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Showing posts with label Blue Ridge-Berryessa Natural Area. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue Ridge-Berryessa Natural Area. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2010

Help Build a trail above Lake Berryessa this weekend!

Berryessa Peak trail construction begins!

from http://tuleyome.org

Our first trail building event on the new Berryessa Peak Trail will be held October 29, 30, and 31st, 2010. During this 3-day, 2 night backpacking trip, we'll be building a half-mile segment of the trail on an easement that gives access to the 9,100-acre Berryessa Peak public lands. The trail project is located north of Lake Berryessa, near the top of the scenic Blue Ridge. We'll camp in an amazing oak grove overlooking the lake. Tools will be provided, and we'll share dinners. We'll be meeting at 9am at the trailhead, and be back to the cars around 2pm on the 31st.

If you are interested in joining us on this trip, please RSVP to Andrew Fulks at yolohiker@yolohiker.org and I'll get you more details.

Hope to see you at one or both events!

Also, we've routed the new loop trail on Tuleyome's Cold Canyon Headwaters parcel, and will be scheduling construction days in November. This new trail will add 2 miles of new trail to Cold Canyon, including a wonderful forested hike to the ridge, with access to dramatic rock outcroppings.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVxeZsJiLcY
video of trail construction

Protecting the wild heritage and agricultural heritage of the Northern Inner Coast Range and the Western Sacramento Valley for existing and future generations.
http://www.tuleyome.org

Visit the Yolohiker web site for trail maps, hikes, and outings in the Putah and Cache creek watersheds.
http://www.yolohiker.org

http://yolohiker.org/trails/berryessa/coldcan/index.html
cold canyon trails

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http://www.latimes.com/videobeta/569102b6-5618-402a-93be-cafe4b3fb2a9/Travel/Berryessa-Snow-Mountain-America-s-next-national-monument-

LA Times video on BRBNA—3:29

Monday, July 19, 2010

Wind Power plan on BRBNA ridgeline?

Windmill Farm proposal East of Clearlake has Enviro's worried



http://www.colusa-sun-herald.com/news/wind-5044-hopes-colusa.html

7/6/2010--Walker Ridge in western Colusa County may be the home of a future wind farm.

Calgary-based AltaGas hopes to embrace wind turbine technology in the Mendocino National Forest, and has proposed a wind park on land managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, located on the border of Colusa and Lake counties.

AltaGas — a $2.6 billion natural gas generating company — hopes to have the wind power project under construction by 2012, but fears the growing trend in alternative power could bog the company down in red tape.

"BLM is swamped with renewable energy applications," said Peter Eaton, project development director.
If all goes well for the company, 29 to 42 turbines will twirl on about 80 acres of a 8,157 acre row, and generate up to 70 mega watts of renewable energy.

MORE:
http://lakeconews.com/content/view/14906/919/

http://www.tuleyome.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=93

Friday, May 28, 2010

1275 Acres of Development rights deleted in Napa

Room to Roam - Partnership Permanently Protects Historic Blue Ridge-Berryessa Ranch

http://www.rangelandtrust.org/

NAPA, Calif., May 28, 2010- The California Rangeland Trust is pleased to announce the permanent conservation of the 1,275-acre Running Deer Ranch, owned by John and Judy Ahmann in Napa County. The Rangeland Trust worked with the California Department of Conservation, U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program (FRPP), and the Napa Land Trust to place an agricultural conservation easement on the property, ensuring that it will remain a natural, working landscape in perpetuity.

Running Deer Ranch is one of the oldest continuously operating cattle ranches in the state, and was a part of the Las Putas Rancho that the Berryessa Brothers acquired in 1843.

"The conservation of the Running Deer Ranch is a success for the Ahmann family, our partners and for open space protection in the Bay Area," said Nita Vail, California Rangeland Trust Chief Executive Officer.

"Our mission is to protect rangelands and ranching culture," said Vail, "but intact ranchlands contribute so much to the Bay Area economy and quality of life." According to the Bay Area Open Space Council, there are 1.3 million acres of private ranchlands still remaining in the Bay Area that play a critical role in supporting local food production, tourist-enticing vistas, and "ecological services" like migration corridors and wildlife habitat.

"As we watched development edge closer to the ranch, we knew we had to do something to protect the natural resources and history of this land," said Judy Ahmann. "From the Native Americans to the vast land grants to the American pioneers – they all had a place here. We feel we have done the best we can to maintain the part of the Blue Ridge-Berryessa area under our care."

Running Deer Ranch is located about 22 miles north of the city of Napa, and extends from the gentle gradient of the Berryessa Valley to the steep slopes of Blue Ridge. It is a critical "connector" property, one that helps keep the wilderness values of the region whole and unfragmented. The ranch showcases many of the areas' distinctive ecosystems – grassland, oak savannah, hardwood forest and chamise chaparral. For over 150 years the ranch's cattle operation has shared habitat with bald eagle, foothill yellow-legged frog, golden eagle, blue oak and interior live oak.

The Ahmann family has owned the property since 1986, and managed it for both high quality cattle and to improve the ecological processes of the landscape by promoting grassland and forest health. They generously provided a half mile of their private land to help connect a 100 mile hiking trail that runs through the Blue Ridge-Berryessa Natural Area.

Read more:
http://samandadorger.com/blog/2010/06/berryessa-cattle-ranch-gets-conservation-easement/123

Read more: http://www.sunherald.com/2010/05/28/2216959/room-to-roam-partnership-permanently.html#ixzz0pFLBKw8W

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Berryessa Peak trail is under construction

Yolohikers will soon have a new trail to park between Bay area and Sacramento

http://yolohiker.org
New Trail: above Lake Berryessa on the new Berryessa Peak Trail easement, to start constructing the half-mile length of the easement. A private ranch has so graciously donated a public trail easement...
Total distance is 10 miles, round trip, with 2000-foot elevation gain.
When completed, this trail will offer the first open public access to the 9,100-acre Berryessa Peak BLM public lands. Located in Yolo and Napa Counties, this public land was previously inaccessible.  I’d been working for 15 years to raise awareness of these lands and to get agency and landowner approvals for this project, and the time has finally come. We can build it!

Photos of the hike can be seen here: http://picasaweb.google.com/yolohiker/BlueRidgeTrailScouting#

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

L.A. Times focuses on SF to Sacto Mountain preserve...

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Proposed conservation area would preserve some of California's least-trampled terrain

excerpted from
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-berryessa22-2010mar22,0,7702234.story

3/22/2010--
The diverse 100-mile-swath of inner coast range land between the Bay Area and Sacramento, dubbed the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Conservation Area, is on a list of prospective national monuments.
(Editor's note: The land includes both public and privately owned lands. Monument status only affects the lands owned by the Federal government.)

...Four of the 14 sites identified as candidates either to become monuments or gain acreage via presidential declaration are in California: the Berryessa site, the Bodie Hills, the Modoc Plateau and an expansion into California of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument from Oregon.

...John and Judy Ahmann run Romagnola and Black Angus cattle on several thousand acres of ranchland that sweeps up from the shores of Lake Berryessa. The couple love the area so much that they have been exploring ways to preserve it.

...The couple have decided to place more than 3,000 acres of the ranch into a conservation easement that they hope will be folded into the prospective national conservation area.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

North SF Bay land trust needs $ to open land to public

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Napa Land Trust is still working to pay for 4000 acre Mountain





"the longest "mansion free" viewshed on any of the surrounding ranges in the Napa Valley."

http://www.napalandtrust.org/preserves/wildlake_duff.shtml

The Land Trust acquired Wildlake Duff for $25 million through our "Napa Valley Wild" capital campaign. We have raised all but $2.2 million and we need to raise an additional $700,000 for stewardship and administrative expenses.
----------------------------

http://www.napavalleyregister.com/news/local/article_eb66d6b0-dd63-5fd5-9939-ee4c499142a7.html

4/27/2009

...When the Land Trust bought the 4,000 acres on the Wildlake and Duff properties, the plan was to negotiate a sale to the state for the land to be used as a park with public access. The Land Trust’s “Napa Valley Wild” campaign raised $27 million to acquire the properties, of which $24 million was used to purchase the two pieces of land. ($2 million in state funds were contributed to the sale by the Coastal Conservancy.)

Yet the state’s financial problems have caused this process to stall indefinitely. Consequently, the Land Trust is now charged with the stewardship of the property....

Ultimately the goal was to add both new acquisitions to Robert Louis Stevenson State Park and create a 13,000-acre oasis of protected, undeveloped land....

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for a map of preserved lands in Napa County:

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDGtgP5K_e5b_A5d_drXD9dugECAw-Te2JgVZCf_sMoywh2daFzOmrMYZxwjq6cBrSh7F6ObLDWANUITzr81XEfIiEz05WPwuwfbBVanECnA1BbCUEfHGwS-Y-ptc5ldMRXevyjlIFfBo/s1600-h/napa+county+2007+saved+o.s..jpg

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

update on future mega-park between Sacramento and North Bay area...

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72 Acre Land purchase is in the works in Mountains between Sacramento and north Bay Area sprawl

Known as the Blueridge-Berryessa Natural Area--this 100 mile by 20 mile range of mountains, streams and lakes is a future mega-park that is currently a mix of public and private lands spanning from the Mendocino National Forest to the San Francisco Bay. Both the state and federal governments have purchased many thousands of acres of oak-covered woodlands and flowing creeks in the past ten years...


From http://yolohiker.org

11/17/2009--Update: If you haven't yet heard, Tuleyome is buying 72 acres of the Cold Canyon headwaters. Information can be found at http://tuleyome.org . To date, we've raised about 20% of the purchase price, so thank you to all those who have contributed. Once we own it, it will be open to the public and we will work on trails. We anticipate within 5 years it will become part of the UC Reserve, though it will be open to the public right after we buy it.

http://www.tuleyome.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=91

http://www.dailydemocrat.com/news/ci_13746413

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BIG REPORT ON STATUS OF RECENT PUBLIC PURCHASES IN THE FUTURE MEGA-PARK

http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/86m6234j?display=all

UC davis natural reserve system—4 year report—50 megabyte file

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MAPS OF THE BRBNA:

http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/ukiah/maps_ukiah.html

where to get maps of the public lands in the BRBNA

http://www.brbna.org/CF-files/BRBNArecreation-24x36.pdf

big BRBNA map

http://www.brbna.org/districts.htm

maps of land ownership in the BRBNA

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ARTICLES ON THE BRBNA:

http://baynature.org/articles/apr-jun-2001/blue-ridge-berryessa-boasc-award

BRBNA from 2001 issue of Bay Nature magazine

http://books.google.com/books?id=ZwchwO3OQmsC&pg=PA52&lpg=PA52&dq=%22blue+ridge+berryessa+natural+area%22&source=bl&ots=MDGKUjhlTI&sig=g1a2jofG8pB7JfGMPtlgu1W_7HE&hl=en#v=onepage&q=%22blue%20ridge%20berryessa%20natural%20area%22&f=false

BRBNA

http://www.rangelandtrust.org/conservation-yolo_ranch.php

yolo land and cattle Cons easement 2005

http://books.google.com/books?id=TWJP7NRrxTYC&pg=PT147&lpg=PT147&dq=blue+ridge+berryessa+natural+area&source=bl&ots=H9AuYspQKL&sig=p1AQ4TMtFObh2f_GHYpF4tSBVQg&hl=en#v=onepage&q=blue%20ridge%20berryessa%20natural%20area&f=false

Payne ranch sale to BLM

Tuleyome - Protecting Putah and Cache Creeks Through Sustainable Development - Berryessa Snow Mountain National Conservation Area

http://www.top10baseballbats.com/clients/tuleyome_v2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=35&Itemid=27

Tuleyome - Protecting Putah and Cache Creeks Through Sustainable Development

http://www.top10baseballbats.com/clients/tuleyome_v2/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=35

BRBRNA-snow mountain proposal

http://lakeconews.com/content/view/3063/764/

on BRBNA

http://www.estuarynewsletter.com/2002_02/cover.php

on BRBNA

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OPPONENTS OF THE BRBNA:

http://ko-kr.facebook.com/pages/Middletown-CA-95461/351924910127

http://www.familywateralliance.com/issues_brbna_opposition.html

http://www.familywateralliance.com/issues_brbna_dailyrepublic_article.html

farm interests attack BRBNA plans in Capay Valley


Wednesday, May 6, 2009

State Frees Up $$$ for Napa preserves

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Napa County Parks Finally Get some State Funding


http://newspherenapa.com/2009/04/funding-for-napa-projects-restarted-by-state-bond-sales/

4/23/2009--The governor's office recently sold almost $7 billion in bonds which now make possible a list of environmental projects throughout the state. In Napa county, those include purchase of 212 acres of wildlife habitat.

the list includes:

Acquisition of a conservation easement and a 55-acre property known as Smith-Madrone, adjacent to Bothe Napa Valley State Park

Acquisition of two parcels, totaling 157 acres, for inclusion in the Quail Ridge Reserve, part of the UC Davis Natural Reserve System, located near Lake Berryessa.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Yolo Trail Nearly finished...

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Otis Ranch Trail Progress Report--on East Side of Blueridge-Berryessa Natural Area

Hello Yolohikers!

4/20/2009--Huge progress has been made on the trail at the Otis Ranch. We have only about 100-feet to go to hook into the fire break on the ridge. This next trip will have us finishing that 100-feet, as well as installing steps on the steep parts and building a bypass route around the rocks. It should be cooler by the weekend!

To see photos from our April 11th trip, go to:

http://picasaweb.google.com/yolohiker/YoloCountyParksOtisRanchTrailbuildingApril112009#

photo gallery: http://picasaweb.google.com/yolohiker

http://yolohiker.org

Friday, April 10, 2009

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Todd Ranch adds 738 acres to Knoxville Wildlife Area


4/1/2009---After 15 years, the Land Trust of Napa County has completed efforts to purchase another 738 acres for the Knoxville Wildlife Area north of Lake Berryessa. $3.37 million in Funds to complete the purchase came from the California Wildlife Conservation Board.

http://newspherenapa.com/2009/04/todd-ranch-adds-738-acres-to-knoxville-wildlife-area/

http://www.napalandtrust.org/frameland.html

http://rare-earth-news.blogspot.com/2008/07/total-of-8648-acres-of-california.html

Monday, March 9, 2009

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Napa areas could be part of huge conservation region



excerpted, for full story:
http://newspherenapa.com/2009/03/napa-areas-could-be-part-of-huge-conservation-region/

3/2009--Some remote parts of Napa County could become part of a huge National Conservation Area that would protect one of the planet’s most biologically diverse areas. The proposed Berryessa Snow Mountain National Conservation Area stretches from Solano County to the Mendocino National Forest along the ridgeline east of Lake Berryessa. It includes over 500,000 acres of public lands including portions of six counties: Napa, Solano, Lake, Glenn, Colusa, and Yolo...

The Berryessa Snow Mountain NCA campaign originated with the Blue Ridge-Berryessa Natural Area Partnership, (BRBNA) which formed in 1997 to coordinate private and public landmanagers in the region. The BRBNA partnership first met in 1998, when Homestake Mining Company, which owned about 20,000 acres in the region at the time, closed down operations and asked neighbors what to do with the property. Homestake had already arranged with U.C. Davis to convert some of the area into an environmental research reserve. One rancher had the idea of conserving lands beyond Homestake all the way to Colusa County up north.

for map:

http://www.tuleyome.org/images/stories/file/NCA%20Map%2010%2006%2008.pdf

Monday, February 23, 2009

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More Trails and Several Development Battles Near the Blueridge-Berryessa Natural Area


2/22/2009 Update from http://yolohiker.org

New trail project!

I know lots of people have noticed the lack of hikes this year. This is because I was working on starting up a new trail building project, and am pleased to announce that Tuleyome (http://tuleyome.org) is now working with Yolo County to build the first multi-use trail on the
Otis Ranch Open Space Park. The park is located across from Camp Haswell County Park, upstream from Rumsey. I’ve wanted to build trails up in this area for a while, and this
segment will eventually give access to the Blue Ridge trail from a new location. In light of the current economic downturn, money for trails and other park features will surely become scarcer, so it’s up to us, the trail users, to help improve our public lands! Dates for volunteer trail building days have been posted on the Hikes, Trips, and Events calendar on the Yolohiker webpage, and a description of the project can be found on a new Trailbuilding link on http://yolohiker.org. Be sure to come out and help build trails on our County Open Space!


Blue Ridge Trail update

A ranching family in Napa County donated a half-mile trail easement to the Napa Open Space District, which will connect the DFG Knoxville State Wildlife Area with the BLM Berryessa Peak public lands. This will bring an almost 32-mile corridor down the Blue Ridge into the public right of way, and allow for first-ever non-docent led hikes onto the 9,100-acre Berryessa Peak public lands! Tuleyome will be helping construct the trail using volunteers (that means you guys!).
Before construction can begin we need to complete the environmental review, and I am looking for a Botanist and an Ornithologist who would be willing to do some pro bono work, inventorying the route for the CEQA document. If you would love to be one of the first to see the new trail easement, and are willing to donate a day to do the field work with me, drop me an email!

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"Trust key to rangeland partnership, rancher says"(Capital Press, 1/22/09)
"Where Yolo, Colusa and Lake counties meet, a 10,000-acre patch of U.S. Bureau of Land Management-owned grassland (Payne Ranch) is the site of a special grazing project. Historically a forage ground for elk, cattle and sheep, the parcel began showing signs of over-grazing by the 1960s, but grazing continued into the 1990s. That's when the land's previous owner contacted the BLM about a sale of the property. The sale was completed about three years ago, and the BLM's original goal was to restore habitat for the bald eagle and other species and to preserve the land's cultural values ... But as a result of a noxious weed problem, grazing is back on the grassy plot under a partnership between the BLM, Elk Creek rancher Chet Vogt and a local environmental group called Tuleyome."

http://www.tuleyome.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=40&Itemid=27

http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/ukiah/grazing.html

http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/ukiah/cachecreek.html

http://www.blm.gov/pgdata/etc/medialib/blm/ca/pdf/pdfs/ukiah_pdfs.Par.70383.File.dat/cachecreek_wilderness.pdf
for map

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Environmentalists push for massive north-state conservation area—Berryessa Snow Mountain National Conservation Area—1/27/2009
http://www.sacbee.com/ourregion/story/1575533.html?mi_rss=Our%2520Region

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California: Will 600 homes and a golf course destroy rare Cache Creek Oak woodlands ? http://forestpolicyresearch.org/2009/01/09/california-600-homes-golf-course-destroy-rare-cache-creek-oak-woodlands/ Economic forces put into play long ago spelled certain doom for these parcels below that are marked in red…
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SOLANO COUNTY / Lawsuit opposes development / Critics say project violates plan for scenic Lagoon Valley
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/04/08/BAGFJC53N31.DTL

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Big vineyard plans for east side of valley Five sites totaling more than 1,000 acres in planning stages
http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2009/02/09/news/local/doc498fd0973e09a333248868.txt

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

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SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA LOOSE WEBSITES:

http://www.savemountdiablo.org/SupportLandPreservationEfforts.pdf

Save Mount Diablo 11/20/2008 news:

Throughout the East Bay (not just around Mt. Diablo) another 30 to 35,000 acres will be acquired and hundreds of recreational projects will be funded during the next twenty years. …In the past twelve months Save Mount Diablo has protected six parcels (through acquisition and land use planning) totaling 399 acres. In addition we are about to transfer our 333-acre Chaparral Spring property to East Bay Regional Park District so that it can be opened to the public. We owned Chaparral Spring for fourteen years until the Park District was ready to manage it….Despite the economic downturn, development threats continue. We helped stop two attempts to break the County Urban Limit line and have responded to 42 other development applications, 14 of which have been largely completed. They range from a single house-site to the reuse of the 5,000 acre Concord Naval Weapons Station.
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http://gambolinman.blogspot.com/2008/12/bay-area-wild-places-and-open-spaces.html

pictures and text on bay area wild places


http://sfep.abag.ca.gov/sfep-newsletter/2002_02/cover.php

Blueridge-Berryessa Natural Area, wildlife and mercury mines


http://www.ebcnps.org/conservation.html

conservation issues in the east SF bay


http://steevsonja.net/gallery/Outdoor/Bay%20Ridge%20Trail%20Hike

pictures of the Bay Ridge Trail from Pantoll Station to the Golden Gate Bridge


http://www.sonoma-county.org/PARKS/outdrpln/pdf/orp_vol1-chap4.pdf

SF Bay area land preservation statistics and map of Sonoma County



http://openspacecouncil.org/projects/conservancy/baosc_conservancy_2003.04_farmland_priorities.jpg/image_view_fullscreen

9/2002-Coastal Conservancy’s map of Bay area priorities for agricultural land preservation


http://openspacecouncil.org/projects/conservancy/baosc_conservancy_2003.04_regional_priorities.jpg/image_view_fullscreen

open space, habitat, recreation value map of Bay area, 9/2002

Monday, November 17, 2008

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Another 800 Acres opened to the public between Napa and Yolo Counties



from http://yolohiker.org

11/6/2008: By the end of November, a new 800-acre public purchase will open up a segment of the Old Toll Road, which is a historic route between Yolo and Napa Counties. While the Yolo section is in private ownership, the Napa section will now become public (for the first time ever, and without a toll...)
I plan on leading a hike up the newly-public section.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

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Ranching family donates easement across rugged land for public trail North of San Francisco Bay


Trail Leads to Berryessa Peak through Private 3000-acre ranch


Napa Valley Register, 9/21/08

The Ahmanns have granted an easement for use of land along the Napa-Yolo county line, east of Lake Berryessa, to the Napa County Regional Park and Open Space District. The donation now gives hikers a chance to trudge up the Blue Ridge, the 3,000-foot highlands controlled by the federal Bureau of Land Management, to take in a view ranging from the Sierra Nevada to the east to Mount Tamalpais to the west.

for full story:
http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2008/09/21/news/local/doc48d5e67442cf7565276001.txt


To read more on this trail easement donation:

http://www.carangeland.org/Files%20to%20Link/Guardian%20of%20the%20Range/Ahmann/CRCC%20-%20GR%20-%20Ahmann-Final.pdf

or http://carangeland.org/

Friday, September 12, 2008

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September 20th: Cache Creek Celebration in the Blueridge Berryessa Natural Area


Hello Yolohikers!

On September 20th, Tuleyome, http://tuleyome.org/,will be hosting our 3rd annual Cache Creek celebration. Come out to Cache Creek Canyon Regional Park and spend the day with friends, go for a hike or bike ride, swim in the creek, or just relax and enjoy a BBQ dinner. For those who want to spend the night, we've reserved the group campgrounds (which are the best and closest to the creek). To get there from Yolo County, just take Highway 16 through the Capay Valley, past Rumsey, until you get to the middle campground.

Here is a google maplink: http://tinyurl.com/cache-creek

The event is free, just bring a potluck item to share. We'll provide the hot dogs and veggie dogs and drinks. Kids and dogs are welcome. Both are known to eat food that falls on the ground.
Please RVSP to Debra Chase at Tuleyome, via email: dchase@tuleyome.org

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

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A Look at Some of the Groups Working to Save the 20 Mile Wide By 100 Miles Long Blueridge-Berryessa Preserve Between the North San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento




http://www.tuleyome.org/projects/campaigns/blueridge/index.html

http://bioregion.ucdavis.edu/what/brbna.html

The Blue Ridge Berryessa Natural Area (BRBNA) focuses on Blue Ridge and the lands to the east and west of the ridge, down to the Capay Valley on the east side and over towards Coyote, Long, and Pope valleys on the west. It stretches from Monticello Dam in the south to the area north of Highway 20 between Williams and Clear Lake. Straddling the ancient contact between the rocks of the continental and Pacific tectonic plates, the area's diverse geology supports a unique assemblage of ecological communities including serpentine chaparral, grasslands, oak woodlands, and extensive riparian and cliff habitats.

Wildlife abounds. The area is sufficiently large and remote to support tule elk, bald and golden eagles, mountain lions and bears, as well as diverse songbirds, raptors, amphibians, reptiles and fish. The serpentine soils of the region host a large number of indigenous and rare plants, while Cache and Putah Creeks, along with their tributaries and the region's lakes, provide abundant fisheries.

---------------------------

http://www.berryessatrails.org/

http://www.berryessatrails.org/lakedistrict.htm

The Napa County Lake District is part of the larger Blue Ridge Berryessa Natural Area (BRBNA), a natural area of some 750,000 acres spead over portions of five counties, half of which is public land. The BRBNA is the subject of a voluntary conservation partnership (the BRBNA CP) in which BT&C is a partner, dedicated to conserving the natural, recreational and agricultural lands within the BRBNA. Trails planned in the Lake District form the core of the regional trail system being planned in the BRBNA, starting with the Bureau of Reclamation's proposal for a 150 mile Lake Berryessa Shoreline Trail.

Most of the 80,000 acres of land in the Lake District is held by two federal bureaus of the Dept. of the Interior - the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) plus a state agency, the California Dept. of Fish and Game (DFG). The fourth major public landholder is the UC Davis Nature Reserve System (NRS). Despite the extensive public land holdings, there are few formal trails in the Lake District, and finding access to the public land can be difficult.


Major Public Land Parcels

1. Quail Ridge (NRS) - 2,000 acres, southeast of the Lake, scheduled hikes
2. Lake Berryessa Recreation Area (BOR) -19,000 acre lake plus 9,000 acres of land around the shoreline, Smittle Creek Trail and the North End Trail
3. Cedar Roughs (BLM) - 6,000 acres in the hills to the west of the Lake, no formal trails, proposed Wilderness area
4. Berryessa Peak Blue Ridge (BLM) - 9,000 acres (includes substantial portion in Yolo County) on Blue Ridge to the east of the Lake, surrounded by private land there is currently no public access
5. Knoxville Wildlife Area (DFG) - 20,000 acres, no formal trails but many old ranch roads. Includes the new 12,575 acres of public land acquired in December 2005
6. Blue Ridge (BLM) - 700 acres, while a small parcel in Napa County, this land is contiguous with the Cache Creek Natural Area which is 70,000 acres of land primarily in Lake and Yolo Counties. There is no trail in Napa County but there is an 8 mile trail north along Blue Ridge to the north of Napa
7. Knoxville Recreation Area (BLM) - 17,000 acres (includes substantial portion in Lake County) west of the Knoxville Wildlife Area, a portion of this large parcel includes OHV trails and a campground
8. McLaughlin (NRS) - 7,000 acres (includes substantial portion in Lake County), occasional guided hikes

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http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/california/press/napa121605.html

Conservation partners protect 12,575-acre ranch in Napa County
Public-private partnership takes critical step toward preserving open space and completing wildlife-compatible recreational area in popular Napa region

Sacramento, Calif.—December 15, 2005—The Wildlife Conservation Board, in partnership with the Blue-Ridge Berryessa Natural Area Conservation Partnership, the Department of Fish and Game, the California Coastal Conservancy, The Land Trust of Napa County and The Nature Conservancy, today announced the acquisition and protection of the 12,575-acre Napa Ranch, an important milestone in protecting the region’s natural areas and providing wildlife-compatible recreational opportunities. The property, which will become part of the California Department of Fish and Game’s Knoxville Wildlife Area, includes one of the last unprotected segments of the 70,000-acre Eticuera Creek watershed, which supports a wide variety of threatened plants and animals.

“What the Point Reyes National Seashore is to San Francisco, or the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area is to Los Angeles, the Blue-Ridge Berryessa Natural Area can be for our region,” said Ray Krauss of the Blue-Ridge Berryessa Natural Area Conservation Partnership, a coalition of private landowners and public land managers dedicated to conserving 750,000 acres in portions of Napa, Yolo, Solano, Colusa and Lake counties. “More than 10 million people live within a three hour drive of the BRBNA, and that population is expected to increase 33 percent by 2020. The protection of Napa Ranch is a big step in our effort to protect the region’s natural treasures and its way of life before it’s too late.”

The acquisition of Napa Ranch contributes 12,575 acres to the Knoxville Wildlife Area and a network of open space that spans the Cache Creek Wildlife Area, the Cache Creek Natural Area, the Knoxville Wildlife Area, the McLaughlin Reserve, the Cedar Roughs Wildlife Area and the Lake Berryessa public lands. Protection of the property preserves an important wildlife corridor serving a variety of wide-ranging animals, including mountain lion, bear and bald and golden eagle. Napa Ranch also contains one of the last unprotected segments of the Eticuera Creek watershed, which spans 70,000 acres of oak woodlands and serpentine chaparral — two highly threatened vegetation types in California of which only a small percentage remains. While only four percent of oak woodlands are protected in California, they are known to support more than 80 species of migratory and resident birds and more than 330 species of amphibians.

Napa Ranch was purchased by the Wildlife Conservation Board in cooperation with the Blue-Ridge Berryessa Natural Area Conservation Partnership, the California Coastal Conservancy, The Land Trust of Napa County and The Nature Conservancy for $12,500,000 using public and private funds. The Wildlife Conservation Board allocated $7,200,000 for the purchase and received a $2,300,000 Land and Water Conservation Fund grant from the National Park Service, a $1,500,000 grant from the State Coastal Conservancy, a $1,000,000 grant from Resource Legacy Fund Foundation’s Preserving Wild California program secured by the Napa Land Trust and a $500,000 grant from The Nature Conservancy.

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