Santa’s helpers come to Shipley Nature Center
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VIC LEIPZIG AND LOU MURRAY
If ever there was a nature center deserving of help this Christmas,
it’s our own Shipley Nature Center in Central Park.
If you’ve followed the story of the nature center in our columns,
you know that the city closed the center in October 2002 and turned
management over to Friends of Shipley Nature Center.
You know that the group, in cooperation with the Orange County
Conservation Corps and an army of volunteers, has made great progress
in restoring the various habitats at the center. With the help of
several Scout groups, the observation blind has been completely
renovated, a coastal sage scrub habitat has replaced the forest of
toxic castor bean and giant reed, and more than 600 trees and 500
shrubs have been planted throughout the center.
For the Interpretive Building, the Friends put together a master
plan with the help of LSA Associates’ Steve Conkling, who has
volunteered his expertise as a museum consultant. Under the direction
of Friends’ Education Director and City Planning Commissioner Tom
Livengood, the friends stripped the interior and set about upgrading
the exhibits.
The task of renovating the building, however, was well beyond the
group’s meager budget. That’s when City Planning Commissioner Steve
Ray stepped in. He must have placed a call to the North Pole, because
a host of Santa’s helpers descended upon Shipley Nature Center.
Ray arranged a meeting between representatives of the Los
Angeles/Orange County Building Trades Council and the Friends’
Education and Restoration Committee representatives. The Friends
hauled out their Christmas wish list.
The union workers of the Building Trades Council said that they
could make the wishes a reality. Different trade unions have adopted
different Shipley projects and are donating their skilled labor, as
well as some materials needed for the various jobs. The result is
nothing short of a miracle.
The first “elf” to arrive was Peter Martyniuk, a coordinator of
apprentices with the International Union of Painters and Allied
Trades. Martyniuk consulted with Grant Mitchell, the business
representative for District Council 36, and Sergio Hernandez, the
director of the apprenticeship, to arrange to donate their talents to
the Shipley project.
Martyniuk showed up last week with instructor Daniel Gutierrez,
and apprentices Mike Aguiler and Mervin Knighton. The apprentices
cleaned two decades of dust from the metal girders and carefully hung
plastic over the brick walls and animal displays.
In two days, these men transformed a dingy tan and brown metal
ceiling to a fresh sky blue. The Friends will hang mounted birds in
flight and artificial clouds made of fiberfill or Styrofoam from the
new blue ceiling. Along the interior walls, they’ll mount small trees
salvaged from the restoration process. The effect will simulate the
outdoors. Won’t that be totally awesome?
To spray the paint, Martyniuk suited up from head to toe in a
white space-age protective suit. Only his eyes showed from behind his
respirator. He coated the few square inches of exposed skin around
his eyes with Vaseline to make it easier to wipe off the inevitable
paint spray.
When Martyniuk emerged from behind the plastic sheeting at the end
of the second day, his face was painted the same sky blue as the
ceiling. He was one funny-looking elf.
The apprentices train for seven years before they advance to
journeyman painters. It’s a difficult trade to learn. Martyniuk
pointed out that the apprentices will be working with several
chemicals and solvents, nasty things that can cause cancer, liver
disease and skin problems.
“A careless painter is a sick or dead painter,” he said.
The next elf on the scene was Ken McLean, a flooring installation
instructor with the Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee of the
Painters and Allied Trades District Council 36. McLean brought his
crew of apprentices to install blue carpet with flecks of tan and
green over the old, blotchy red concrete floor.
The union laborers weren’t the only ones to help this project
along. Ken Hurd, owner of Commercial Interior Resources, donated all
of the carpet squares and adhesive needed for the main display area
of the interpretive building.
While apprentices Ruben Montelongo, John Ruiz, Robert Herrera and
Isidro Lopez cut and laid the carpet squares, McLean regaled the
Friends with tales of apprentices cutting off their fingers and
slashing other body parts with the tools of their trade --
double-edged knives known as Bloody Marys.
McLean said it’s all in a day’s work. The apprentices just dress
their injuries with duct tape and keep on laying carpet. Fortunately,
the beautiful blue carpet was successfully installed without a drop
of blood. The new main exhibit room is not only gorgeous, but
quieter, cleaner and brighter. The blues in the ceiling and carpet
bring out the colors in the lovely floor-to-ceiling mural of
Blackbird Pond.
Martyniuk and McLean are only the first in a long line of trade
union representatives who have helped at Shipley Nature Center. Other
Santa’s helpers expected to visit in the near future are from the
unions of concrete workers, bricklayers, landscapers, irrigation
specialists, plumbers, tile layers, ornamental ironworkers and
others.
It’s a wonderful Christmas for Shipley Nature Center. The Friends
hope to be able to show off their many presents at a grand opening in
April.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at [email protected].
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