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Land Trust Success Stories: Pacific Region

A Big Sur State of Mind
by Francesca Dalleo

View from Glen Deven Ranch
View from Glen Deven Ranch. Photos by Francesca Dalleo.

CALIFORNIA - "Big Sur really is a state of mind, as well as a place,” explains Rachel Saunders, Director of Communications and Community Affairs at The Big Sur Land Trust. Glen Deven Ranch, an 860-acre mixed use property above Highway 1 in the hills of Big Sur, is a striking example of the beauty, simplicity and raw power of the area.

The property was a bequest from the late Dr. Seeley and Mrs. Virginia Mudd in 2001, who were deeply dedicated to their ranch and to land protection in their community. They were longtime supporters of The Big Sur Land Trust, which was formed in 1978 by local landowners. Since then, the land trust has ensured that 25,000 acres throughout Monterey County are conserved in perpetuity, which includes sustainable, local agriculture; trail corridors; redwood, oak and pine forests; and stretches of protected beach and coastline. Saunders explains that the land trust helps maintain strong relationship between humans and land, “because members of our community depend on and relate to the land.”

Glen Deven Ranch sits on a ridge above a stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway recognized as one of the most rugged and beautiful areas of California, as well as the entire country. In between the towns of Carmel and Cambria, the road slows down - winding around hills, clinging to cliffs and passing over canyons for over 60 miles. To get to the property you have to drive off the main road through the redwoods and up to a narrow dirt path. On sunny days before the fog rolls in, the view from the ranch of the coastline and Pacific ocean is breathtaking.

The couple purchased the ranch in 1970 and lived in a peaceful and modest house on the vast property. Glen Deven means small brook, referring to the Garrapata Creek that runs through it. The land has had many uses, from running cattle to growing Christmas trees to managing bee hives for honey.

The ranch has served the Palo Colorado community in times of emergencies or natural disasters – acting as a base camp for the Mid-coast Fire Brigade for training exercises, and as a shelter for residents of the Palo Colorado canyon during floods and mudslides.

Glen Deven Ranch
The Mudds' favorite place on the ranch.

The ranch has also become a community resource in other ways. The Big Sur Land Trust offers it to nonprofit, research and public benefits organizations for retreats and other functions. For example, it is available for youth nonprofits – such as the YWCA's camp program outting for teenage girls – as a way to help reconnect at-risk and underserved kids with nature. The land trust also offers educational programs there including hiking, lectures, donor events, volunteer events, and meetings. Future plans include turning the ranch into a learning center for sustainability and a showcase for sustainable land practices.

Jim Cox, caretaker of the property for 28 years for the Mudds and ranch manager for the past seven with the Big Sur Land Trust, estimates that between 250 to 300 people a year get to use it. He also knows and appreciates the land like its his own. He described how the hand-carved benches he’s made that are scattered throughout the property honor the memory of people who supported the land trust and have passed away. The first one he ever made was placed at one of the Mudds' favorite spots on the ranch, a precipice looking out over the ocean and hills and into the horizon. (posted 9/5/07)


Patience Key to Using Nevada Act to Protect Land
By Bartholomew Martin

Hussman Ranch
Photo by Kathi Hussman

NEVADA: Thanks to a unique piece of federal legislation, and despite pressure from a growing population, 300 acres in western Nevada will now be preserved by a conservation easement brought about by the American Land Conservancy.

The easement represents the first successful attempt at harnessing the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act. Designed to promote conservation, the Act offers a new public funding avenue specifically for those interested in conserving both the ecology and the agricultural character of Nevada. Yet, this funding source may require more patience by landowners and more expertise by land trusts than a typical publicly funded easement—as its novelty and complexity significantly slows down the process for receiving funds.

The Carson Valley borders the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada mountains and includes fertile soils, the latter of which has supported a vibrant agricultural community for over a century. This landscape, however, is now drawing settlers with different interests. A burgeoning local economy, led by recreational opportunities, has created substantial development pressure in the area. Even so, long-time Carson Valley ranch owners David and Kathi Hussman successfully protected a large portion of their ranch from ever being developed by selling their development rights to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) through the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act.

Passed by Congress in 1998, the Act generates revenue by selling public land with low ecological value around the Las Vegas metropolitan area to private developers. The resulting revenue then funds a variety of public initiatives in Nevada—including the conservation of ecologically and agriculturally valuable land. The American Land Conservancy approached the Hussmans about pursuing an easement on their ranch the same year the Act was passed, but it took some time for them to view the federal act as a viable option.

First, while the Act empowers the federal government to take action on behalf of local interests, it did not immediately provide the funding necessary for administrating action. As one BLM spokesperson stated, “There originally was no staff assigned to manage the Act.” Second, the local BLM office responsible for putting the deal together for the Hussmans had never purchased an easement before. It took some time for them to familiarize themselves with the rights and obligations inherent to such an agreement. Finally, the nomination process demanded by the Act takes considerably longer than most other public funding processes by requiring state and local government review, along with federal oversight, prior to acceptance.

Jim Elias, the Great Basin program director of the American Land Conservancy, said that the extraordinary vision and patience of the Hussmans was pivotal in arranging the easement and overcoming the obstacles. He also noted that, for land trusts interested in acquiring funding from this unique source, “It’s a long tough row to hoe, especially for easements.” He is hopeful, however, that future efforts will be more efficiently executed now that the Hussmans have cleared a path. The BLM is similarly hopeful about speeding up the nomination process, now that the required administrative structures are in place and the necessary institutional knowledge is growing.

Learn more about the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act

(posted 3/21/07)


The Jewel of the Ka’u Coastline
by Francesca Dalleo

Coast of the Big Island, HI
Photo of Ka'u District coast by Francesca Dalleo, Land Trust Alliance

HAWAII - “What you see here you don’t see in the rest of Hawaii. Or the rest of the world,” says John Replogle, Hawaiian native, board member of the Hawaii Island Land Trust, and field coordinator for The Nature Conservancy. A cowboy for 30 years on the Big Island before dedicating his career to conservation 3 years ago, Replogle loves to explain why this area is so special.

The Ka’u District is enormous in Hawaiian standards - the size of the entire island of Maui or Oahu. The district contains a variety of habitat, from prehistoric rainforest to dry lava desert, windblown grasslands and rugged rocky coastline. Kau’s coast is the longest undeveloped shoreline in the Hawaiian Islands, stretching 80 miles from South Kona to South Point and on to Volcanoes National Park. Two areas with the most pristine and critically important habitat include: Punalu’u black sand beach, nesting grounds for the endangered green sea turtle; and Honu’apo Bay and tidal wetlands, where the Hawaiian monk seal, the state’s most endangered animal with only 1,400 left in the wild, has been spotted.

Replogle says, “The ancient Hawaiians were some of the first great conservationists.” They recognized the importance of the natural world to their way of life and that the mountains, land, and ocean are all connected, and man needs access to them to be healthy and survive. For 2,000 years native Hawaiians have retreated to the coast for some of their most important cultural traditions, such as to the beaches for luaus and the ocean for fishing and canoeing.

Honuapo Bay, HI
Photo of Honu'apo Bay by Francesca Dalleo, Land Trust Alliance

When Replogle was growing up, Honu’apo Bay and its surrounding tidal wetlands were part of a sugar plantation. Once the plantation closed and the land was put up for sale - 225 shoreline acres for $3.4 million - it was dangerously close to becoming residentially zoned and overdeveloped like the Kona coast of the Big Island.

Fortunately, members of the community in nearby towns - Na’alehu and Pahala - weren’t about to let this happen.  Forming a community group, Ka Ohana O Honu’apo, and working with the Hawaii Island Land Trust, The Nature Conservancy, and The Trust for Public Land, they secured county, state and federal funds to purchase the land from a private developer. They also received donations from private sources, such as the $40,000 given by new landowners in the area.

John Replogle of the Hawaii Island Land Trust and TNC
Replogle explaining plans for the estuary to a local conservationist.

Last December when Ka Ohana O Honu’apo organized a Ho`o`laulea (celebration) for the community at a local park, they raised $14,000 towards protecting Honu’apo Bay in the donation box at the entrance, an impressive feat in such a sparsely populated place with only 6 people per square mile. Replogle remarks, “People came out and gave their hearts, even people who have moved away from Ka’u many years ago came through for their Aina (land).”

The land has now been turned over to the State of Hawaii from The Trust for Public Land, and will eventually be turned over to the County of Hawaii. Long term plans for it include re-establishing the natural habitat in the estuary, which was damaged during its plantation days, and creating a nursery for fish as well as a possible breeding habitat for the ai`o, the endangered Hawaiian Stilt bird. They also plan to partner with the Department of Parks and Recreation to create and manage the largest park in the state of Hawaii. The park will contain trails for hiking and camping areas, and most importantly, leave plenty of coastline open for Hawaiians to enjoy as they always have. (posted 4/26/06)


Placer Land Trust Offers a Vision for Balancing Growth and Conservation
by Mary Ellen Kelly

Photo of Egret by Vernal Pool
Vernal pools in Placer County. Photo courtesy of Placer Land Trust.

CALIFORNIA - How do you balance the demands of rapid population growth with the need for preserving critical open space? A solution that’s working in Placer County, one of California’s fastest growing areas, is collaboration. By teaming up with developers and city planners, the Placer Land Trust recently recorded a conservation easement on 227 acres owned by the City of Roseville.

This is the third successful project of the land trust’s new West Placer Habitat Protection Program, and the fourth project they’ve completed with a public agency as landowner. Through this program, the Placer Land Trust has preserved upland habitat, vernal pools, annual grasslands and grazing land. More (posted 12/21/05)


The Zimmerman Family

Ranching Stays in the Family Thanks to Easement

CALIFORNIA - As a founder of the Tomales History Center, Mary McCullough Zimmerman appreciates tradition. In fact, the house where she and her husband Merv live is the former Halleck School, a one-room schoolhouse built in 1862 on the ranch overlooking Tomales Bay. Read more... (posted 12/18/03)


Muir Heritage Land Trust Awarded Nearly $2 Million for Fernandez Ranch Restoration and Public Access Project

Fernandez Ranch
View of Fernandez Ranch - Photo courtesy of Stephen Joseph

 

MARTINEZ, CALIFORNIA—Secretary for Resources Mike Chrisman has announced that the Muir Heritage Land Trust (MHLT) has been awarded $1.92 million from the highly competitive California River Parkways Grant Program

for its Fernandez Ranch project off of Highway 4 between Martinez and Hercules, CA. “We’re absolutely ecstatic and deeply grateful that the Fernandez Ranch project was selected for this grant. The property will offer tremendous public recreational opportunities and wonderful benefits to wildlife and water quality. With such generous funding from the California Resources Agency, MHLT will get the project done.” said MHLT Executive Director Linus Eukel upon hearing the news. Read more... or visit the Muir Heritage Land Trust website. (posted 7/18/07)

 

Close to Wilderness and Civilization

Photo by Stephen Joseph of Dutra Property
View from the top of the Dutra property looking toward Mt.Diablo.
Photo courtesy of Stephen Joseph

CALIFORNIA - Stagecoaches once rumbled across the land. Now, hikers, bikers and those on horseback can ride a three-mile segment of the San Francisco Bay Area Ridge Trail and feel in the midst of wilderness while in proximity of a major highway.

Muir Heritage Land Trust is ensuring the wilderness will be forever protected as it raises $190,000 by February 2004 to buy 158 acres on Franklin Ridge, providing another link in a trail around San Francisco Bay. The landowners, a ranching family, will get $790,000 for the land with oak forests and prime views of the nearby Carquinez Strait.

The nonprofit land trust expects to receive $100,000 from the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council and $500,000 from the California Coast Conservancy. The family, the Dutras, bought the land in 1917, and lived and raised cattle there for decades. Heirs of Margaret Dutra decided to sell after her death last year.

"This land has incredible views,” said Steve Pardieck, a land trust board member. The prime views could have stoked interest in building upscale houses, noted land trust officials. The land is home for 150 to 200 plant species and habitat for such protected species as the Alameda whip snake. (posted 5/9/2003)

Photo of Hana Ranch
Photo courtesy of Ron Chappelle

Pristine Oceanfront Protected Forever

HAWAI'I - Forty-one acres of oceanfront land, valued at more than $8 million, were permanently conserved in their pristine state when the owners of the 4,500-acre Hana Ranch signed a conservation easement with the Maui Coastal Land Trust, established in December 2000. Seven ranch parcels, three miles south of Hana town at Maka’alae Point, will forever be protected from any building or development.

The area has great cultural significance to the community and is a popular traditional fishing site. The Hana Ranch and the land trust have been widely applauded for their vision in permanently protecting these lands.

The nonprofit Maui Coastal Land Trust will oversee stewardship of the parcels, which will continue to be used as part of the working ranch. The conservation easement ensures that the pasturelands, views and public access will forever remain unchanged from their status today. The conservation easement also creates an endowment, funded by Hana Ranch, to finance the land trust’s on-going protection efforts.

“Because Hana is one of the most precious natural areas in Hawai’i, it is extra special to have this conservation easement as our first land protection agreement.” said Maui Coastal Land Trust Executive Director Dale Bonar. Maui Coastal Land Trust is the state’s first local, fully-staffed land trust. (posted 1/10/03)

The First Steps to A State Park

Photo of San Timoteo Canyon courtesy of the Riverside Land ConservancyCALIFORNIA - Riverside Land Conservancy has received a 165-acre land donation in San Timoteo Canyon from the trust of movie producer Gale Anne Hurd, owner of Valhalla Motion Pictures, and purchased another 710 acres, paving the way for creation of a 10,000-acre state park that would be located primarily in Riverside County.

The conservancy has been working with the California Department of Parks and Recreation since 1999 to establish a state park in the scenic canyon, which straddles Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The park would offer hiking and horseback riding, among other recreation. The donated parcel borders important historical sites including the San Timoteo Canyon Schoolhouse and Native American burial sites. Wyatt Earp operated a stage line through the canyon. The land trust intends to buy other parcels in the area.

The donated and purchased parcels contain several endangered species, including the kangaroo rat, as well as reserves of the protected coastal sage scrub. The parcels eventually will be transferred to the county, and will be part of Riverside County's proposed multiple species habitat conservation plan for protection of endangered species.

Ms. Hurd, who lives in Los Angeles, kept horses on her San Timoteo property and enjoyed riding in the scenic canyon. She elected to contribute the land to the state park effort, so the people of California could enjoy the pristine hills she loved as a youth. (posted 11/27/02)

Photo of lands adjacent to Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

Two Land Trusts Work to Save A Desert

CALIFORNIA - Two nonprofit land trusts have succeeded in permanently conserving more than 1,200 acres adjacent to Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. The Wildlands Conservancy donated the acreage to the Anza Borrego Foundation, a nonprofit land trust that works to acquire land for the state park from willing sellers.

The Wildlands Conservancy works to acquire "inholdings," or privately-owned land within state and federal parks. The land must have environmental resources worth protecting.

The 1,200 acres, which eventually will be transferred to the state park system, have a rare plant species - orcutt's aster - as well as archaeological resources and dry desert wash woodland with mainly palo verde and smoke trees.

The Anza Borrego Foundation, founded in 1967, has protected more than 28,000 acres, all of which have been transferred to the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in Imperial County. (posted 9/27/02)

Douglas Steakley/ Big Sur Land Trust

Ranch Acquisition Links California Coastal Preserves

CALIFORNIA - The Big Sur Land Trust and The Nature Conservancy secured the view from one of the most famous sections of California's Highway One and linked 13 parks and preserves with their $37 million purchase of the 9,898-acre Palo Corona Ranch.

The property begins about a block south of Carmel, and contains old-growth redwood forests, oak woodlands and coastal terrace. It connects an additional 10,000 acres of parks and preserves owned by The Big Sur Land Trust, the State of California and Monterey County as well as the US Forest Service's 160,000-acre Ventana Wilderness.

The Big Sur Land Trust and The Nature Conservancy are coordinating with adjacent landowners on a comprehensive management plan. Eventually, most of the property will be transferred to the state and the Monterey Peninsula Regional Park.

California Gov. Gray Davis committed $32 million for the purchase; the Regional Park District committed $5 million. The Nature Conservancy and The Big Sur Land Trust are raising a still-to-be-determined sum for the long-term conservation management of the ranch. The two groups financed the purchase primarily through interim loans. (posted 9/13/02)

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