North Coast Portal

Other Articles in This Issue
The Unique Potential for EcoCultural Recovery
California's North Coast is a global treasure at the southern extreme of the world's largest coastal temperate rainfores...

EcoCultural Recovery and Indigenous Communities in Northwest California
Until not very long ago, the focus of life for human inhabitants of Northwestern California was daily sustenance taken f...

A Whisper of Hope from the Wildlands
The beginning of the 21st century ushered in many riveting and exhausting events for America: a seemingly endless war, d...

BACH: Pushing the Spirit of Conservation in the Urban Jungle
When I look out my window, I see redwoods. I consider myself very lucky, particularly because I live in the Bay Area, al...

Welcome To Our New Partner: Friends of Small Places Targets Gravel Mining
Friends of Small Places is a local Northern CA organization concerned with impacts to rural neighborhoods and river ecos...

THE Gienger REPORT...Diggin' In
Another summer season has come and gone. There were record-breaking heat waves, but the late spring rains helped to keep...

Campaign to Restore Jackson State Redwood Forest: Reform Efforts Turn the Corner
After six years of education, and five years with no timber harvests, the idea that our publicly owned 50,000-acre redwo...

Eel River Salmon Restoration Project
The Eel River Salmon Restoration Project is anticipating the coming winter rainfall in bringing back the salmon to our l...

Mattole Restoration Council: MRC Working Toward Good Roads, Clear Creeks
The main objective of the Mattole Restoration Council's (MRC) Good Roads Clear Creeks (GRCC) program is to reduce sedime...

Mattole Salmon Group: Looking Beneath the Surface
Working in and around rivers and streams comes naturally to the Mattole Salmon Group (MSG). And with the help of local l...

Salmonid Restoration Federation: 25th Annual Salmonid Restoration Conference March 7-10, 2007, in Santa Rosa, California
The Salmonid Restoration Federation will hold the 25th Annual Salmonid Restoration Conference at the Wells Fargo ...

Salmon Protection And Watershed Network: SPAWN
After years of collecting local genetic-stock native plants and then having them grown for us at commercial nurseries an...

Sanctuary Forest: Sanctuary Forest Continues to Enhance Mattole Headwaters Area
As Sanctuary Forest moves into its 20th year, we celebrate the many successes of the past and prepare to overcome the n...

Forest Activist Update: Mattole SLAPP* Suit Update *(Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation)
Maxxam's Pacific Lumber (PL) and their subcontractors Columbia Helicopter, Steve Wills Trucking, Russ Timber, and Lewis ...

An Activist Shares Her Story: California Wilderness Protected!
On October 17, the Northern California Coastal Wild Heritage Wilderness Act of 2006 became federal law. The bill ...

Community Support Empowers Community Action
Never doubt that a few, thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world --indeed, it is the only thing that ever has...

Federal Court Halts Construction in Yosemite!
As we go to press: A federal court has halted several new construction and ground-disturbing projects affecting Yosemite...

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The Unique Potential for EcoCultural Recovery

Trees Foundation
November 15, 2006


California's North Coast is a global treasure at the southern extreme of the world's largest coastal temperate rainforest. Coastal temperate rainforest once covered less than 1% of the earth, now only half of that remains. The ecological devastation of the past 150 years is threatening the survival of this delicate web of life.

However, the building blocks for ecocultural recovery along the North Coast are abundant. For example: over 1 million acres are permanently protected as Wilderness, the longest unroaded coastline in the continental United States (the Lost Coast) is protected, over 6 million acres of public lands provide for citizen input into conservation priorities, strong tribal communities provide needed Traditional Ecological Knowledge, and community-based organizations have been working for over three decades to connect, protect, and restore this globally-unique region.

In this issue three of Trees Foundation's Partners explore the complex, rich, exuberant interdependency of the North Coast. Karen Pickett of Bay Area Coalition for Headwaters and Earth First!, Hawk Rosales of the InterTribal Sinkyone Wilderness Council, and Lesley Adams of the Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center discuss the range and depth of a vibrant ecocultural recovery.



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