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Recent drought weakened Kelowna trees that toppled in wind storm - Kelowna News
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City of Kelowna asks residents to water young neighbourhood trees - Kelowna News
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Southeast Kelowna group creates petition opposing targeted grazing - Kelowna News
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Image Credit: SUBMITTED/Heather Stewart April 28, 2021 - 6:30 PM A group of Kelowna residents is petitioning city councillors and the Ministry of Forests and Lands saying a cattle grazing program to prevent wildfires in Southeast Kelowna will inhibit access to a popular trail system. Heather Stewart, an area resident, said cattle grazing is planned on a trail network that runs above Field Road and the installation of permanent fencing for the cattle will inhibit access to the trails. “Our belief is it’s not appropriate for cattle, it’s forest, it’s not range and it will really cut off access because they’re putting up gates and cattle guards in and although they’re only putting in cattle for three or four weeks a year, the fence will remain,” she said.
(ROB MUNRO / iNFOnews.ca) March 17, 2021 - 7:00 AM If you’ve ever walked through the rows of eastern white cedars near Kelowna’s Guisachan house, you may have heard the faint clip-clop of horses and echoes of laughter that has long since faded away. It harkens back to the 1890s and is one of this area’s only ghost stories a happy enough one, for the record. On the heels of the City of Kelowna s announcement that contractors and parks staff had begun removing the eastern white cedar trees from the laneway at Guisachan Heritage Park, historian Bob Hayes explained how the foliage had its roots in some colourful history.