8/5 CZU and You: Henry Cowell

Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park has implemented a new prescribed burn program that allows community members to actively participate in forest management practices that support the health and resiliency of the park. Join us for this two part program where we’ll:

1. Learn about fire ecology in the redwoods and current forest management practices underway in the Redwood Grove of Henry Cowell Redwoods, including burn piles that are being created by community volunteers.

2. Practice building burn piles alongside State Parks staff and volunteers for future burn days. This is a unique opportunity to actively support land management both for and with fire in Santa Cruz County.

Saturday, August 5, 2023
10 a.m. to noon

Location: Henry Cowell (meeting details will be shared upon registration).
Accessibility notes below.

$20 Suggested Donation


About the CZU and YOU Series

Explore the role of fire on our landscape through a series of walks that invite our community to reflect on the CZU Lightning Complex fires of August 2020, while learning about proactive steps being taken throughout the County to manage the landscape both for and with fire. Explore fire resources from past events here.

In Partnership With

CZU and You Events


Accessibility and What to Expect

  • Participants should be prepared to walk 1-2 miles on mostly paved and flat trails.
  • Restrooms are available near the parking lot.
  • Wear layers, comfortable shoes, and bring any snacks/water you might need.
  • The first hour of the program will be a guided tour, and we will end with an opportunity to help build brush piles for those who are interested. NOTE: We will be building the piles, not burning them. Please wear boots, bring work gloves, and be prepared to work in varying terrain/conditions should you like to participate in this portion of the program. Please watch this video before attending.
  • Please leave your pets at home. Trained service animals are permitted.
  • Youth under the age of 14 must be accompanied by an adult.

CZU and You 2023

Explore the role of fire on our landscape through a series of programs that invite our community to reflect on the CZU Lightning Complex fires of August 2020, while learning about proactive steps being taken throughout the County to manage the landscape both for and with fire. Explore fire resources from past events here.

Events

In Partnership With

Perils in Paradise: Natural Disasters in Santa Cruz County with Gary Griggs

The climate, beautiful coastline, and majestic mountains that draw countless people to the Santa Cruz region every year were developed by the same forces that wreak havoc along the coast on a regular basis: floods, landslides, earthquakes, and storms.

Join Dr. Gary Griggs for a presentation about the historical and geologic context of the perils we endure to live in paradise, followed by a panel discussion featuring Tiffany Wise-West (Climate Action Program Manager for the City of Santa Cruz) and Nate Mantua (climate scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries Office) where we will turn our attention to the future of this landscape, exploring the implications of climate change and community actions to address these challenges.

This program is part of the series Extreme Weather.

Thank you UC Santa Cruz and the Center for Coastal Climate Resilience for making the livestream and recording possible. The new center aims to advance campus research and to partner with state and federal agencies as well as private foundations to address coastal climate change, resilience, and sustainability.

About the Speaker

Gary Griggs is a Distinguished Professor of Earth & Planetary Sciences at the University of California Santa Cruz, where he has taught for 54 years. He received his B.A. in Geological Sciences in 1965 from the University of California Santa Barbara and a Ph.D. in Oceanography from Oregon State University in 1968. Gary served as the Director of the University’s Institute of Marine Sciences for 26 years, where he led the development of a Coastal Science Campus. His research, teaching, writing and lectures have been focused on the coast of California and include coastal processes, hazards, and the impacts of and responses to sea-level rise. Read more about Dr. Griggs.

Accessibility

Resources

With support from

Watsonville – Let’s Go Outside! – ¡Vamos afuera!

Free Family Programs | Programas familiares gratuitos

Join our free programs, connect with science and nature, and have fun with your family and friends. Share this invitation and join our community! To receive email reminders about upcoming programs and events in Watsonville, subscribe to our monthly newsletter below.

Venga a disfrutar de nuestros programas gratuitos, conéctese con la ciencia y la naturaleza, y diviértase con su familia y amigos. ¡Comparta esta invitación y únase a nuestra comunidad! Para recibir notificaciones sobre los próximos programas y eventos en Watsonville, suscríbase a nuestro boletín mensual.

Come visit the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History’s Mini-Museum located at SOMOS Watsonville112 E Beach St, Watsonville, CA 95076.

Venga a visitar el Mini-Museo del Museo de Historia Natural de Santa Cruz ubicado en SOMOS Watsonville 112 E Beach St, Watsonville, CA 95076.

Free Upcoming Programs | Próximos programas gratuitos

Make sure to sign up for our free Nature Explorers Summer Camp! This camp will be in Watsonville – Franich Park.This camp is now FULL, and we will be starting a waitlist.

¡Asegúrese de inscribirse en nuestro campamento de verano gratuito Nature Explorers! Este campamento será en Watsonville – Franich Park.Este campamento ya está LLENO y comenzaremos una lista de espera.

After-School Activity: Animal Tracks

Tuesday, May 6 | 4:30-6:30 p.m. | Arte del Corazón

Come learn about local mammals and their tracks. Come and create an animal track for your to take home! We will be at Arte del Corazon every 1st and 3rd Wednesday of the month!

Actividad después de la escuela: Huellas de animales

6 de mayo, 2025 | 4:30-6:30 p.m. | Arte del Corazón

Venga a aprender sobre los mamíferos locales y sus huellas. ¡Estaremos en Arte del Corazón cada 1er y 3er miércoles del mes!

After-School Activity: Plant Pressing

Thursday, May 8 | 4:00 – 5:30pm | Somos Watsonville

Join us at the SOMOS Watsonville to discover a botanical process with fresh flowers and a cardboard press. Come and learn how to make a plant press to dry and preserve your favorite flowers. 

Actividad después de la escuela: Prensado de plantas

8 de mayo, 2025| 4:00 – 5:30 p.m. | Somos Watsonville

Acompáñenos en SOMOS Watsonville para descubrir un proceso botánico con flores frescas y una prensa de cartón. Venga y aprenda a hacer una prensa de plantas para secar y conservar sus flores favoritas.

Mobile Museum : Oceans

Friday, May 9 | 2:30 – 4:30pm| Watsonville Public Library

Come find us at the Library! We will be sharing our Oceans themed collections : orca tooth, krill, baleen, and more!

Museo Móvil : Océanos

9 de mayo, 2025  | 2:30 – 4:30pm|Biblioteca pública de Watsonville

¡Vaya a visitarnos a la Biblioteca! Compartiremos nuestras colecciones con temática oceánica: dientes de orca, krill, barbas y mucho más.

Family Fun: Toddler Tumble Time

Tuesday, May 13 | 10:30-11:30 a.m. | Watsonville Public Library

Come for Toddler Tumble Time. We will have diverse specimens to share with everyone! Specifically, we will be showcasing our entomology collections.

Diversión Familiar: Hora de Toddler Tumble

13 de mayo, 2025 | 10:30-11:30 a.m. | Biblioteca pública de Watsonville

Venga a disfrutar la Hora de Toddler Tumble cada segundo martes del mes. ¡Tendremos diversos ejemplares para compartir con todos! Mostraremos nuestras colecciones de entomología.

After-School Activity: Embossing

Tuesday, May 13  | 4:00 – 6:00pm | Environmental Science Workshop

Make a print that will last forever inspired by the different things you see in nature! This printmaking technique is called “embossing”. Used during the 19th century to design stamps and seals for documents, to make coins, and to make a variety of different types of prints.

Actividad después de la escuela: Arte repujad de cobre

13 de mayo, 2025 | 4:00 – 6:00pm | Taller de Ciencias Ambientales

¡Haga una impresión que durará para siempre inspirada en las diferentes cosas que ve en la naturaleza! Esta técnica de grabado se llama “relieve”. Se utilizó durante el siglo XIX para diseñar sellos y sellos para documentos, para fabricar monedas y para realizar una variedad de diferentes tipos de impresiones.

Family Fun: Pajaro Valley Arts

Friday, May 16 | 2-3:30 p.m. |Pajaro Valley Arts

Come do scientific illustrations with us! You will be making close observations of specimens and using descriptive language and drawings to reflect your observations.

Diversión Familiar: Pajaro Valley Arts

16 de mayo, 2025 | 2-3:30 p.m. | Pajaro Valley Arts

¡Venga a hacer ilustraciones científicas con nosotros! Observará detenidamente los especímenes y usarás lenguaje descriptivo y dibujos para plasmar sus observaciones.

After-School Activity: Mushroom Hats

Tuesday, May 20 | 4:30-6:30 p.m. | Arte del Corazón

Come and join us in learning about fungi while making a mushroom hat to take home! We will be at Arte del Corazon every 1st and 3rd Wednesday of the month. 

Actividad después de la escuela: Sombrero de hongo

20 de mayo, 2025 | 4:30-6:30 p.m. | Arte del Corazón

¡Venga para aprender sobre los hongos mientras hace un sombrero de hongo para llevar a casa! Estaremos en Arte del Corazón cada 1er y 3er miércoles del mes.

These programs are funded by the Outdoor Equity Grants Program, created through AB 209 and administered by California State Parks, Office of Grants and Local Services.
Estos programas son financiados por el Programa de Subvenciones de Equidad al Aire Libre, creado a través AB 209 y administrado por la Oficina de Subvenciones y Servicios Locales de Parque Estatales de California.

Explore the nature of Santa Cruz — wherever you are! Connect with local experts and deepen your understanding about nature, science, and stewardship online and in-person. Stay updated about upcoming events!

¡Explore la naturaleza de Santa Cruz, dondequiera que esté! Conéctese con expertos locales y profundice su comprensión sobre la naturaleza, la ciencia y la gestión en línea y en persona. Mantengase actualizado sobre los próximos eventos.

In Memoriam: Richard Gurnee

From the glorious wingspan of our golden eagle to the small haunches of our slender salamander, our taxidermy displays are an impactful tool for connecting people to science and nature. For half a century, we have been lucky enough to build out this toolkit with specimens from a local pioneer in the ancient tradition of taxidermy. It is in the memory of this good fortune that we reflect on the life of local taxidermist Richard Gurnee, who passed away this fall.

From the glorious wingspan of our golden eagle to the small haunches of our slender salamander, our taxidermy displays are an impactful tool for connecting people to science and nature. For half a century, we have been lucky enough to build out this toolkit with specimens from a local pioneer in the ancient tradition of taxidermy. It is in the memory of this good fortune that we reflect on the life of local taxidermist Richard Gurnee, who passed away this fall. 

Gurnee, a thoughtful man who radiated warmth and knowledge, was also an artist who excelled at preserving the animal world through freeze-dry taxidermy. This unique process of Gurnee’s own invention enabled him to preserve challenging specimens with minimal construction of otherwise typical physical supports. From the bright plumage of traditional game birds to the unusual preservation of a sea anemone, his taxidermy process captured tremendous diversity. Gurnee’s distinctive work is an endless inspiration. A closer look at his specimens, like our taxidermied octopus, can teach us not only about the creature itself, but also about the history of the science and art of taxidermy

Some have been lucky enough to take field trips to his Watsonville-based shop – just over ten years ago, museum staff and volunteers got to explore Gurnee’s studio as part of an enrichment experience. As we reflect on the legacy of this incredible naturalist, artisan, and community member, we wanted to share some highlights of that experience for those of us who did not get the chance to explore Gurnee’s studio while he was still with us.

Gurnee’s work has brought us closer to our nonhuman neighbors, as well as more exotic and endangered animals, for more than five decades. Given the nature of taxidermy, it will continue to do so for many years, just as Gurnee’s legacy will live on in the hearts and minds of nature nerds in the Central Coast and beyond.

Transforming Taxidermy: Remembering Richard Gurnee

Watsonville native Richard Gurnee pioneered a freeze-drying technique that revolutionized the field of scientific taxidermy. Though he passed away in late 2022, his legacy will live on through the many organizations that share his specimens with the community through nature centers, museums, and educational programs.

Join the Kenneth S. Norris Center for Natural History, Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History, and Watsonville Wetlands Watch for a look back on his life and celebrate his lasting legacy.

Resources

A Whale of a Tale

The barnacled bodies and heart-shaped spouts of gray whales (Eschrictius robustus) are a welcome sight as they migrate through the Monterey Bay, routine visitors renowned for their deliberate and friendly curiosity towards humans. As one of the three most commonly seen whales along the Central Coast, it can feel surreal to reflect on how recently, and how close to home whales were last commercially fished in the United States. To the whaling industry, these amiable animals earned the nickname “Devil Fish” for their robust aggression in the face of harpoons. But since the U.S. officially outlawed commercial whaling in 1971, these behemoths earned a more gentle reputation, and their populations have stabilized in response to a wave of conservation efforts in the 1970s. 

Against this backdrop of accelerating whale conservation, what was then the Santa Cruz City Museum was delighted to host an exhibit by General Whale. The brainchild of artist Larry Foster, who was known for his pioneering efforts to accurately portray whales, General Whale harnessed a blend of art and science to get folks excited about cetaceans. It was through two temporary exhibits in 1977 and 1979, that the Museum memorably hosted two titanic visitors: the ferrocement statue of Sandy the gray whale, who found a home at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, and the fabulous fiberglass form of Pheena the fin whale, who landed at the Lawrence Hall of Science.

Wherever these whales went, they were a hit, and Santa Cruz was no exception. It didn’t take long for city and Museum staff and volunteers to hatch plans to acquire Santa Cruz’s own whale statue. The vision was to make a ferrocement gray while like Sandy, but rather than build the statue in separate chunks that could be easily relocated, this permanent structure would be built with a single wood lathe frame, encased in a layer of cement-coated wire mesh. The City Museum community was keen to provide a forever home to a public art piece that would simultaneously provide opportunities for play and learning.

From a wildly-popular lecture series to well-attended walkathons, the whale-wishers put their money where their mouth was, raising thousands of dollars in collaboration with the City to get the whale built. Starting in spring of 1982, City Museum newsletters began bursting with the names of individuals (including former staff member John Anderson) and activities dedicated to getting the community on board the whale ship, as it were. 

An important aspect of this campaign was activities designed to get people thinking at the scale of whales — like assembling a ten foot whale skeleton, or wandering around inside an inflatable 110 foot long blue whale model. Connecting folks to a life-sized gray whale statue was a key component of the important ways that this statue was always intended to act as an educational exhibit for park-goers of all ages — in the words of City Museum leadership, the whale would be a visible symbol of the Museum’s purposes. The whale campaign raised more than funds —it also expanded community awareness of the Museum’s mission to connect people to nature.

Construction of the gray whale statue, carried out by local ferrocement boat builder Al Hipkins in consultation with Larry Foster, culminated in the statue’s dedication on October 16, 1982. While the well-loved whale has been refurbished throughout its life, it continues to provide community and connection from where it rests in Tyrrell Park. The Museum (an independent non-profit since 2008) proudly continues to partner with the City in the stewardship and care for this remarkable statue. This October, we hope the friendly face of the gray whale statue lures the marine-curious beyond the park and into the depths of our special Maritime Mysteries and Monsters exhibit, which will further explore oceanic phenomena, marine science, and the complex relationships between humans and the sea.

Thank you for sending us your sea monster!

Follow us on social media to see if your submission will be featured.

Maritime Mysteries and Monsters Events

Contest | We’re Searching For Sea Monsters

In honor of the new exhibit, Maritime Mysteries and Monsters, we’re searching for sea monsters! Share your photos, videos, artwork, or stories spotlighting the scary side of the sea.

One lucky winner will receive spooky ocean swag from the Museum store and two free tickets to the Museum of the Macabre Halloween Party on October 29. Last day to submit is October 15.

What can I submit?

Anything created by you that represents the scary, mysterious, or odd side of the ocean. Examples:

  • Photos (landscapes, critters, etc)
  • Videos
  • Memes
  • Poems
  • Drawings
  • Costumes

How do I submit?

Complete a submission form and upload a PDF, DOC, DOCX, PNG, JPG, JPEG, or GIF file (16MB maximum). Submissions are due by 11:59 p.m. on October 15. The winner will be announced before October 29.

What will you do with my submission?

Select submissions will be featured on social media and one winner will be selected to win a prize.

What is the prize?

A variety of spooky ocean swag from the Museum store and two free tickets to the Museum of the Macabre halloween party on October 29. If you are unable to attend the event or are under the age of 21, you will be offered a Museum Membership instead of tickets to the event.