Stones Rewarded For Yard Work

landscaping.gif”>The yard of Rick and Terry Stone, 1803 E. Howard St., has been named the June 2008 Yard of the Month by the Beautification Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce.

The Stones have resided in the house they built 14 years ago and every year has led to a little more of their landscaping touches.

While not too much of the front yard can be seen because of a privacy hedge along Illinois 116, the open areas at both ends of the curved driveway give a glimpse of the beauty within.

“While the hedge does shut off a lot of view it also has its advantages in that it cuts down a lot of traffic noise from the roadway,” said Terry Stone.

One thing that cannot be overlooked is the unique driveway paving material chosen by the Stones. The off-red gravel-looking material is named “rotten granite” and gives the large curving driveway its own special soft color very different from routine run-of-the-mill white or gray gravel.

Knock-out roses in a deep red are repeated throughout the yard along the front, back and side.

“The roses have done so well and bloomed so profusely this year. I have lots of daffodils which did not bloom that well this year and I was afraid other perennials might follow the same course,” she said. “Instead what a pleasant surprise it has been with the roses and a few others, including the purple perennial salvia.”

“I have also been a little disappointed that more perennials like black-eyed Susans and purple coneflowers are so much later this year. I’m guessing the cold and wet spring has put everything a little behind,” she said.

Rick Stone’s project this spring has been starting some maple trees from maple “helicopter” seeds that blew into the yard.

“While the seedlings look good, they are still small, it’s too early to tell how they will do once set into the landscape as trees,” she said.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

New Landscape Plan To Make History Bloom

The Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better landscaping design around it Landscaping Contractor.

“We wanted a historical landscaping design for the area, with plants common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Chew.

The Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better design around it.

“We wanted a historical design for the area, with common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Chew.

The town contacted ’s Design and and offered a competition for the landscape design. A plan designed by two students, CSU seniors Celsey Svenson and Lydia Young, was selected by .

“We were given a concept of what this area is and did research to find out what sort of plant life would have existed here,” Svenson said. “We designed a plan with natural grass seeding, such as buffalo .”

In the design, and an orchard of peach, cherry and will be planted. A will be located near the school house, featuring cabbage and carrots. Other plant life will include yucca and goldenrod.

“We’re also going to incorporate lots of wildflower patches,” Young said.

Manager Kelly Arnold asked about irrigation.

“Because the plant life is native to the area, we’ve designed it to be almost xeriscaped,” Young said. “Of course, there will need to be some watering with the initial planting.”

Chew explained that less intense watering would help keep the historical buildings in by eliminating on the buildings.

“This design will need to be approved by the landscape architect we have on retainer,” Chew said. “Then we can look at the cost of implementing the plan and decide when we can get to work.”

Windsor Mayor John Vazquez asked about the hard surface being planned for the trails through the village.

“We’re looking at using a fine crusher , which is pretty ,” Svenson said.

The museum is coming along well, and the train depot Contractor, schoolhouse, church and beet shanty will be open to receive visitors this summer.

“The house and kitchen area are not finished, and the church hasn’t been given much renovation since we accepted it from the Historical Society,” Chew said. “We also don’t have much of a plan for the Eaton House yet, but we’ll get there.”

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

Wilton Landscaping Company Wins Design Award

The of the American Society of Landscape Architects has awarded a Connecticut Design Award to Dickson DeMarche Landscape Architects/The LaurelRock Company at 969 Danbury Road.

The chapter gives the Connecticut Design Awards each year to recognize excellence in architectural design, planning and analysis, communication and research.

Dickson DeMarche Architects/The LaurelRock Company won a merit award for their work on a in Westport, an entry in the built works/residential category.

The owners of a beachfront home in Westport purchased an adjacent house to create a compound for themselves and their grown children. The design challenges were significant: The owners wanted to make the second house subordinate to the main house; attractively include a tennis court in the ; increase privacy from the seasonally ; preserve specimen plants; and provide additional protection from nor’easter storms, according to a release.

The new tennis court was positioned close to the second house to emphasize that building’s ancillary role. A lattice fence was used as the tennis court enclosure, employing a garden to diminish the impact of the large void within. The two homes were then joined by and walkways through gardens.

Japanese black pine, inkberry, bayberry, tall ornamental grasses and a mixture of twiggy deciduous shrubs were planted to provide variety in color and texture while subduing views between the and the road.

Broad lawn swaths were juxtaposed with planting beds of spirea, hydrangea, dwarf pines and perennials. The beds were mulched with washed pebbles and to carry the beach theme through the .

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Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Energy Adviser Landscaping Can Keep Home Cool Bills Down

Our yard is boring with just a lot of grass. The house faces east, which means our living area in the back of the house gets hot in summer, even though I close the blinds. What kind of landscaping do you suggest that could help cool the house?

The right kind of can enhance the look of a home, offer more outdoor living space and even help cool a house in summer. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that carefully positioned trees can save up to 25 percent of a typical household’s energy used for cooling.

A well-designed yard offers environmental benefits, such as controlling erosion or limiting runoff, providing food and habitat for wildlife, and cleaning the air by absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen.

Landscape design typically is site specific, but in general, deciduous trees that shade in summer and drop their leaves in winter are the best choice for shading a house. Mike Odren, landscape architect and planner for Olson Engineering in Vancouver, suggests planting a deciduous canopy tree on the southwest corner of the building if possible or along the south side that will allow for maximum shading in summer.

Tim Shull, designer with Yard and Garden in Vancouver, said are a good choice of deciduous trees for our area.

“If the yard is small, the home owner should consider planting a more columnar tree,” he said. “Armstrong maple is a good choice because it’s narrower and fits into a smaller area.”

Exact placement of trees will depend upon where the windows are in the home, and if there are or solar panels, which you’ll want to avoid shading.

Odren added that plantings around a building also will help shade it and reduce the amount of heat it absorbs and stores during the day that is radiated back during the night.

“Use organic mulch or for paths and walkways rather than asphalt or concrete,” he said.

Another tip from Odren is to incorporate into your , which gives the perception of cooling. Install a pond or even a patio bubbler.

“If you have water somewhere around your patio, it will tend to feel cooler,” he said. “But it has to be . Standing water will heat right up and cause other problems, like a perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes.”

Whatever you plant, choose a species that will grow to the desired size, rather than buying a fast-growing variety that you will have to prune each year.

“If you take a 40-foot tree and try to make it stay at 20 feet, Mother Nature will win,” Shull said. “Look down the road 10 years.”

And before you plant a tree, look up. If your proposed spot is near any overhead power lines, you’ll want to choose a tree that will grow no more than 25 feet tall to ensure your tree won’t cause power problems once it grows up.

Reduce lawn

Lawn is typically the least eco-friendly thing in our yards when you consider the maintenance it requires. We mow it weekly, usually using a gas-powered mower, apply moss and weed killer, feed it, and water it — just to do it all over again.

By reducing the size of the lawn and planting native plants or drought-tolerant , we can have a smaller impact on the environment.

“There are a number of out there that don’t require supplemental irrigation, such as native ,” Odren said. “Consider alternate techniques such as drip systems or microsprays that use water more efficiently.”

Both experts recommend staying as close to native as possible because they thrive in our climate and are typically more disease- and pest-resistant.

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Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Eco Gardens: How To Grow Fruit And Vegetables

The vegetable patch has become the most fashionable home improvement accessory, a makeover for the credit crunch era that should add value to your property in the long term. The “home allotment” (its virtues are extolled by Jamie Oliver) is not only proof of your impeccable green credentials, it is also a source of cheaper food Landscaping Stone. The cost of staples such as rice, bread, eggs and meat are rising relentlessly around the world, with no sign of let-up, and consumers are increasingly being forced to opt for less expensive fruit and vegetables to make their household budgets stack up.

But all that sowing, mulching, watering and reaping to grow your own may not be as much of a chore as you suppose, and fruit and veg simply tastes better if you eat it fresh from the ground. It’s all to do with the sugars: the natural sugars in a courgette, for example, will start turning to starch within minutes of it being cut from the vine, a process that will rob the courgettes of much of their beautiful sweet flavour.

Can anyone grow their own fruit and ? The answer is yes. Even someone with a window box or small can cultivate a wide variety of herbs, - or even fruit. Home are easy to get going and now is the perfect time of year to start.

First, you will need a growing area. This can be a few large pots or a couple of grow bags. If you have the space, build a raised bed using timber. In my work as a garden designer in southeast London, I build stylish raised beds for my clients using untreated French oak , which are bolted together. These raised beds are normally 480mm (19in) high by 2.6m long by 1.3m wide, but they can be virtually any size.

A raised bed is prepared by first adding a layer of shingle for drainage. It is then filled with a mixture of good landscaper’s loam and farm manure. Choosing the right location for your raised bed can be difficult within the restrictions of most gardens, but try to find the sunniest spot and not under overhanging trees.

The principles for large pots, grow bags and window boxes are the same: just remember that the smaller the container the more watering they will need. One useful tip for containers is to stand them on a tray or saucer filled with . This helps to stop the soil from drying out, while the stops waterlogging around the roots. Now you have prepared your planting area, you can choose what to grow. The options are vast, from exotic pak choi to the humble spud. My choice for the garden allotment would have to include courgettes, French beans, strawberries and sweetcorn. You could also try an apple tree. Or why not be adventurous and give blueberries a go?

Courgettes (Cucurbita pepo): these are among the most productive you can grow. Aim to have three or four plants and to stagger the planting. Start by sowing the seeds in 7.5cm pots, 3cm deep in moist compost, placing the pot on a warm windowsill. When well-established, plant out in their final position and give them room to grow.

Sweetcorn (Zea mays): freshly picked, they are a treat. Again, sow them in pots or trays indoors and stagger the sowing, so that you get a steady flow of ripe cobs and not a flood. Sweetcorn is a hungry plant, so before planting out make sure to add plenty of organic fertiliser to the bed. Plant sweetcorn in blocks and not rows, so that they crosspollinate. Try them straight on to the barbecue - just fabulous.

Beans: French beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and runner beans (Phaseolus coccineus) are a must in any home allotment. They like well-drained and need support: dwarf French beans require a few twigs to support the , while runners need a framework of bamboo poles or similar. Sow the seeds in 7.5cm pots, 4cm deep in moist multi-purpose , and place on a windowsill. Once germinated, harden off by placing outside in the shade during the day, and plant out two to three weeks later. Water well.

Strawberries (Fragaria x ananassa): Fruit such as these are best bought as in late summer or early autumn. Choose a good all-round type such as “Cambridge Vigour” or a perpetual fruiter like “Aromel”. I like to plant strawberries through a fabric. Simply spread a sheet over the area to be planted and secure it with pegs to the raised bed surround. Cut holes in the fabric and then plant into the prepared beneath. This will keep the around the shallow roots moist and warm, ensuring an early crop of fat beautiful strawberries. I have tried the fabric planting method on many , and it also works well for courgettes, tomatoes and sweetcorn.

Apples (Malus Sylvestris var. domestica): To achieve the best results you need a sunny, sheltered spot. Apples are best grown in the ground, but there are some varieties that can be pot-grown. The height and size of an apple tree is mainly determined by the root stock; ask your garden centre for advice on which variety to choose. Most apples require a second tree for pollination, so buy two trees of similar varieties. After planting, water well throughout the first two summers and thin out fruit as they develop.

Blueberries (Vaccinium corymbosum): Landscaping Stone For the more adventurous gardener, these fruit bushes prefer acid and slight shade or sun. Blueberries are also good in pots: use a 38cm or bigger pot and plant in ericaceous . One tip is to use collected rainwater and to feed with organic seaweed extract regularly throughout the growing season.

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Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Swedeborg Plans Playground Landscaping Contractor

Preschool students in Swedeborg will soon have their own pint-sized playground with miniature items suited for their smaller bodies.

Worth nearly $5,000, the playground equipment was purchased with a grant that requires the school to separate the equipment from other items on the playground that are designed for older elementary students. Installing the equipment shouldn’t be a concern, according to District Administrator Joel Carey.

“We’ve got enough volunteers around here that I don’t think labor will be a problem,” Carey said during Monday night’s school board meeting.

Fencing and , however, could cost a substantial sum. Carey said the district’s insurance company agent has warned that more pea is needed for the playground and said it must be at least six inches deep around each piece of playground equipment.

“They couldn’t care less about where the kids run; they’re concerned about where they play,” Carey said.
Board members said they believe it’s been about a half-decade since school officials purchased more pea , though they’ve dug it up and moved it around several times. Landscaping Stone Periodic replenishment with new is likely unavoidable, said Greg Black.

“With freezing and thawing and all the kids out here, it’ll work its way in, that’s all there is to it,” Black said.

Board President Chris Black said in the past, quarry owner Bobby Laughlin has been willing to donate the if someone else will haul it; Jamie Alexander said the company for which he works, Security Bank, owns a plant but said he doesn’t know if it can produce pea .

Carey took board members outside to show them the existing playground equipment and explain his plans to install a fence dividing the playground into two parts, with the preschool playground having its own entrance closer to the modular classroom that’s used for the preschool program. Carey said a larger metal jungle gym is embedded in concrete and will have to be cut out and moved to the playground for older children, but a smaller jungle gym can be moved easily since it’s not embedded in concrete.

Carey asked whether the school district should seek bids on fencing or arrange for volunteers to install it. Board members agreed that hiring a professional fencing company is important due to a steep slope down a hill and because insurance agents will be checking the . Landscaping Stone “It’s going to be looked at; it’s not like nobody will notice it,” said Wayne King.

Stone In other facilities-related matters, Carey said he’s arranged for volunteers from a garden club in Richland to do for the Swedeborg School and is working with students to do as a math and science project for students. Students will use the skills they’re taught in math class to calculate a budget for and science skills to design the project; the best set of plans submitted by students will be used as the plan for the school.

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Friday, April 18th, 2008

Growing A Business From The Ground Up

Generations of knowledge have been passed down through the Carson family to form the basis of Audubon Organics.

“My father taught me everything he knows,” says owner Kevin Carson. “He taught me what his father taught him.”

The young owner has learned a lot from working in the , Landscaping Services it’s where his entrepreneur roots were firmly planted. Kevin began the solo endeavor of creating Audubon Organics in 2001.

Backed by working knowledge in the family’s construction company, H.E. Carson &; Sons, Kevin kept busy doing everything from to building roads. After obtaining his University degree, he decided to view the roads from a different perspective than construction.

“When I finished University, I drove across Canada and the United States and ended up in New Orleans during Mardi Gras,” he recalls. “While I was there I went to the Audubon Zoo. I immediately liked the name Audubon and thought it would be a good name for my company.”

Carson who always aspired to start a construction company also had a passion for .

“The Audubon Zoo is named after the Audubon Society, which does a lot for nature, it seemed like the perfect fit,” he says, and beginning with sand, and a small , Audubon Development was born.

When the opportunity to acquire a considerable amount of mulch was provided, Kevin took the bait and bought into the market.

“I purchased a pile of which had been composted for 40-50 years,” he says, noting that the aging process provides a healthy environment for the product. “You can’t buy time, and there is no substitute for age.”

The trucks, which were part of the company, became useful as a vehicle for selling Kevin’s wares. It could all be sold out of the back of his trucks. After the first year the company grew, and as it did, his topsoil became a number one seller. The company became too busy for one person.

“The second year I had to hire someone to take phone calls and hired a couple of drivers to deliver,” shares the owner. “Now there are 12 full-time seasonal staff.”

Landscaping Services All Audubon Organics products are high quality and they have one of the only tumble screens around, which makes the topsoil fluffier and easier to work with, easier to spread.

“Most places use a high volume of peat moss as a filler,” Kevin says. “We use true topsoil that is not manufactured.”

The landscape occupied by Audubon Organics at 655 Mapleton Road is filled with triangle shaped piles of product. Although they wear a protective cover due to the season, the business is ready to open the first day of May.

Audubon Organics cater to the individual and the industrial market.

“We have U-Bag where if you don’t want a truck load of soil you can bag your own,” Kevin explains. Landscaping Services “A lot of people come in with a trailer and fill it up. For large quantities, we deliver.”

The company also sells decorative stone, and crushed stone for driveways. Although Kevin has other companies, Audubon Organics is the pet, which he started from the ground up.

“I enjoy working with people, educating people about lawn and development,” he says. “When I see a healthy lawn of someone we sold product to, knowing that we helped contribute to their success makes me satisfied.”

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Friday, April 18th, 2008

Tourists flock to Hawaii’s Big Island to see Kilauea volcano’s latest eruption

VOLCANO, Hawaii Visitors are flocking to witness the spectacular eruption at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano despite summit explosions, toxic fumes and partial closures at the national park.

Nearly 9,000 people a day are touring Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on average so far this year, a 2.5 percent increase over last year when the volcano’s 25-year eruption was much more peaceful, said Cindy Orlando, the park’s superintendent.

“Everybody’s coming. I think they recognize they have an opportunity to participate and be here at a very historic time,” Orlando said. “They’re witnessing the creation of earth, and you can’t experience that anywhere else in the world.”

Inside Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, viewers can see the plume of ash and sulfur dioxide gas rising from Halemaumau Crater, which spewed small blobs of lava that fell along its rim this week and exploded gas and -sized rocks on the summit last week the first such burst from Kilauea’s main crater since 1924.

Outside the park along the southeast edge of the Big Island, as many as 10,000 visitors in one day have come to see fresh lava flowing over land and collide with the ocean, creating a giant cloud of steam, according to county and park officials. A new lookout point allows viewers to get about 600 feet from the lava flow.

Emergency officials are preparing to evacuate the area if the winds change, moving the fumes’ course inland toward areas with a scattered population approaching 10,000. So far, Hawaii’s famous tradewinds are pushing the plume to the southwest.

The highly concentrated levels of sulfur dioxide could pose serious health risks, especially to people with existing respiratory problems. State health officials say the gas has not posed serious problems so far because it is blowing more toward the ocean.

“It’s unpredictable. The last several months have been extremely unusual, and perhaps the most exciting activity on Kilauea in decades,” said Tim Orr, a geologist at Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.

Most of the national park remains open, including the visitor center, Volcano House Hotel, Kilauea Military Camp, Volcano Art Center Gallery, Thurston Lava Tube, Devastation Trail, Chain of Craters Road, Petroglyph Trail and all backcountry campsites.

Closed areas include all trails leading to Halemaumau Crater and part of Crater Rim Drive near the ash-laden toxic gas plume.

The volcano has not given rangers reason to believe it’s about to blow because there’s no visible lava in the crater itself, little seismic activity and no surface swell, Orlando said.

“As long as the winds stay as they are, there is no danger,” she said. “The park is Hawaii’s gift to the world, so we want to keep the area open as long as we can.”

About 536,000 people visited Hawaii Volcanoes National Park in January and February, the most recent months for which data has been compiled, she said.

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Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Birders’ Top Spots Dungeness Bay

Location: Inside Dungeness Spit, on Strait of Juan de Fuca near Sequim

Habitat: Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife/Clallam County sites, 200+ acres of river estuary, freshwater wetlands, tide flats and saltwater bay.

Best season for birding: Good year-round. Currently, look for new arrivals including shorebirds, turnstones and plovers. Good site to visit in conjunction with Olympic Peninsula BirdFest in Sequim (April 4-6; www.olympicbirdfest.org).

Birds commonly seen: Plentiful black-bellied plovers, dunlins, sanderlings, brant, western and least sandpipers and rarely seen species: black and ruddy turnstone, whimbrel, marbled godwit, Wilson’s phalarope; sharp-tailed, stilt, and pectoral sandpiper. Catch sight of American and Pacific golden plovers. Highlighting fall-winter are huge flocks of American wigeons with some Eurasians; plus northern pintails, northern shovelers, gadwalls. Double-crested and pelagic cormorants abound.

Viewing:

%26#8226; Near Three Crabs Restaurant and at Helen’s Pond: Best at rising/falling tide. From roadside at restaurant, scan tide flats, river estuary. Purple martins nest in boxes on pilings May-August. At high tide, many birds move to Helen’s Pond, surrounding fields and cattail marshes. Check for Virginia rails, American bitterns, occasional yellow-headed blackbirds.

%26#8226; Dungeness Landing County Park: From ADA observation deck, watch bay for sea- and shorebirds, skies for Caspian terns spring-summer, trees for bald eagles.

%26#8226; Marlyn Nelson County Park: Check strait for rhinoceros auklets, ancient murrelets, eared grebes, harlequin ducks; and cliffs for pigeon guillemot nest holes.

Getting there:

%26#8226; Three Crabs Restaurant site and Helen’s Pond: From Highway 101 at Milepost 264.2 eastbound/263.8 westbound, take Sequim Avenue exit. Turn north onto Sequim Avenue/Sequim-Dungeness Way. Drive 4.8 miles, veering right at Y to stay on Sequim-Dungeness Way. Drive north 0.6 mile to road end, park on west or north. For pond, turn east onto 3 Crabs Road, drive 0.2 mile to pullout on right.

%26#8226; Dungeness Landing County Park: From road end, drive back south on Sequim-Dungeness Way 0.6 mile. At Y intersection, turn right (west) onto East Anderson Road. Drive 0.8 mile. Turn right (north) onto Marine Drive. Drive 0.2 mile, veer right onto Oyster House Road, go downhill to Dungeness Landing parking.

%26#8226; Marlyn Nelson County Park: From Y intersection with East Anderson Road, drive 3.5 miles south on Sequim-Dungeness Way. Turn left (east) onto Port Williams Road. Drive 2.6 miles to road end. Park by beach.

Source: Audubon Washington, Great Washington State Birding Trail maps. To order maps (Cascade Loop, Coulee Corridor, Olympic Loop or Southwest Loop), go online to www.wa.audubon.org. Call toll-free, 866-922-4737, for more information.

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Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Boy racers are morons says police officer

Inspector Tony ONeill warned that police would be cracking down on young drivers who put others at risk after police had to section off the Thames and Dee streets intersection on Thursday night after offenders poured diesel on the road and did burnouts.
He said police fielded several complaints about problems at the intersection.
%26quot;They (boy racers) are morons, theyre people that have no regard for other members of the public and as such they determine themselves to be policed in a heavy-handed manner and when we get the opportunity we will do so.%26quot; Mr ONeill said police had to call in a grit truck to put on the road.
He said the intersection was a hotspot for boy racer-type activity but he was unaware of diesel being poured there before.
Police tried to catch the offenders but had no registration details to prosecute anyone.
Mr ONeill said Thursday was a busy day for police with 150 calls between 9am Thursday and 9am yesterday. %26quot;Unfortunately we cant be everywhere,%26quot; Mr ONeill said.
Graham Williamson, who owns a car yard on Dee St said the problem had snowballed despite his regular complaints to police.
%26quot;Im criticising the lack of action. They should have nipped it in the bud early. Theyve allowed it to snowball and get worse and now its out of control.%26quot; Mr Williamson feared an innocent person would be killed.
%26quot;And Im not just saying that lightly. I believe someone will (be killed) from what I have witnessed an innocent mum with her kids walking along the street here will get bowled.%26quot; He has recently expanded his business and opened a new dealership site on Dee St near Thames St.
%26quot;Weve been here six weeks and what weve witnessed in those six weeks has been an eye-opener. Its been quite disturbing really.%26quot; Mr Williamson said he was engaging certified protection agent Brendan McElhinney to help address the problem.
Mr McElhinney said unlike police he had the resources to intensively monitor the area. %26quot;There may be a orchestrated campaign of action taken,%26quot; he said.
Mayor Tim Shadbolt said Invercargills boy racer problem was not as bad as other areas, such as Christchurch, but was still a concern.
He believed installing security cameras in areas prone to boy racer activity was the best way to catch them and said he would support any moves by the city council to install more cameras in the city.

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Saturday, March 29th, 2008