Gilcrease Sanctuary Fire ruled Accidental

From the R-J:

"Who wants a cookie?" she asked, and the birds, which can live more than 80 years, flocked to the treat.

As the birds plucked peanuts and dates from her hand, she tried to sound upbeat as she explained to the two donors the facility's plans to become an elaborate educational center.

But the past few days have tested Salinas and the employees of the sanctuary near Durango Road and Grand Teton Drive. A Friday morning fire tore through wooden structures at the preserve, killing more than 150 birds.

"I'm trying to keep my composure," Salinas said after the donors left.

"Before the fire, you would walk by and hear birds saying hello to you."

"Now it's all quiet."

Also killed in the blaze was Zapatos, the German shepherd who watched over the sanctuary and its animals.

The dog was barking in alarm as the fire ripped through the buildings that housed the birds. Zapatos woke up Carlos Gilcrease, who lives on-site and is the son of the sanctuary's namesake.

"He's our hero," Salinas said of Zapatos.

But while Gilcrease phoned the fire department, Zapatos ran into the burning building and perished.

"We don't know why he did it," Salinas said. "I can only say that he was trying to help some of the birds inside."

Clark County Fire Department investigators ruled the fire accidental. Department spokesman Scott Allison said investigators believe the cause was electrical in nature and started near the ceiling of one of the buildings.

The blaze spread to the sanctuary's rehabilitation building, a wooden structure that houses about 30 ill or injured animals at any given time.

Investigators valued the loss in the fire at $100,000. That includes the value of the buildings and the birds, Allison said.

The fire has forced the preserve to cancel more than 100 school field trips since it will be closed for some time, Salinas said. She did not have an estimate of when it will reopen.

The sanctuary was in the beginning phases of redesigning the property into an educational center when the blaze struck.

It recently received a $4 million grant, $500,000 of which was to be used directly for renovations. Architects had been hired to develop the sanctuary's cages into a modern aviary, which would have been more resistant to flames than the wooden buildings.

Those plans will continue, Salinas said.

The Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary houses about 1,500 abandoned animals, including parrots, ostriches and goats. A few animals are endangered.

Salinas said she and the other workers become very attached to the animals. She hired a trauma intervention specialist to help those workers cope with what happened.

Donations of cash and material goods are being accepted on-site at the preserve.

The animals will be buried in a pet cemetery and will be remembered during a memorial planned for the weekend of April 24-25. The preserve will be hosting an arts and crafts fair that the community is invited to attend.

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Sandra Salinas led two potential donors into a large, half-cylinder building on the Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary's eight-acre campus on Monday afternoon.

Inside, brilliant macaws clung to chain-link fencing and watched their visitors. Salinas grabbed a plastic bowl of fruit and nuts and held a peanut through the fence.

 

Gilcrease Sanctuary Fire Update

Updated news reports on the fire at the Gilcrease Sanctuary earlier this morning:

 

From the R-J:

Sandra Salinas was in a panic.

Salinas, executive director of the Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary, awoke Friday morning to news that a fire was ripping through the facility she manages, near Durango Road and Grand Teton Drive in the northwest part of the valley.

As she arrived, tears streamed down her face as she rushed to a group of Las Vegas firefighters and sanctuary board members who huddled near the entrance. The blaze had just been extinguished, but firefighters were not yet allowing staff inside.

She looked to the group for an answer: What happened?

The news wasn't good.

"They're all dead," cried Salinas a short time later, her panic giving way to grief as staff members consoled her. "How could this happen, how could this happen?"

Official reports from Clark County Animal Control indicate that 151 birds and a guard dog perished in the fire, which was reported at 5:23 a.m. Staff reports estimate the figure to be higher, with between 250 and 350 birds believed to have died, including at least 60 exotic parrots. Some breeds, such as the cockatoos and the peacocks, were almost entirely wiped out, the staff said.

An additional 30 birds were taken to an animal hospital in North Las Vegas for treatment.

Fire investigators have not yet determined the cause, or given a damage estimate, a Clark County Fire Department spokesman said. Although the city's fire department battled the blaze, the investigation falls under Clark County's jurisdiction because the area is unicorporated land within city limits.

The sanctuary is home to about 1,500 abandoned animals, including parrots, cockatoos, peacocks and even a few ostriches, said Salinas. The facility also houses several types of barnyard animals, including goats, llamas, donkeys, and a mule deer fawn named Bambi.

Bambi survived the fire, as did the barnyard animals, said Salinas, but the birds in the path of the flames had no chance to escape.

"There was nowhere they could go, nowhere they could fly," she said. "They were just trapped."

Las Vegas Fire Department spokesman Tim Szymanski said the fire started at the northern edge of the facility and spread to the sanctuary's rehabilitation building, a wooden structure that houses about 30 ill or injured animals at a given time.

When firefighters arrived, the rehabilitation building was consumed with flames. One of the staff members was on the roof of another building with a water hose, but his methods weren't effective, Szymanski said.

Firefighters assumed a defensive position around the building and the fire was extinguished within 30 minutes, he said. The building, which burned quickly, had collapsed.

Salinas said the rehabilitation building housed many of the larger birds at the facility -- and the most exotic and rare, she said.

"These were people's pets that they couldn't take care of, and they sent them to us to be cared for," Salinas said. "They were rare, they were priceless."

Standing among the charred cages, Don White, a board member for the sanctuary, could only shake his head at the sad irony of the situation.

The sanctuary recently received a $4 million grant, $500,000 of which was to be used directly for renovations, the other $3.5 million to be invested into an endowment for future development, he said.

Architects had been hired to develop the sanctuary's cages into a modern aviary, which would have been more resistant to flames than wooden buildings that had stood for almost a century.

"We were working on a master plan for it (the renovations)," White said. "We were going to take a lot of this old stuff out of there. Now we'll have to tear everything out."

The sanctuary, which will be 40 years old this year, is a historical facility that has remained essentially unchanged since it was built in the 1920s by the Gilcrease family, aside from remodeling throughout the years.

Bill Gilcrease, now in his 90s, and his late brother, Ted, also developed a well-known fruit orchard near the nature sanctuary, both of which have survived decades of urban development.

Bill Gilcrease, who lives at the sanctuary, was sleeping when the fire started. He spent a majority of the morning wrapped in blankets in a van near his home.

He wasn't injured, but fled the home quickly and wasn't dressed for the cold weather, said White.

Although the fire department hasn't determined a cause, there was speculation among staff that heat-lamps to warm the birds overnight may have been knocked over by strong winds, causing a spark.

But that is just one theory, Salinas said, adding that "not knowing why" the fire started is a huge weight on her shoulders.

The sanctuary, which is nonprofit and offers daily admission of $5 and under, is not a private collection of birds, she said.

It's a piece of the community -- an educational landmark that 5,000 students visit every year to learn about nature, she said.

The birds weren't just birds to the staff, she said. They were like family.

"The only good news is that some of them are still alive," Salinas said. "That's what keeps us going."

From the Las Vegas Sun:

A fire damaged a building and killed about 150 birds Friday morning at the Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary in the northwest Las Vegas Valley.

Las Vegas Fire & Rescue responded to the fire shortly before 5:30 a.m. at the sanctuary at 8103 Racel St., which is northeast of U.S. 95 and Durango. The fire destroyed the rehab building at the private nature preserve and sanctuary.

Clark County Fire Department spokesman Scott Allison said about 150 birds and a German Shepherd guard dog were killed. He said all of the animals killed in the fire were taken to Clark County Animal Control for cremation.

Thirty to 40 birds that were injured in the fire were taken to the North Las Vegas Animal Control facility for treatment, Allison said.

Firefighters said three people were sleeping inside another building at the sanctuary when one of them was awakened by popping sounds.

Fire department spokesman Tim Szymanski said someone at the sanctuary used a fire hose to try to battle flames, but the one-story wooden building was fully ablaze when firefighters arrived.

Investigators said one man suffered minor smoke inhalation injuries and was treated at the scene.

Firefighters were leaving the scene this morning as investigators tried to determine how the fire started.

Vernon Weir, director for the American Sanctuary Association, said the fire is one of the deadliest involving animals he has seen in the last 10 years.

The preserve is a nonprofit sanctuary, education center and rescue operation for animals including tortoises and horses. It has housed large birds including ostriches and emus, along with smaller species like finches, parakeets and parrots.

The fire is being investigated by the Clark County Fire Department.

 

Article on the Disney Museum

My good friend, Jane Ann Morrison, over at the R-J wrote this wonderful column today.  Thank-you, Jane Ann!

Since I take joy in sharing undiscovered places, here's my latest discovery, a discovery I owe entirely to historian and preservationist Lynn Zook.

Somehow I mentioned (OK, I was telling anyone who would listen.) I was going to San Francisco to see "Wicked."

Lynn  told me I had to, absolutely had to, go see the Walt Disney Family Museum there. She raved about the quality of the museum and convinced me and my friend this was a must-see.

Lynn was adamant … and she was right.

The museum tells Walt Disney's life story, but it is also part of the life story of just about every 20th century American.

Who hasn't seen a Disney cartoon or movie or been to Disneyland? "Snow White" was made in 1938 but like so many other Disney creations, it remains a significant part of American culture.

Going through the museum, located at the Presidio in San Francisco, was a personal experience as well as a time to learn more about Disney the man, rather than the corporation.

There were surprises galore.

Did you know Mickey Mouse was Disney's second choice as a cartoon star? He created a series called "Oswald the Lucky Rabbit," but lost the rights to his distributor, making Disney a lifelong stickler for copyright.

In 1928, he created this mouse called Mortimer. Except his wife, Lillian, didn't like that name. Mortimer became Mickey and mouse history was changed forever. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit could have a been a contender, but instead, is a footnote.

Did you know Disney said "the toughest period in my whole life" was in 1941 when he had union problems with the animators?

Did you know that for "Steamboat Willie," it took 348 cartoon drawings to create less than one minute of film?

The museum works on many levels. Since it's in a refurbished barracks on the grounds of the Presidio, the parking is on what was once a military parade ground. The setting is one of military history and preservation while the museum tells the life story of a natural storyteller.

I saw more adults than kids this past Saturday afternoon, but it's designed to appeal to both, just on different levels.

Lynn learned about the museum from a newspaper article published around the time the $110 million museum opened Oct 1.

Just before Christmas, she and her husband went to San Francisco to see the museum and relish the wonderful memories it provoked. "It was reliving my childhood," she said. "The animation room brought back memories of seeing 'Bambi' at the Huntridge Theater. We watched it from the crying room because my brother was a baby." Her husband, Jon Stromp, a video engineer for extreme sports, focused on the development of the technology, starting with the rough beginnings of cartoons, then the revolution of animation. The museum doesn't explain today's animation technology because it ends with Disney's death in 1966 and it's a stirring closure, including newspaper cartoonists honoring a fellow cartoonist.

Sometime later Zook spotted a job listing -- the museum was looking for a digital archivist. She applied.

In the meantime, she was told that "Untold Stories," the monthly panel about Southern Nevada history she first organized in September 2007, was being canceled by the Springs Preserve. Officials are rethinking the educational programs and cutting costs. Lynn would no longer be commuting from Southern California to Las Vegas each month.

Three days later, she was offered the job at the Walt Disney Family Museum. She's moving to San Francisco this weekend for another job and another commute. Lynn starts work there Monday.

Next time you're in San Francisco, see the Walt Disney Family Museum. Tell them Lynn Zook sent you, because indirectly, she did.

Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary turns 40!

Anyone who loves the outdoors, loves nature and loves fresh fruit is familar with the Gilcrease family.  Their family farm provided fresh fruit and veggies to a growing city in the 20th century. 

Today, that farm is a nature sanctuary and has been for 40 years.  They are celebrating their anniversary and are inviting all of us to join them.

From the R-J:

Love is in the air at Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary these days.

John the ostrich and his "girlfriends" are in mating season.

One pen over, a donkey mama tends to her foal, born the day after Valentine's Day. Sanctuary staff says you can call the baby Valentino.

A few paces away, you can find the ultimate love story.

A widowed orange-bill mute swan has found love in a black swan. The mute swan lost his mate -- the birds mate for life -- but has found himself a companion.

To witness all the drama for yourself, visit Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary at 8103 Racel St., which is gearing up for site upgrades.

About 1,500 abandoned birds and barnyard animals call the sanctuary home, although some migratory birds come and go. Bill Gilcrease started collecting and taking in abandoned birds in 1970. The sanctuary didn't become a nonprofit entity until 1991.

Although the sanctuary will turn 40 this year, it has been in the Gilcrease family since the 1920s and has seen a lot of changes to the property. An orchard neighbors the sanctuary and, at one point, a wildlife park with exotic animals was on the land. A former giraffe pen now houses a mule deer.

"All these years, it's been a preserve for birds, but it's so much more," Executive Director Sandra Salinas said.

But after decades of opening their wings to abandoned and rescue birds, staff has had to stop accepting new animals.

"It's not fair to the birds to take on any expansion at this time," Salinas said.

But a change is about to come.

The center recently received a grant for $500,000 from an anonymous donor and has begun eyeing plans to enhance cages and facilities and use more space on the 8-acre lot.

The sanctuary partners with the Nevada Department of Wildlife, and, each year, about 5,000 students come to the sanctuary for hands-on education programs. Salinas said the sanctuary will be able to rebuild cages and bird averies and explore green approaches to maintaining the grounds.

Other funds will go to educational programs, Salinas said. The sanctuary has opportunities for education in ornithology, paleontology, archaeology, agriculture and horticulture, she listed.

"We have things for (those in) preschool on up to college," she said. "Isn't that cool?"

Through on-site classes on animal wellness, presentations and tours, the facility encourages the thoughtful adoption of pets so the sanctuary doesn't become a dumping place for the abandoned animals.

Salinas grows excited when showing preliminary renderings of the future of Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary.

Historical landmarks will be honored, and educational gardens will find a new home, but new features such as a hummingbird and butterfly plaza are possible. Staff members and the sanctuary's board of trustees currently are taking proposals from architects and planners.

"It has so much potential," Salinas said.

The sanctuary will be holding an arts and crafts festival from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 24 and 25. Vendors, entertainment and carriage rides will be available for attendees.

Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary is open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Admission is $5 for adults, $1 for children under 12 years of age, and $4 for seniors ages 65 and over and military personnel. Special rates for class tours and large groups also are available.

For more information, visit www. naturesanctuarygilcrease.org, call 645-4224 or e-mail info@naturesanctuary gilcrease.org.