Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Magnificent TARGETED Willow Downed Naturally at Magazine Beach on the Charles River

Magnificent TARGETED Willow Downed Naturally at Magazine Beach on the Charles River.

1. Magnificent, TARGETED Willow Downed..
a. Just now.
b. The pair of willows.
2. Habitat of the Charles River White Geese Destroyed
a. General.
b. The destruction of the Nesting Area of the Charles River White Geese, more destruction coming.
c. First starving of the Charles River White Geese, in front of the just downed willow.
2. Habitat of the Charles River White Geese Destroyed and Destroyed.
a. General.
b. The Nesting Area of the Charles River White Geese, more destruction coming.
c. The MWRA plant and the Playing Fields
d. The western part of the Magazine Beach Recreation Area, west of the downed Willows.
4. Its neighbors.
a. Phil photos.
b. City Council FAKE concern for Bees:
5. Recent publications which go into greater detail.
a. Based on drone videos.
b. The Nesting Area of the Charles River White Geese, more destruction coming.
c. Detailed FILED plans of the ongoing destruction at Magazine Beach.
d. Destruction in January 2016 with mention of the current and planned outrages.  Before and after photos and DCR plans included.


1. Magnificent, TARGETED Willow Downed..

a. Just now.

A magnificent Willow Tree has been downed in the Magazine Beach Recreation Area.

Here are views first from the East and second from the West.

From the playing fields with the end of the Starvation Wall on the left.


From the middle of the grove which it has dominated.


It has been one of now 59+ trees in the area slated for destruction by the Cambridge City Council and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR).

ALL PHOTOS FOLLOWING ARE PHIL'S UNTIL JUST BEFORE THE PHOTO OF THE CHARLES RIVER WHITE GEESE BEING FED ON THEIR FIRST DAY OF STARVATION BY THE CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCIL AND THE DCR.


Eastern Massachusetts has had extreme weather in recent days.

Phil Reports, #1:

A piece of the big willow at MB .down the the high winds Monday, here's a pic


[ed: note the buds.  It was beginning a new season of life. The buildings in the background would be from Boston University on the other side of the Charles.  Telephoto distortion makes them appear larger than they would in person.]

Phil’s Second Report. 

He reported three days after his first report that this excellent tree had fallen.


He stated in two reports:

* * * *

I'm now wondering if the loss of that big branch unbalanced the tree and made it more susceptible to the winds that kept blowing all night. The soil was soaked by the rain, making conditions even worse.

* * * *

It had been one of a pair.  The first that fell continued alive as is common with willows.  But that was not EXCELLENT enough to keep the guilty state agency, the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation  (DCR) happy.

* * * *

And here are the healthy roots, no longer in the ground from the willow which just fell.

.
b. The pair of willows.

Here are four photos of the pair mentioned by Phil above, first in 2003, in season from the east, then from the west in Spring 2004.

The latter shows the clean river bank next to the playing fields.  In the distance is work in the area of the publicly available dock  There is nothing planted YET to starve the Charles River White Geese.  This is clearly before the Cambridge City Council and the DCR started starving the Charles River White Geese.

The third photo, August 2004, from the east, the playing field, shows the limb down with the Charles River White Geese feeding.






In the second photo, note the clean riverbank.  The Starvation Wall was not implemented with a vengeance until the Cambridge City Council and the DCR started starving the Charles River White Geese in 2008, photo below

The first willow to be killed is to the left in photos from east, right in photo from west.

It lost a branch in 2004 (third photo, August 2004).   The branch, to the left in the photo, was subsequently removed by that December (fourth photo, from the east). 

The entire tree fell and lasted for several years with its roots gaining nourishment from the ground.  It was removed by June 2007 as shown in the following photo.


c. First starving of the Charles River White Geese, in front of the just downed willow.

Here is a photo from another concerned person of the day the Cambridge City Council and the DCR started to starve the Charles River White Geese on April 9 2008.  Note the single willow in the background (the one which just fell).



2. Habitat of the Charles River White Geese Destroyed and Destroyed.

a. General.

The Magazine Beach Recreation Area has at its eastern end the Magazine Beach playing fields.  These playing fields, in turn, are part of miles of river banks to which the City of Cambridge and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation have indulged in outrageous destruction of trees, animal habitat and the Charles River itself.

b. The Nesting Area of the Charles River White Geese, more destruction coming.

The outrages started with the heartless abuse of the 39 year resident Charles River White Geese and of other resident animals who are less visible and not so visible and generally loved.  The various outrages started in November 1999 with destruction there by Boston University with the destruction of their Nesting Area, which is to the east of the Magazine Beach playing fields, with the Massachusetts Water Resources pollution control facility and the BU Bridge between the two.

Above is the first day the DCR and the Cambridge City Council started to starve them, in the playing fields east of the magnificent, just fallen, willow, on April 9, 2008.

This crop is taken from minute 9.07 of “From Cambridge to Boston with the DJ Inspire 1," Drone footage posted on the Internet at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sN-OmMzvHhw.


The BU Bridge crosses the river, right to left, with the Destroyed Nesting Area below it and the pollution control plant just above it.  At the top is the eastern end of the playing fields.

The asphalt on the right is a bridge of the Memorial Drive boulevard which rises over a traffic circle at the northern (right) end of the BU Bridge.

Taking the still from the bottom left, first you can see part of the BU Boathouse.  Then is the thickly wooded Wild Area WHICH THE DCR WANTS TO DESTROY IN AN UPCOMING PROJECT WHICH HAS HAD FRAUDULENT public announcement with carefully worded “deniable” praise by the Cambridge City Council.

Coming from the Wild Area and going under the BU Bridge is the Grand Junction Railroad Bridge.  This railroad divides the Wild Area from the Nesting Area of the Charles River White Geese.  The Destroyed Nesting Area has had all its ground vegetation destroyed by the DCR and its friends repeatedly and by various techniques.  Destruction started in November 1999 with illegal work by Boston University.

The Charles River White Geese for most of their 39 year habitat on the Charles River had a habitat about a mile long centered on the BU Bridge.  They lived in their Nesting Area during the nesting season and bad weather.  Now that is the last remnant of that mile long habitat.

c. The MWRA plant and the Playing Fields

After the BU Bridge is the sensitively designed sewage treatment plant (near top of the above drone still)  owned and managed by a different agency, the Massachusetts Water Resources Agency.  This agency brought the progenitors of the Charles River White Geese to their facility in 1981 to serve as guard animals sounding the alarm when the facility was approached.  They continued to be friends of the Charles River White Geese.  They are quiet but responsible.

The Charles River White Geese have been starved by the DCR and the Cambridge City Council starting in April 9, 2008.  Multiple stages of work on Memorial Drive have increased the starvation.  The Cambridge City Council has paid to exacerbate the starvation in three essentially SECRET votes in recent years.

After the treatment plant are the playing fields of the Magazine Beach Recreation Area.

The Charles River White Geese were denied access to their primary habitat at the Magazine Beach Playing Fields and poison uses were initiated for vegetation maintenance.

Currently planned destruction runs between 300 and 400 mostly excellent trees between the Longfellow (2d bridge to the east (behind the camera) and River Street Bridges (the next to the west after the BU Bridge) over the Charles River.  The Magazine Beach Recreation Area’s western end is a few hundred feet east of the River Street Bridge.

Here is a cropping of a drone photo showing the playing fields.  The tall brick building at the top middle of the photo is a hotel on the Boston end of the River Street Bridge.  The crop is taken from  minute 7.11 of “From Cambridge to Boston with the DJ Inspire 1," Drone footage posted on the Internet at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sN-OmMzvHhw.


The downed tree has been the largest of the trees on the left of the photo at the bend in the Charles River at the end of the playing fields..

The solid wall of greenery lining the Magazine Beach Playing fields is part of a number of activities aimed at starving the Charles River White Geese, the Starvation Wall.

A visible example of the depths to which local government sinks is the recent hiring funded by the Cambridge City Council for “environmental” work in the Magazine Beach Recreation Area  beyond the area shown in this photo a very destructive woman who poisoned the Charles River and caused a public health emergency  in 2019.

Here is a sample of the poisoning in process, Phil photo off Magazine Beach.


She poisoned the Charles River in addition to massive destruction she, the Cambridge City Council and the DCR are in the middle of.  She acted as stated agent for the DCR with direct assistance by the City of Cambridge.

The funding award to the Charles River Poisoner included favorably used terminology used by her as her explanation for the poisoning.  She has been called their “kind of activist” by a member in support of one of the SECRET votes by the Cambridge City Council concerning this area

d. The western part of the Magazine Beach Recreation Area, west of the downed Willows.

I can only include so much.  West of the downed willows is the most intense part of the current outrage.

Between the Longfellow Bridge and the River Street Bridge, the City of Cambridge and the DCR, starting in January 2016, are in the process of destroying 200 to 300 mostly excellent trees, plus animal habitat and poisoning of the Charles River ,   They destroyed more than 150 in January 2106.  The current destruction is of trees in the Magazine Beach Recreation Area includes 59+ of the targeted trees.

THE WORST DESTRUCTION on Magazine Beach starts with the magnificent Willow just downed.  Deails are provided at http://focrwg.com/agenda1.html.  This is a copy of a letter to the Cambridge City Council dated June 6, 2017, responsible to a self-deification orgy conducted by members of the Cambridge City Council on City Hall steps just before May Day 2017.  Just another piece of fraud by a destructive entity.  They went inside and, as their first order, praised this outrage.   I documented the destruction they praise in their orgy of self-deification.


4. Its neighbors.

a. Phil photos.

Butterfly


A juvenile Coopers Hawk


Wasps





[5/10/18]

Canadas


Swans


Tortoise



b. City Council FAKE concern for Bees:

My question to Phil (last September) and his response:

* * * * *

City Council is praising release of Monarch Butterflies at Danehy. [Ed: Major  North Cambridge park, maybe a mile from Alewife with its own 3.4 acres destruction by the Cambridge City Council and DCR]

Did you not see bees at MB suffering from Roundup poisoning?

* * * * *
* * * * *

I did, yes. I noted them in abundance unwell last year. They seemed healthy at the beginning of this season, even the yellowjackets which I'd never seen there before but just the other day I saw several affected bumblebees. There were honeybees that seemed Ok, at least until they get into the vile stuff. There's a fair number of monarchs at MB.

* * * * *


5. Recent publications which go into greater detail.

a. Based on drone videos.

(1). Panoramic Photos of the targeted part of the Charles River, https://charlesriverwhitegeeseblog.blogspot.com/2020/03/panoramic-photos-of-targeted-part-of.html, March 6, 2020.

(2). Developer Hated NON PAID FOR Vegetation Thrives on Charles River. Charles River Poisoner Paid Off by Cambridge City Council, https://charlesriverwhitegeeseblog.blogspot.com/2020/03/developer-hated-non-paid-for-vegetation.html, March 29, 2020.

(3). Drone Photos:  Cambridge and DCR Destruction on Magazine Beach, Charles River, part 3, https://charlesriverwhitegeeseblog.blogspot.com/2020/04/drone-photos-cambridge-and-dcr.html, April 1, 2020.

b. Destruction in January 2016 with mention of the current and planned outrages.  Before and after photos and DCR plans included.

Memorial Drive Destruction, January - February 2016, Final Cut.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTplCCEJP7o.

c. Detailed FILED plans of the ongoing destruction at Magazine Beach.

THESE PLANS ARE INCOMPLETE.  Latest estimates from subsequent destruction is that, instead of the 54 disclosed mostly excellent trees, the Cambridge City Council and the DCR, are destroying 59+.

http://focrwg.com/agenda1.html.

This communication was signed on June 6, 2017 and presented to the Cambridge City Council at its next meeting.  It responded to a self-deification for their environmental sainthood by members of the Cambridge City Council on the Steps of Cambridge City Hall as part of the celebration of May Day.