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| Red-masked Parakeet in Live Oak, Golden Gate Heights |
I was out back enjoying some rare sunshine and contemplating my neighbor's oak tree when a flock of noisy parrots descended into its branches. My neighbor, Jake Sigg, planted the tree from an acorn nearly sixty years ago, when he was a young gardener in Golden Gate Park. Jake passed away last month, several days after celebrating his 99th birthday. Hopefully his oak will enjoy such a long life, and more.
In his brief autobiography, Notes on a Long Life, Jake wrote, "The principal focus of my life in retirement is the protection of natural ecosystems. When I was the gardener for the California native section of Strybing Arboretum I wasn't aware of the value of native plants.... I now rail at what I call our biologically illiterate society, which included me." Jake joined the California Native Plant Society, became president of the local chapter, and made righteous noise on behalf of natural ecosystems for the rest of his life.
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| Jake's oak towers above a yard filled with smaller native plants such as coffeeberry, sea spray, cow parsnip, red-flowering currant, wild cucumber, and pipevine, but also includes a couple of ornamentals. |
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| Parakeets dig it, as do crows, squirrels, hummingbirds, juncos, chickadees, bushtits, Townsend's warblers, and the occasional red-shouldered and cooper's hawks. |
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| One of the ornamentals is a fuchsia vine that attracts hummingbirds. |
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| The parakeets can make a lot of noise as they keep in touch with far-flung members of the neighborhood flock. When near and far cohorts engage in call-and-response, I can only wonder what they are communicating. |
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