|
|
(619) 342-5524 |
Who is involved?
With a diverse board that remains engaged in conservation work, EHL
operates with three full-time staff (Dan Silver, M.D., Michael Beck,
Lynne Baker, Esq.), and several part-time staff members including membership
services consultant Nica Knite and Earth Discovery Institute
(www.earthdiscovery.org)
directors, Leslie Reynolds and Cathy Chadwick. EHL deploys members,
hires consultants and contracts for legal services as warranted.
Volunteer Opportunities: We need a few good people!
Indoor work, outdoor work, internships, desert cleanups, office help, tabling at events – we do it all, and we need your help, especially if you live in San Diego or Imperial County. Volunteering is easy – you don’t even need to be a member!
Click HERE to fill out our volunteer form or just call (619) 299-3775 and talk to Terry.
If you have problems with the online form, simply send Terry an email: information@dpcinc.org with the information requested below.

![]()
Desert Protective Council
P.O.Box 3635
San Diego, CA 92163-1635
There are two deserts: One is a grim, desolate wasteland. It is the home of venomous reptiles and stinging insects, of vicious thorn-covered plants and trees and unbearable heat. This is the desert seen by the stranger speeding along the highway, impatient to be out of the “damnable country.” It is the desert visualized by those children of luxury to whom any environment is intolerable which does not provide all the comforts and luxuries of a pampering civilization. It is the concept fostered by fiction writers who dramatize the tragedies of the desert because there is a market for such manuscripts.
But the stranger and the uninitiated see only the mask. The other desert - the real desert - is not for the eyes of the superficial observer or the fearful soul of a cynic. It is a land which reveals its true character only to those who come with courage, tolerance and understanding. For these, the desert holds rare gifts: a health-giving sunshine; a sky that after the sun goes down is studded with diamonds; a breeze that bears no poison; a landscape of pastel colors such as no artist can reproduce; thorn-covered plants which during countless ages have clung tenaciously to life through heat, drought, wind and the depredations of thirsty animals, and each season send forth blossoms of exquisite coloring as symbols of courage that triumphed over appalling obstacles.
To those who come to the desert with tolerance it gives friendliness; to those who come with courage it gives new strength of character. Those seeking relaxation find in its far horizons and secluded canyons release from the world of man-made tensions. For those seeking beauty the desert offers nature’s rarest artistry. This is the desert that has a deep and lasting fascination for men and women with a bit of poetry in their souls.
©2004 San Diego Conservation Resources Network. All Rights Reserved.