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THIS WEEK IN
CALIFORNIA WILD
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Feature
Still Wild
Ten of California's Untrammeled Places
the Editors of California Wild
If John Muir rose from his Martinez grave and headed
southeast on foot, as he used to do, across the Great Central Valley
(which was, in his day, a blanket of wildflowers growing so close together
an ant could walk from one side to the other without touching ground)
and into the Sierra foothills (then forested with immense oak woodlands,
striped with free-flowing, steelhead- and salmon-running streams, populated
with mountain lions and grizzly bears, and decorated with vernal pools)
and into the beloved peaks of his Sierran "Range of Light,"
and down into his "true home," Yosemite Valley, he might well
continue marching straight to the top of El Capitan and jump to a second
death.
But suppose we caught him before he leapt. How would
we convince him to stay? How would we shake loose his horror of what's
been lost and start him working for the preservation of all that remains?
A glass of Napa Valley cabernet sauvignon? A virtual reality fly-over
of pristine Yosemite Valley with traffic digitally removed? "Fools
gold!" he'd say. Perhaps we could show him a copy of the Wilderness
Act. Or the California Desert Protection Act, or the Endangered Species
Act. "Too late," he'd say. The only hope would be to show
him the new frontiers of California's far outside.
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The ten places we have assembled here have two things
in common. First, all of them are untrammeled and would still be recognized
as wild by Muir were he to see them today. Second, all remain vulnerable
to the forces that have degraded so much of California's wild lands.
Otherwise, like California itself, they are distinguished, primarily,
by their variety. Not only do they represent a range of California's
habitat types--from rocky Pacific shores to Big Basin desert, from redwood
forest to coastal sage scrub--but also the army of forces that threaten
them. Some, such as the Soda and Avawatz mountains and the San Joaquin
Roadless Area, are already public land. And what threatens them is the
policy of public agencies. Others, such as Headwaters Forest and Bear
Valley, are privately owned, and ultimately may be saved only by an
individual's or organization's commitment. Some, such as the San Simeon
coast and the American River, are threatened by a growing population
and its resource demands. Others, such as the Lost Coast, are vulnerable
to abusive recreation by off-road vehicle enthusiasts. The biological
and natural values of some, such as the Headwaters Forest, have been
well recognized. Others, such as the Buffalo Creek and Smoke Creek desert
complex, remain virtually unexplored.
Diversity is the theme, but all ten deserve whatever
Muirian feats of appreciation and conservation we can muster.
1. Lost Coast (King Range)
The rugged King Range, which abruptly juts thousands
of feet up from the sea, has protected this stretch of coastline from
hosting the roads that spell doom for wilderness. Designated a Wilderness
Study Area in 1979, the King Range, or Lost Coast as it is often called,
is the wildest stretch of coastline remaining in California. Extending
28 miles from the mouth of the Mattole River to Shelter Cove in southern
Humboldt County, it contains old-growth stands of Douglas-fir, coastal
chaparral, the Mattole dune system, as well as riparian habitat in the
undisturbed western watershed of the 4,000-foot-high King Range. Roosevelt
elk, black-tailed deer, seals, sea lions, bald eagles, black bears,
spotted owls, steelhead trout, salmon, and more than 250 bird species
visit the Lost Coast, but few humans do. Once occupied by the Sinkyone
and Mattole Indians, the area contains more than 80 archeological sites.
The Lost Coast's habitat value is amplified by its proximity to Sinkyone
Wilderness State Park and the Sinkyone Inter-tribal Park to the south.
Until Congress decides to officially designate it wilderness, however,
the Lost Coast will remain vulnerable to mining claims, logging, and
off-road vehicle use. For visitor information call the Bureau of Land
Management at (707) 825-2300.
2. Buffalo Creek/Smoke Creek
Desert Complex
At the junction of the Cascade and Sierra Nevada ranges
and the Great Basin lies one of California's least explored but wildest
regions. The buffalo that made up the only California population no
longer roam here, but wild mustangs, kit foxes, coyotes, mule deer,
badgers, and pronghorns still do. Golden eagles are the dominant predator,
and sometimes congregate in large numbers to feast on the abundant jackrabbits
and cottontails. Five California and one Nevada Wilderness Study Areas
are included in this region at the state's eastern border, north of
Pyramid Lake. They make up a series of unconnected high-elevation islands.
The Davis-based California Wilderness Coalition, among
others, recommends unifying these WSAs to create 350,000 acres of wild
lands, including much of the lowland Great Basin desert sagebrush that
connects them. Habitat includes rolling hills, impressive peaks rising
nearly 8,000 feet, long stretches of undisturbed riparian habitat in
the upland areas, stunning sheer-walled canyons, as well as a unique
fusion of juniper woodlands and Sierra Nevada flora. Ongoing sheep and
cattle grazing degrades the plant communities, and off-road vehicles,
driven mostly by hunters, punch illegal roads into the wilderness, making
way for exotic plant and animal invasions, as well as more drivers and
hunters.
3. Headwaters Forest
Sequoia sempervirens, the giant coast redwoods, at
up to 368 feet, are the tallest trees in the world. They require distinctive
conditions: high humidity, supplied by a combination of generous precipitation
and coastal fog, moderate temperatures, and a moist yet sandy soil.
Only in California, along the lower terraces of the Coast Ranges, are
these requirements met. The redwoods have come to exemplify the state's
biological abundance, and with a lifespan of around 2,000 years, they
embody the term "old-growth." Less than four percent remains
of the two million acres of redwood forest that, only 150 years ago,
stretched through California and Oregon. Today, all the surviving ancient
redwood groves are protected. All, that is, except those in the Headwaters
Forest.
The redwoods are the zenith of a rich and diverse
ecosystem that has evolved in their shadow. Alongside the giants, dwarfed
in stature and reputation, are Douglas-fir, grand fir, red alder, tanoak,
western hemlock, and the rare vine maple. Beneath them, in the understory,
are ten-foot sword ferns and evergreen shrubs, and beneath them the
Pacific giant salamanders--and 15 other salamander species--crawl among
the fallen trees. And in the clean, cold streams, wild coho salmon still
spawn. But the most famous denizens flit among the branches--the northern
spotted owl and the elusive marbled murrelet, a seabird which nests
in the old-growth canopy.
Within the Headwaters Forest, adjacent to the 4,500
acres of redwood groves and adjoining residual old- growth forests,
are second-growth forests, recent clear-cuts, and every stage in between.
Some of the second- growth forests are already a hundred years old and
have developed healthy understories, but the multi-storied canopies,
which define an old-growth redwood forest, take centuries to mature.
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Photograph by Jo-Ann Ordann |
4. Bear Valley
One of the world's greatest wildflower displays is
found in Colusa County's Bear Valley, to the west of Williams and east
of Clear Lake. Though there used to be horizon-defying spring wildflower
displays throughout the Central Valley, there is very little of such
"painted landscape" left in California, and Bear Valley contains
one of the largest remaining patches. In addition to such wildflowers
as the rare pink adobe-lily, and star-tulip, tidy tips, lupines, poppies,
and owl clover, the valley also supports bald eagles, prairie falcons,
golden eagles, Coopers hawks, striped racer snakes, and western pond
turtles. The upland slopes of Bear Valley hold an excellent example
of the increasingly rare California oak woodlands that used to be so
common throughout the area. Walker Ridge, to the west of the valley,
contains serpentine outcroppings that drain into the valley, probably
reducing the competitiveness of many of the exotic weeds that have conquered
so many nearby valleys. Bear Valley has been grazed for a century, but
relatively lightly. Plowing, which disturbs the native habitat elsewhere,
has also been limited here. Walker Ridge, though not as colorful as
the valley itself, is another botanical gem, home to a number of endemics.
A recent attempt to turn Bear Valley into a 20,000-person retirement
complex was stymied by concerned citizens, and the American Land Conservancy
is currently trying to purchase Bear Valley from its current owners
so it can be transferred to a public agency that will protect it in
perpetuity.
5. North & Middle Forks, American River
Encompassing nearly 1,000 square miles of watershed,
the North and Middle Forks of the American River flow through canyons
that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service consider the most pristine of
their kind in the Sierra. Whitewater enthusiasts know the free-flowing
North Fork for its challenging Class IV rapids, but fewer people appreciate
how much wildlife benefits from these two natural corridors connecting
high-altitude conifer stands with foothill woodlands. Ninety species
of neotropical migrant birds, displaced from once-wild rivers in the
Central Valley, use the North and Middle Fork canyons during their international
journeys. Spotted owls depend on the canyons each fall as they migrate
to lower elevations.
The canyons harbor a remarkable array of insects--including
86 kinds of butterflies and the threatened valley elderberry longhorn
beetle. Plants on serpentine soils support critical populations of our
state insect, the California dogface butterfly, plus rare Sierran denizens
like the great copper butterfly and Lindsey's skipper and Wright's skipper
butterflies.
Though the persistent threat of Auburn Dam, which
would inundate 25 miles along each of these river forks, was suppressed
again last year, those who desire additional water supplies and flood
control in the Sacramento Valley will likely bring the plan back to
the table. See for yourself, on foot or from a raft or kayak, what would
disappear if the dam were built.
6. Delta Meadows
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta was once an immense
triangle of marshland, an intricate web of braided waterways, with the
San Francisco and San Joaquin rivers at its corners and San Francisco
Bay at its apex. In the winter and spring, when runoff from rain or
snowmelt combined with high tides to flood the islands, a vast, shallow
inland sea formed. Levee building, river control, and the agriculture
they allowed began transforming the delta in the mid-1800s, and today
almost nothing remains of the 100 square miles of riparian and marsh
habitat.
The wild past has a refuge, however, in Delta Meadows,
a 500-acre patch of riparian freshwater marsh between the towns of Locke
and Walnut Grove. This maze of unaltered waterways attracts river otters,
beavers, muskrats, black-tailed deer, herons, waterfowl, raptors, cottonwoods,
oaks, and willows. Such a fecund ecosystem drew the Plains Miwok Indians,
too, and Delta Meadows contains a number of important archeological
sites.
Two hundred and fifty acres of Delta Meadows is already
owned by the California Department of Parks and Recreation (CDPR), but
the other, more pristine, half belongs to Asian Cities, a Hong-Kong-based
real estate company. Permitting difficulties have saved Delta Meadows
from at least two development proposals: one for a large marina, and
one for an amusement park. CDPR is currently negotiating with Asian
Cities over an appropriate purchase price for the land, which is, according
to state bureaucrats, a high priority for acquisition.
7. San Joaquin Roadless Area
East of the Sierra Nevada crest, between June Mountain
and Mammoth Mountain and in the shadow of San Joaquin Mountain and the
Minarets, stretches the San Joaquin Roadless Area. These 21,000 acres
of wilderness are home to the headwaters of the once considerable Owens
and San Joaquin rivers. They are also home to black-tailed deer, mountain
lions, black bears, American pine martens, the rare Yosemite toad, goshawks,
and an infrequent southern spotted owl. Fishers scurried through the
undergrowth not many years ago, and if wolverines still inhabit California,
this isolated region is where they are likely to live. The Sierra crest
here is relatively low (11,000 feet) and acts as a corridor for creatures
moving east from the Ansel Adams Wilderness.
In the lush sub-alpine meadows at higher elevations,
spring occasions a wonderful display of minute wildflowers pollinated
by a rainbow of butterflies. On the slopes beside the meadows are forests
of old-growth red fir, rare east of the Sierra divide, and ancient Jeffrey
pine.
Today only the most adventurous hiker and cross-country
skier venture into this remote region, but if the Forest Service's current
plan goes through, there will be a network of ski runs and mountain
bike trails, and all the concomitant infrastructure.
8. San Simeon Coast
From the bluff by the Piedras Blancas lighthouse,
one can spot in quick succession a mother gray whale and calf cruising
by, a sea otter bobbing in the kelp, and the peregrine falcon that nests
on the rock just offshore. To the south, the state's fastest-growing
population of northern elephant seals hauls ashore each winter and spring
to fight, mate, birth, nurse, and molt. Numbering about 4,000 at their
peak aggregation, the seals look like driftwood logs stacked along the
beach.
Newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst chose this
sleepy stretch of San Luis Obispo County coast to erect his palatial
estate, San Simeon, atop the rolling hills. Now the Hearst Corporation,
which owns 83,000 acres of nearby beaches and surrounding ranchland,
wants to build a massive resort on the dramatic Pacific promontory of
San Simeon Point. What's now a fairy-tale forest of gnarled Monterey
pines, used as winter roosts by monarch butterflies, would become Pebble
Beach South: a 650-room hotel, exclusive golf course, convention center,
and dude ranch.
Few doubt that should San Simeon Point become a major
tourist destination, coastal development will spread north and south,
spoiling the scenic and agricultural character of the region and potentially
impacting such declining species as the tidewater goby, steelhead trout,
and California red-legged frog. And though they aren't in decline, the
elephant seals have been annexing additional beachfront north of Cambria
and could colonize the beach adjacent to the Point.
County supervisors narrowly approved the resort in
June. Only the California Coastal Commission stands in the way, and
they meet in January to decide whether or not the Hearst plan violates
the letter and spirit of the state's Coastal Protection Act.
9. Soda and Avawatz Mountains
East of the Army's Fort Irwin National Training Center,
south of Death Valley, the Soda and Avawatz mountains rise out of the
Mojave Desert floor. There are five Wilderness Study Areas here, where
the terrain varies from colorful, geologically stratified slopes to
eroded, jagged ridges, and narrow, steep-walled canyons to gentle, creosote-bush-covered
inclines. The area is home to bighorn sheep, endangered desert tortoises,
Gila monsters, kit foxes, ringtails, and chuckwallas. It also contains
a number of important cultural and archeological sites. The Army is
hoping to expand its training facility by about 300,000 acres to make
more room for troop and tank maneuvers. They are opposed by a wide front
of desert interests, including hunters, off-road vehicle enthusiasts,
miners, and environmentalists. These groups, often at odds in land-use
debates, all agree that these pristine and rugged desert lands are too
fragile and important to trash in war games.
10. Otay Mountain and Mesa
San Diego County has greater biological diversity
than any other county in the continental United States. It also has
more endangered species. Many of these occupy coastal sage scrub habitats
such as those at Otay, one of the largest remaining unbroken expanses
of coastal sage scrub in the world. In addition, the Otay Mesa and Mountain
area contains vernal pools, sizable chunks of maritime succulent scrub,
and stands of the rare Tecate cypress. Otay is part of southern California's
innovative Natural Communities Conservation Program, which, by surveying,
prioritizing, and trading private and public lands, attempts to maximize
conservation efforts while minimizing their economic costs. Although
a 44,000-acre portion of Otay has recently been designated the intended
site for a National Wildlife Refuge, most of that property is still
privately owned, and unless enough funds are found for its purchase
and preservation, it could have a far less wild destiny. Complicating
the story at Otay is the 14-mile-long fence recently constructed along
the border with Mexico, south of the refuge in Bureau of Land Management-controlled
wilderness. The U.S. Government's attempt to control illegal immigration
here has funneled immigrants, and their pursuers, around the fence and
through this extremely sensitive habitat.
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Winter 1998
Vol. 51:1
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