after 16 years in San Francisco
Fire breaks out in Vacaville where crews were conducting prescribed burn
SFFD firefighters remain on scene for cleanup, along with performing salvage and overhaul. The public was asked to avoid the area of Goettingen Street between Olmstead and Mansell.
SFFD first posted about the fire at 6:12 p.m. on X.
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Los Angeles Times
27 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Thanks to a $5,000 rebate and DIY skills, their L.A. yard has it all — except grass
Water-hungry lawns are symbols of Los Angeles' past. In this series, we spotlight yards with alternative, low-water landscaping built for the future. When it's hot in Los Angeles, hummingbirds, butterflies and bees flock to the gardens that Lexie Glass and her husband, Evan Hursley, have been building in Harvard Park for the past three years. 'Their garden is a good example of how your landscape can be a universe for wildlife,' says Katie Tilford, development director at Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers and Native Plants, which has featured Glass and Hursley's garden on its annual Native Plant Garden Tour. For Glass, the gardens are not just 'their space,' but an environment to be shared with the natural world. 'The [COVID-19] pandemic really stressed the importance we hold for the landscape around Southern California,' says Glass, who is originally from Arkansas, 'so creating our own around our house was an exciting opportunity.' When the couple purchased the 900-square-foot Craftsman in late 2021, their front and back lawn were primarily brown and dead, and concrete was prevalent. A creative couple — Glass is a designer and Hursley is an architect — the 31-year-olds were accustomed to creating plans and managing projects. So when they learned that the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power's turf replacement program would pay them to convert their grass into a low-water landscape with California-friendly plants, they were excited to spearhead a DIY project for themselves and use the rebate to cover their expenses. Soon after the two bought the property, they started their yard project by removing the L-shaped strip of concrete in the backyard with a sledgehammer. Next, they dug a pathway through the back and side yards, installing the broken pieces of concrete to form 'sinuous paths that would lead to moments of discovery,' Glass says. 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'We added lots of fragrant varieties to the front yard to greet us and our guests home, but also to hopefully spark intrigue with neighbors as they walk by,' Glass says. 'We hoped they would enjoy both the site and the smells of native plants and begin to appreciate native plants if they didn't already.' Glass and Hursley planted 250 mostly one-gallon plants, 80% of which are native to California, while the others are drought-tolerant plants from countries with similar climates. Three years in, they admit they made mistakes along the way. 'Everything grew much larger than the literature we read predicted,' Hursley says. 'Coyote mint is taking over our creek bed.' Also, some plants didn't survive. Trial and error is to be expected in a garden, Tilford says. 'That's part of the experience. Allowing yourself to fail is a way of permitting yourself to learn something new. That is a valuable lesson: Everything is going to get bigger than you think, especially if it's next to a path or sidewalk.' After submitting Glass and Hursley plans to the LADWP's replacement program, which currently offers a $5-per-square-foot rebate, the $5,100 they received covered all their material expenses. 'All we had to supply was the labor,' Glass says. When nearly 300 tour-goers visited the garden in the spring, they were treated to bright orange California poppies, cobalt-blue ceanothus flowers — a fan favorite, the couple says — yellow bush sunflowers and the bold pink flowers of hummingbird sage. Come summer, some plants are dormant, but the wildlife, and in some instances, flowers like De La Mina verbena continue to bloom. Although they added plants to nearly half the property, the couple likes that the garden feels much larger than it did before. 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Peppermint Tree, Agonis flexuosa Desert Museum Palo Verde, Cercidium 'Desert Museum' 'Eureka' Semi Dwarf Lemon, Citrus X Limon 'Eureka' Washington Navel Dwarf Orange, Citrus Sinensis, Washington Dwarf Bartlett Pear, Pyrus Communis Morning Glory, Calystegia purpurata Howard McMinn Manzanita, Arctostaphylos 'Howard McMinn' Concha Ceanothus, Ceanothus 'Concha' Firecracker Penstemon, Penstemon Eatonii Desert Spoon, Dasylirion Wheeleri 'Desert Spoon' California Buckwheat, Eriogonum fasciculatum Scarlet Columbine, Aquilegia formosa Moonshine Yarrow, Achillea 'Moonshine' Desert globemallow, Sphaeralcea ambigua Coyote Mint, Monardella Villosa Parry's Agave, Agave Parryi California Fuchsia, Epilobium canum Star Jasmine, Jasminum multiflorum Narrow Leaf Milkweed, Asclepias fascicularis Margarita BOP Penstemon, Penstemon heterophyllus 'Margarita BOP' White Sage, Salvia Apiana De La Mina Verbena, Verbena lilacina 'De La Mina' Bush Sunflower, Encelia californica Common Yarrow, Achillea millefolium Everett's Choice California Fuchsia, Epilobium canum 'Everett's Choice' Hummingbird Sage, Salvia Spathacea California Poppy, Eschscholzia Californica Brittlebush, Encelia farinosa Allen Chickering Sage, Salvia 'Allen Chickering' Palmer's Indian Mallow, Abutilon palmeri Elegant Clarkia, Clarkia unguiculata Bird's Eyes, Gilia tricolor Iris Pacific Coast Hybrids Wendy Alumroot, Heuchera 'Wendy' Coral Bells, Heuchera Yerba Buena, Clinopodium douglasii Seaside Daisy, Erigeron glaucus Catalina Currant, Ribes viburnifolium Safari Sunset Conebush, Leucadendron 'Safari Sunset' San Miguel Island Buckwheat and Red Buckwheat, Eriogonum grande var. rubescens Germander Sage, Salvia chamaedryoides Cow's Horn Cactus, Euphorbia grandicornis Variegated African Candelabra, Euphorbia ammak variegata Blue Flax, Linum lewisii Turf Replacement Rebate Program Planting a Native Garden in Los Angeles Waterwise Garden Planner Green Gardens Group Education California Friendly and Native Landscape Training California Native Plant Society Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants Plant Material Artemisa Nursery


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