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Text Content

 * Home
 * What we do
   * Our vision
   * Protected properties
     * Gualala Bluff Trail
     * Hearn Gulch
     * Cooks Beach
     * Mill Bend
       * Mill Bend history
     * Gualala Cemetery
     * Property Map
   * Conservation easements
     * RCLC Conservation easements
   * Mill Bend Conservation Project
 * About us
   * About RCLC
   * What does a Land Trust do?
   * Board & Staff
   * Business Partnerships
   * Advisors
   * Newsletters
   * In the news
   * Property Map
 * Give
   * Donate
   * Give stock or IRA
   * Business Partnerships
   * Wish List
   * Mill Bend campaign
 * Get involved
   * Volunteer
   * Events and calendar
   * Donate
   * Stay in touch
 * Contact
   * Contact us
   * Stay in touch
   * Media center
 * Events and calendar
 * Videos

Select Page
 * Home
 * What we do
   * Our vision
   * Protected properties
     * Gualala Bluff Trail
     * Hearn Gulch
     * Cooks Beach
     * Mill Bend
       * Mill Bend history
     * Gualala Cemetery
     * Property Map
   * Conservation easements
     * RCLC Conservation easements
   * Mill Bend Conservation Project
 * About us
   * About RCLC
   * What does a Land Trust do?
   * Board & Staff
   * Business Partnerships
   * Advisors
   * Newsletters
   * In the news
   * Property Map
 * Give
   * Donate
   * Give stock or IRA
   * Business Partnerships
   * Wish List
   * Mill Bend campaign
 * Get involved
   * Volunteer
   * Events and calendar
   * Donate
   * Stay in touch
 * Contact
   * Contact us
   * Stay in touch
   * Media center
 * Events and calendar
 * Videos


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YOUR SUPPORT ALLOWS US TO PRESERVE OUR BEAUTIFUL MENDONOMA COAST!




Mill Bend Preserve is protected forever because of the determination and
commitment of our community. Work has already begun to protect the forest and
wetlands, restore the estuary for salmon and other endangered species, and
carefully repair the historic cemetery.

A network of trails is being developed at Mill Bend to provide public access and
enjoyment of this amazing property. Conservation and more continues at Cooks
Beach, Hearn Gulch Preserve, the Gualala Bluff Trail, and other public access
sites under our protection.

Redwood Coast Land Conservancy is taking the lead on these undertakings, but our
work is just beginning. Your continued support is needed to make sure that we
can keep moving forward with the plans our community envisions for Mill Bend and
the ongoing preservation of our protected properties.

Please consider making a generous, tax-deductible contribution today! Your
support will help ensure the preservation of our natural coastal landscapes and
wildlife habitats for generations to come.

Donate

Now Hiring: Land Steward

NOW HIRING: LAND STEWARD

RCLC's projects continue to expand. RCLC is looking to hire a Land Steward. The
Land Steward’s top-line priority is to protect, improve, and manage RCLC
properties. This includes restoring native plant and wildlife habitats, and
ensuring safe and enjoyable visitor...

Read More

Apr 29, 2024

Now Hiring: Communications Manager

NOW HIRING: COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER

RCLC's projects continue to expand. In an effort to share land protection and
restoration progress, and update you on upcoming events, RCLC is looking for a
talented Communications specialist to join our small but growing team. If you
love North Coast nature and...

Read More

Apr 11, 2024

Click on the map image to learn about each place RCLC has preserved for you to
explore.


NEWS AND ARTICLES FROM REDWOOD COAST LAND CONSERVANCY



> WHAT WILL RCLC PROPERTIES AND GUALALA
> LOOK LIKE IN THE YEAR 2123?
> 
> Have you ever wondered what Mill Bend, Cooks Beach, or Gualala might look like
> 100 years from now? That question was put to the test with the help of
> Microsoft Bing Images, an artificial intelligence (AI) engine and online app
> that creates images from textual descriptions.  For example, when the
> following text was entered… Read more here…
> 
>  




> EDITORIAL
> 
> 
> 
> The following editorial by RCLC’s Executive Director, Jim Elias, appeared in
> the May 5, 2023 ICO:
> 
>  
> 
> Dear Editor:
> 
> Thank you for your April 28 report that the Department of Commerce has
> recommended $60.3 million in funding for northern California projects
> dedicated to climate change adaptations and habitat restoration, including
> toward improving conditions for Mendocino Coast salmonids. This funding
> compliments Redwood Coast Land Conservancy (RCLC) Mill Bend Preserve projects
> currently underway, and others set to launch soon.
> 
> CLICK HERE TO READ MORE…




 

 


> THE MARCH 2024 NEWSLETTER IS HERE…


> IN THIS ISSUE…
> 
> 
>  * * Good News for Mill Bend Preserve: $1.66 Million Public Access &
>      Restoration Grant Awarded by State Coastal Conservancy
>    * RCLC Welcomes New Board Members: Introducing Andrea and Jennifer
>    * California Conservation Corps Bolsters Mill Bend Preserve Wildfire
>      Resistance
>    * In Memory
> 
> Click here to read the newsletter…




> COME JOIN US!
> 
> RCLC’s community outreach team is looking for volunteers to engage with the
> larger community and other public and non-profit organizations. Activities
> include all aspects of community engagement activities, both virtual and
> in-person, including the following…
> Click here to read more…



Gualala Pioneer Cemetery

RCLC Volunteers have transformed this nearly forgotten cemetery into a beautiful
place to celebrate local history. Read about restoration efforts and histories
of the families laid to rest at this location.



Stream Team News

This partnership project aims to involve a broad spectrum of Mendonoma residents
including students, teachers, and members of community organizations.



View our wish list

RCLC is in need of a variety of tools and equipment to help us succeed in our
work. Maybe you have these items gathering dust in your shed. Please consider
donating your tools or funds to purchase new equipment.



Protecting salmon

It’s not often that a land trust gets to help an iconic species.  The Redwood
Coast Land Conservancy (RCLC) is preparing for that special opportunity as it
completes the purchase of Mill Bend.  The restoration of Coho salmon to the
Gualala River is on the agenda.

Dan Wilson, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Fisheries Biologist,
says salmon are a “keystone species” for this area, and bringing them back is a
top priority. A keystone species is defined as one on which other species
largely depend.  When a keystone species declines or disappears, as with the
salmon in the Gualala River, everything from Orcas and sea lions to birds of
prey suffer.

Dan’s interest was based on the fact that the Gualala River is a historically
important salmonid coastal stream in northern California.  Read more >>

Preserving the Coast

Redwood Coast Land Conservancy (RCLC) covers the coastal region of southern
Mendocino County and northern Sonoma County.  It’s a place of scenic beauty and
unique wildlife.

Several rivers-the Navarro, Garcia, Gualala and Russian- flow through this
landscape.  These riparian corridors, home to the endangered Coho salmon and
Steelhead trout, provide the precious resource of fresh water.

Forests of pine, fir and redwood extend down to the Pacific Ocean. Wild
rhododendrons, azaleas and iris show seasonal displays.  If you’re lucky, you
might see a river otter, bald eagle or migrating gray whale.

This land contains some of the rarest and varied habitats found on earth. It’s
part of the California Floristic Province, named by scientists as one of earth’s
25 conservation “hot spots.”  Read More >>



John Muir, Conservationist, on seeing the Redwood coast in 1897

“The redwood is the glory of the Coast Range. It extends along the western
slope… from beyond the Oregon boundary…to the south of Santa Cruz.  Its massive,
sustained grandeur and closeness of growth surpasses all the other timber woods
of the world.

Trees from ten to fifteen feet in diameter and three hundred feet high are not
uncommon, and a few attain a height of …even four hundred feet… while the ground
beneath them is a garden of fresh, exuberant ferns, lilies, gaultheria, and
rhododendron.”

 

MENDONOMA WEATHER & EMERGENCY ALERT LINKS


GUALALA POINT REGIONAL PARK – LIVE WEATHER STATION




NIXLE – EMERGENCY ALERTS




NOAA – NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE

 




HIGH SURF ALERTS



 




WEATHER RADAR MAP 10-DAY FORECAST

 




AIRPORTS – CLOSED OR DELAYED

 





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Copyrights and Photo Credits

Redwood Coast Land Conservancy is a California 501(c)(3) non-profit.

Tax ID number 68-0287719.


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Copyright © 2021 Redwood Coast Land Conservancy– all rights reserved.

 

Redwood Coast Land Conservancy

P.O. Box 1511                     

Gualala, CA. 95445-1511

Phone: (707) 884-4426

email: rclc@rclc.org


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