Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Naturescaping Workshops 5/5 & 5/20


Naturescaping Basics Workshops

These workshops are FREE. Register now and learn how you can do it yourself! Register online at www.emswcd.org/workshops-events/register-for-a-workshop

Learn to design your landscape so that it reduces water use, decreases stormwater runoff and pollution while saving you time, money and energy! You’ll learn how to create a thriving, low maintenance, garden that is free from chemicals. You will get advice on native plant gardening & landscape design, visit a nearby naturescaped garden, and receive a comprehensive workbook and a native plant to help you get started.

Saturday, 5/5
9am-1pm
SMILE Station, 8210 SE 13th Ave, Portland, OR 97202
·         Hosted by Crystal Springs Partnership


Sunday, 5/20
1:30-5:30pm
Mt. Scott Community Center, 5530 SE 72nd Ave, Portland, OR 97206
·         Hosted by Mt. Scott-Arleta Neighborhood Association

Rain Gardens Workshops 3/17 & 4/21


Rain Gardens 101 Workshops

These workshops are FREE. Register now and learn how you can do it yourself! Register online at www.emswcd.org/workshops-events/register-for-a-workshop

Learn how to contain that rain! Rain gardens add beauty to your yard and can help restore overloaded urban streams at the same time. Taught by professional landscape designers, this workshop provides step by step details on how to build your own rain garden. You’ll learn how to determine soil suitability, calculate impervious surfaces, determine the correct size and location for your rain garden, choose appropriate plants, take a short field trip to a nearby rain garden and much, much more.

Saturday, 3/17
9am – 1pm
Tabor Space in Mt. Tabor Presbyterian Church, 5441 SE Belmont, Portland, OR 97215
·         Hosted by Mt. Tabor Neighborhood Association


Saturday, 4/21
9am – 1pm
Southeast Uplift - 3534 SE Main St., Portland, OR 97214

Friday, February 24, 2012

Getting ready for Spring.


Can't you just feel it?  Spring is almost here - bulbs are up, even saw a Rhododendron in full bloom today.

At your tool library, we've been getting ready for Spring.  Pretty soon members will be asking for the mowers, and we're ready.  Two of our member volunteers (one on the Board) recently spent a few hours tuning up and sharpening our five push lawn mowers.  Testing on the lawn outside the SEPTL door proved them worthy once again.

As always, do your best to protect the mower blades from sticks and stones, and be sure to clean the mowers - and all the tools you borrow - before you return them.

Mowers will be in high demand very soon, so it's important that they be returned on time.  Even better if you can - if possible, return them on our next open day: we're open both Tuesday evenings and Saturdays.  If a mower comes back to us in just a few days, it can go out twice each week.  Your neighbor's lawn will appreciate that, as will you the next time your lawn needs a trim.

And happy Spring!

- e michael brandt

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Donation buttons!

We just added PayPal Donate buttons to our website!

Help us meet our expenses by clicking on these buttons and spending freely.  Your donations will help us pay rent, keep our volunteers happy, replace consumables and buy more of the tools you want most.  You do not need a PayPal account to donate.  We get about 97% of whatever you give, and it's safe to use!

Tell your friends ... and hmm, perhaps even your parents!

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Seismic retrofit - the city wants our help.


Last year SEPTL and St David's Church hosted a City of Portland seismic strengthening workshop.  The city is now asking for our feedback.  The links below are well worth reading even if you missed the workshop.  Here is what the city has sent us:

Having grown into major city long before scientists discovered its unique seismic vulnerabilities, Portland is now expected to experience a potentially devastating earthquake of magnitude 9.0 or greater. Work is underway to identify those vulnerabilities and make Portland a more earthquake-resilient city. This work -now embodied in the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management’s new Earthquake Response Appendix - will help lessen the severity of an earthquake’s impact on residents.

The Earthquake Response Appendix is a supplement to the City’s Basic Emergency Operations Plan and a framework for Portland's ever-evolving approach to earthquake response. Soon, this document will reach Portland City Council for consideration. In the meantime, PBEM is asking the public to thoroughly examine the appendix and provide feedback.

To learn more about the threats facing Portland’s energy, water, sewer, transportation, communication and building infrastructures; to understand the roles elected leaders, city officials, emergency responders, the private sector and community-based organizations play in the context of earthquake response; and to understand the partnerships established among public and private agencies to help support this response, please read the appendix.

To provide insight and comments about the document, please fill out the feedback form.