North Coast Portal

Other Articles in This Issue
Editor's Note
Landowners everywhere are faced with a plethora of issues in stewarding their land, be it urban, suburban, or rural. Man...

Sustaining Instream Flows for Fish and People
It's early August and the Mattole River presents itself as a long grey ribbon of dry gravel running through a tunnel of ...

Motivating Personal Action
While financial incentives secured through grants do move some landowners to take action to protect the environment, t...

Our Wildfire Predicament
Trees Foundation board member Bill Eastwood is a geologist with 35 years experience in various aspects of watershed r...

Restoring Your Watershed: Coho Confab September 26-28, 2008 on the Smith River
The Coho Confab is an annual symposium to explore watershed restoration, learn techniques to recover coho salmon populat...

Diggin' In: The Gienger Report
Since arriving in the Mattole Valley of Humboldt County in 1971, Richard Gienger has immersed himself in homesteading...

Tree-Sitters Descend Victoriously From Freshwater Tree-Village
Following 20 years of intense front-lines struggle to defend Ancient Redwood and Douglas-fir forests from the liquidatio...

Recent Wildfire Impacts
In late May and June 2008, Santa Cruz County experienced two major wildland fires, which impacted more than 5,000 acres....

The Final Chapter
In 2000, the Campaign to Restore Jackson State Redwood Forest (the Campaign) filed suit to halt logging in Jackson State...

An Integrated Approach To Expanding Salmon Populations
The Eel River Salmon Restoration Project has focused on maintaining and expanding salmon and steelhead populations in th...

Pacific Lumber is Out of the Picture
A glimmer of hope graces the Redwood coast this summer as decades of wrangling between environmental activists and Pacif...

Klamath National Forest Cancels Post-fire Timber Sales
Following the 2007 summer fires, at the behest of the timber industry, the Forest Service immediately started planning "...

Comprehensive Watershed Restoration
The Mattole Restoration Council engages in an array of projects to heal the landscape for the benefit of the wildlife an...

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Editor's Note

Trees Foundation
September 2, 2008


Landowners everywhere are faced with a plethora of issues in stewarding their land, be it urban, suburban, or rural. Many of these issues present opportunities for landowners to live lighter on the land, thereby reducing their ecological footprint. A land-based stewardship ethic applied across a matrix of private lands can provide the connectivity needed to allow the greatest opportunity for sustainable plant and animal communities to thrive, including the human community.

Local organizations are partnering with private landowners to restore endangered species, save parched rivers, recover native streamside forest, and much more. These voluntary collaborations are demonstrating the power of the individual and community to contribute to meaningful landscape-level ecological recovery. With the uncertainty that progressing climate change will bring, management of an individual's lands for public trust resource benefits becomes even more important.

Water, wildfire, and wildlife--especially imperiled salmon, are the specific aspects of landowner stewardship that our Partners focus on in this issue. Each article explains the direct impact rural and suburban private land practices can have on the landscape, and the tremendous potential for ecological and social benefit when small landowners alter their management practices, as these authors demonstrate. In this issue the authors discuss their successes and offer tools for individual and collaborative action.



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