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Calabasas Registers as NWF Community Wildlife Habitat
Calabasas is making a commitment to citizen education about providing habitat for wildlife and employing sustainable gardening practices.

From the City of Calabasas: The City of Calabasas, CA, is putting out the welcome mat for birds, butterflies and other wildlife by registering as a Community Wildlife Habitat™ with the National Wildlife Federation.
By joining this program, Calabasas is making a long-term commitment to citizen education about providing habitat for wildlife and employing sustainable gardening practices, such as reducing or eliminating the use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers, conserving water, planting native plants, removing invasive plants and composting.
“We’re very excited to be part of this effort to improve habitat for wildlife,” said Calabasas Mayor Mary Sue Maurer. “It is a program that ties together other work we've already done to protect all creatures including banning anti-coagulant rodenticides, restricting the use of throw away polystyrene containers that break apart and are ingested by birds, and restoring cement channels into natural flowing creeks that attract wildlife.”
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Since 1973, NWF has provided millions of people with the basic guidelines for making their landscapes more hospitable to wildlife. Through the Certified Wildlife Habitat™ program, NWF has certified more than 205,000 sites including yards, schools, businesses, community gardens, parks, and places of worship. Each of these sites provides the four basic elements that all wildlife need to thrive: food, water, cover and places to raise young.
For more information on becoming involved in Calabasas’s efforts to become a certified Community Wildlife Habitat or to get started on your own gardening for wildlife adventure, visit NWF’s website at www.nwf.org/garden.
Find out what's happening in Calabasasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
For more information, please go to: www.nwf.org/community. For more National Wildlife Federation news, visit: www.nwf.org/news.
Image via Pixabay
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