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Parks & Nature in ...
With San Francisco's canine population at around 120,000, about 32 million pounds of dog waste are produced here per year—all of it going to landfill. A new program is aiming to change that.
The new facility would provide accessible resources for everything from watersports to birding to yoga.
The recently removed pepper tree at the center of Patricia's Green may not be replaced for a while, as the HVNA considers an entirely new plan for the park.
Some surfers paddled in after spotting the shark, whose dramatic leap from the water was captured on a surf cam.
Months after launching its workforce development program in Civic Center, Downtown Streets Team is now helping to tidy up Union Square.
At Sunday's Pollinator Fun Fair in the Sunset, a coalition of city officials declared that protecting bees, butterflies, and more will soon become city policy.
The basketball courts reopen today, with face-painting, a basketball clinic, and much fanfare.
Palomacy's founder believes pigeons make great pets, and she's hoping locals will consider adopting a rescued bird.
For all you dendrologists out there, we've got word that a tree fell inside the San Francisco Botanical Garden this past Sunday afternoon, as witnessed by tipster Damien S.
Many more improvements to the Panhandle are on the way this fall.
The San Francisco Zoo's newest addition, born on Saturday, is the zoo's first-ever guanaco born in captivity.
This Lakeside District playground serves up a dose of recreation in the neighborhood.
Because of drought and insect infestations, the tree mortality rate inside the "cloud forest" has doubled since 1999.
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