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Messages From FIDO Members

Thank you! to all of you who sent in your message to FIDO regarding why you use Fiesta Island.  Unfortunately, Parks and Recreation and many city officials believe the LiFE (Leash Free Exercise) areas are for dogs only.  They don't understand the areas are for the people.  It's up to 'all of us' to send the message to the city that Fiesta Island's LiFE areas are for human exercise, recreation and places to get away.  It's a place where we can exercise with our dogs and feel renewed from the busy life styles that we all have.  If you haven't sent us your message or testimonial please take a moment and send us a picture of how you love to use Fiesta Island and your message to the city.  Your Message

Jan O'Connor:

Dear Mayor Sanders,

As a member of the Pacific Beach community, I frequently take my dogs to Fiesta Island.  The whole island is used in various capacities and does not need to be further developed!  As a matter of fact, considering San Diego's financial crisis, I think the money could be put to better use, such as hiring police officers and paying existing police officers a fair wage.

The city has removed fire pits from many beach and bay areas because of the cost to maintain them - why not replace them before any consideration of developing Fiesta Island?

Fiesta Island also offers a safe haven for people and animals looking for refuge from fires.

Please contact me if you have any questions.

Jan O'Connor Pacific Beach Town Council - Director


Sara:

How do you use Fiesta Island?  I use Fiesta Island to walk my dog Napoleon. I travel from Spring Valley to use the leash free area at least 4 times a week. I am able to get good exercise and it is great for my dog.    I am able to bring my 3 1/2 year old daughter with me and push her in the stroller or let her walk. It is a difficult task to walk the dog and keep track of her when he is on leash, and it is such a great way to start our days together!  She loves walking on the beach and picking up shells, so I can make both my "kids" happy at once.  She has been coming with me since she has been in a front pack.  It is so important to keep the members of my Family happy and healthy, I don't know how I would get better exercise than I do at Fiesta Island. It is so important to keep my dog healthy and socialized as well.

Sara C.


Kerry:

How do you use Fiesta Island?  My husband and I take our three yellow Labrador Retrievers (Rebel, Rowser, & Ruckus) 4-5 times a week.  It is our favorite part about living in San Diego.  Where else in the world can you take your dog off leash in the middle of the city at the beach and watch the sunset?  It's absolutely gorgeous.  We feel very fortunate that we live in a place that values the human / canine bond so much so that it dedicates such a wonderful space to both our enjoyment.  Thank you San Diego!!!

Who do you bring with you to Fiesta Island's fenced, leash-free area? Our family and friends when they come to visit.  It is such a unique place we want to share it with them. 

Why is Fiesta Island's leash-free area important to you?  It is the best way for us to ensure our dogs get as much exercise, socialization and stimulation they need to be happy and healthy members of our family.  It is an added bonus that we can get exercise too, meet wonderful people and enjoy the outdoors - all in the middle of the city!   It also helps us to relieve stress from the long work day. 
 


Laura Schultz:

Dear Mayor Sanders

I would like to address the proposed modifications to Fiesta Island.  I believe the land use for people and dogs at Fiesta Island should remain in the same essence as it stands today.  I am a practicing Veterinarian and concerned citizen who uses the park daily for various purposes.  The health and well being of animals is a primary concern in my life as my career centers around their care.  There are several reasons why I feel San Diego needs to maintain a large open area for recreation and sport activities rather than smaller, divided areas.

Safety is a valid concern for people as well as animals in the park.  As I understand the plans, the large open area that currently exists will be divided with a road and vehicles traveling through the middle.  I have personally seen a dog struck by a car at another park in the city because of its proximity to a major road.  Fiesta Island is the only area in our city where families can come to walk, jog, and exercise without having their dogs on a leash.  Placing an unnecessary road through the middle of an area intended for off-leash use will create a hazard for animals, children, and adults alike.

The rare privilege of having an off leash area for animals poses benefits too.  When I first moved to San Diego I would take my dogs to a small dog park close to my neighborhood.  I realized that I was just sitting around watching them play.  I decided to walk with them on a leash around the neighborhood for my own exercise.  Even though my dogs are well trained, it was not the most beneficial experience to have two large dogs falling all over me as I walked and attempted to run.  Then I discovered Fiesta Island.  It is the only place I can get a quality exercise along with my dogs.  Because of this, my dogs and I lead a healthier lifestyle.  Purina did a study which showed there is a 1.8 year difference in lifespan between an overweight (not even obese) dog and a healthy dog.[1] This study also demonstrated lifetime obesity is a risk factor for cancer in animals.  If a lean body mass is maintained by an animal throughout their life, cancer has been found to be delayed and mean survival time after diagnosis has been longer.  This entire philosophy is adaptive to people as well.  A large open area allows for adequate exercise to maintaining a healthy life for animals and people.

I see the consequences of animal behavior and how it relates to humans on a daily basis.  Fiesta Island is one of the reasons I can come home to well behaved dogs.  When I am not able to get them out in the morning, they are prone to be more excitable and potentially destructive during the day.  The most common reason for euthanasia and surrendering an animal to a shelter is behavior problems.  A simple solution is to exercise the animals.  Many people in San Diego do not have an adequate yard for their animal to play.  Parks become a necessary component to keeping our animals, as well as ourselves, happy.  Large spaces allow the socialization of dog to dog interactions and are less threatening so all animals can enjoy the space from the very shy dog to the more dominant dog.  Appropriate play allows animals and their owners a better quality of life.

My last concern for Fiesta Island is the financial obligation of the project.  I know the San Diego budget has many shortfalls and the financial state of the city is a common theme in the media.  Recent natural disasters continue to stretch the limited funds of the City already.  Many programs, initiatives, and schools can use the money from this project.  Why fix something that is not broken?

I am hopeful that this information will help you understand why Fiesta Island is such a special site to the populous of San Diego.  I can assure you that many residents can provide many reasons to preserve open space of Fiesta Island.  If you have any questions regarding the information I have presented, please do not hesitate to contact me at your convenience.  I appreciate your work for our city and hope you can help preserve this precious place.

Regards,
Laura Schultz, DVM


[1] J Am Vet Med Assoc. May 2002;220(9):1315-1320, 2002


Janice C:

 

I usually walk the perimeter along the water with my 7 year old Australian shepherd, who is my best buddy. My dog loves to chase the waves/wakes.  Since I am older and have some health issues I usually rest under the trees on the way back to my vehicle.

I feel safe walking inside the fenced area. Plus I feel my dog is safe, away from traffic.  I also don't have to worry about me or my dog getting in the middle of someone's soccer game or other activity. My dog has previously been harassed/hit by unescorted children inside Wells Park fenced off-leash dog park in El Cajon so I prefer to bring her to Fiesta Island where children are seldom unescorted.  Plus most regular users of Fiesta Island for the last 30 + years are dog savvy, dog friendly and live-and-let-live types of people.  Bringing in sports fields, developed parking, picnic, pavement and non-native landscaping would make the area unusable for off-leash activity for large or active dogs who need to run.  It would also destroy the peaceful serene feeling that this section of Fiesta Island has.  I am a native San Diegan/grew up in Bay Park.  I have been enjoying east Mission Bay for 50 + years.

Janice C.


 

Gerry and Richard:

Dear FIDO,

As a visitor to the area, we were thrilled to find such a wonderful, wonderful place to take our dog. We travel often and have never found a place so friendly to dog owners. Dogs and humans are well behaved and friendly.  Most impressive is the number of bins for waste and the fact that users actually use them.

Congratulations to your organization for such a good job. We hope you are successful in saving as much of this dog park as possible.

Thank you, 

Gerry, Richard
and Bart who thanks you the most!


Marla:

PLEASE, PLEASE - don't try to tame Fiesta Island!!!  How can you improve on perfection?

It's appeal lies in it's un-kept state!  It provides a very desirable - wanted, needed - contrast to the beautifully maintained and manicured other parts of Mission Bay Park.

For almost 25 years, I, and countless others, have "run away' to that unique little speck of paradise, when in need of a few minutes/hours of solitude.  the illusion of having escaped into a wilderness far far away, refreshes the mind and makes the spirit soar.  After a long walk along the edge of the Bay, either the total circle, or with less time available, the half circle, or cross-crossing, at random, on the many, narrow footpaths across the middle of the island, one feels fit again to join the human jungle.

After the rains, the greater part of the island is/was covered with a carpet of yellow wildflowers, (that was before you raped the land and scraped much of the land barren, in your misguided efforts of 'maintenance', now causing dust storms across the whole island).

I have a photo of that seemingly endless yellow field of flowers with my black and white Border Collie in it's midst.  It was made into a commercially produced poster. (Chamber of Commerce - are you interested?)

Yes, our free-roaming dogs as our companions, are a necessity.  They enhance our experience, our love for nature.  Their ability to "live in the moment", their joy of being free, is contagious.

Fenced-in "dog parks" are so artificial.  One goes out of duty and love for the dog, but the human mind becomes bored quickly just standing around.  The tendency to cut those visits short is therefore strong.

All my visitors from out of town, especially from Europe, are always shown Fiesta Island in combination with the rest of the Mission Bay Park.  All marvel at the contrast of this unique speck of untouched nature in the middle of a metropolis and the diverse activities one can observe there from horse back riding to rocketry.

If you have money laying around improve the water circulation in some of the bays, which have become dead fish cemeteries and prevent further run-off into the bay which diminishes the water quality.

BUT LEAVE "FIESTA SIALND" UNTOUCHED.  PLEASE!!!!!
 


Chris:

How do you use Fiesta Island?  My wife and I use the leash-free area of Fiesta island almost 5 times a week. We take our pride and joy, our 3 year old Husky/Shepard mix, Oslo, there. We choose Fiesta Island because its a great area for Oslo to run free as well as a perfect opportunity for my wife and me to get some exercise. Walking along the perimeter is a chance for my wife and I to connect and talk about our days, as well as take in the beautiful San Diego sunsets. Plus, you'll never see a happier dog than Oslo when the Husky in him takes over and he can run to his heart's content

Who do you bring with you to Fiesta Island's fenced, leash-free area?  I bring my wife and our 3 year old Husky/German Shepard mix, Oslo.

Why is Fiesta Island's leash-free area important to you?  The leash-free area is very important to us because it is the only place in San Diego where our dog can run free and where we can join him. The near-by dog parks and dog beaches are nowhere near as big and do not allow my wife and I to get our exercise as well.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Joanie H:

I use the Fiesta Island fenced, leash-free area in a few ways. First of all, I love the fact that I can walk at my own pace - actually get my 1/2 hour walk in - and my dogs can either run up ahead or lag behind to do what dogs do best - sniff! I appreciate the raw, relatively untouched natural beauty of the area. It is one of the last places you can go where wild flowers and brush can grow and where you get a glimpse of what San Diego looked like prior to mass development. The grassy, planned parks around the bay are nice, but are contrived and monotonous - very predictable - every city has those - ho hum. Also, I am a bird watcher and I am excited to see the variety of birds in that area. I have brought my binoculars and have observed besides the usual house finches, sparrows, phoebes, etc., a few Western Meadowlarks and a multitude of breeding pairs of Horned Larks. This is the only
place in San Diego where I have ever seen them! I fear that we will lose much more than simply a "dog park" if the plan goes through.

I bring with me my two dogs, sometimes my son who plays with them there, my anticipation of being in nature, my appreciation for having such a wonderful safe place for my dogs and me to go, bags to pick up after them, and a lingering fear that this may not last. When I'm there I often wish my mom, who was a dog lover in Arizona and always felt sorry for city dogs who had to always walk on a leash, could come and see this wonderful paradise where dogs can be free - on land and in water.

Fiesta Island's leash-free exercise area is important me for many reasons.  Besides the above-mentioned reasons, we NEED a place like this. I actually feel sick inside when I see natural areas being "improved". To me it is not an improvement but another example of man's need to control something - to change it to fit his needs. But it fits many more peoples' and animals' needs just as it is. It is as it was intended by nature. It is important to me
because we have so few of these areas left - none that I can think of in the city. It would be a travesty if it were to change.

Joanie H.

Thank you
Volunteers!

Special Thanks
to Kimi, Sara, Wendy, Pete
and Diane for all those hours working the table!

Thank you to the individuals who are providing pro bono professional services to this unique and special cause that affects all of our lifestyles!

Every bit of help from every volunteer makes a huge difference!

E-mail Mary and tell her you want to help!

Last Updated: 08/23/2008