San Francisco Chronicle

Investor’s ranch to reap rewards as public park

Conservati­on group to turn ‘spectacula­r’ tract into preserve

- By Kurtis Alexander

COVELO, Mendocino County — Three years ago, a 26,600-acre ranch in remote Northern California, with a 10-bedroom lodge, 16 miles of riverfront and two herds of Roosevelt elk, was drawing attention in the nation’s luxury real estate market.

The family of the late investment giant and onetime ranch owner Dean Witter was ready to unload their unusually large property and seeking a wealthy buyer for the one-of-a-kind site.

As it turns out, the $25 million plot on the Eel River, which spans both Mendocino and Trinity counties, will go to a conservati­on group. The Wildlands Conservanc­y closed escrow on the tract Tuesday and plans to turn this mostly untamed stretch of mountains and valleys into a preserve open to the public.

“It’s just as scenic as anything in the national park system,” Frazier Haney, executive director of the Wildlands Conservanc­y, said during a recent helicopter tour of the property.

The group expects to soon welcome people to the site for hiking, biking, kayaking, swimming and camping.

The deal was years in the making. The Wildlands Conservanc­y has long wanted to showcase a part of California better known for private pot farms than public recreation, an area it calls the Grand Canyon of the Eel River.

The property is at the heart of

this wild gorge and at the center of the organizati­on’s long-term goal of protecting and providing access to much of the Eel River’s 196mile run — from the Mendocino National Forest to the Humboldt County coast. The Witter plot, once known as Lone Pine Ranch and set to be renamed the Eel River Canyon Preserve, is the group’s fifth and largest acquisitio­n along the river.

When the helicopter arrived at the southern edge of the property, it touched down on a sandy beach where the main fork of the Eel meets the north fork. Water gushed down the riverbed. Maple trees with fall hues of yellow and orange punctuated evergreen woodlands. Horse Ranch Peak loomed nearby at more than 4,000 feet.

“It has that feeling like you’re really off the beaten track,” said Peter Galvin, program director for the Center for Biological Diversity, who joined the tour and whose organizati­on helped with the purchase.

Across the river was another selling point for the Wildlands Conservanc­y and its supporters: the out-ofservice Northweste­rn Pacific Railroad. The ranch acquisitio­n is expected to advance efforts to turn the lengthy rail line into a public path for hiking and biking. The project would be part of the Great Redwood Trail, a multi-use path in the works by a coalition of support groups and local lawmakers, running from from San Francisco Bay to Humboldt Bay.

“We haven’t had access to the Eel River Canyon,” said state Sen. Mike McGuire, one of the chief proponents of the Great Redwood Trail, who was on the tour surveying where the 320-mile route would go. “It’s a spectacula­r landscape.”

The helicopter proceeded down the canyon, and up and over the grounds of the 5,300-square-foot main lodge, an area slated to be the headquarte­rs of the preserve. By car, the site is about five to six hours from the Bay Area, through the Mendocino County community of Covelo.

Within the next year, the lodge will be retrofitte­d for visitors while a ranger station and primitive campground will be built nearby. A trail network will evolve from the ranch’s existing roads and trails. Initially, the property will be accessible only by reservatio­n, but in two years, once the new owners have more time to prepare, they hope to open to the public more broadly.

The helicopter’s final destinatio­n was a mountain meadow tucked deep in the forest, known as Rice Lake. Another campground is planned for south of here. Reports of Roosevelt elk, which roam the property, are common in this area. The lake is also popular

“It’s just as scenic as anything in the national park system.” Frazier Haney, executive director of the Wildlands Conservanc­y

with cattle, some of which will remain on the property as vestiges of the past.

Dean Witter, who founded the San Francisco investment house Dean Witter and Co., bought up a handful of parcels to create the ranch in the 1940s. He and his wife, Helen, would take a train from Marin County to a stop on the property along the Eel River to visit, about a seven-hour hour ride. Witter used the property as a retreat, timber operation and working cattle ranch.

After Witter’s death in 1969, the ranch was handed down for use by generation­s of family, who in recent years decided it was too much for them to handle.

“When we put the ranch on the market, I had the very earnest prayer that the place be passed on to an entity that would take as good of or better care than us,” Brooks Witter, Dean’s great-grandson, told The Chronicle by phone from his home in Colorado.

In 2019, the Wildlands Conservanc­y bought the nearby 3,000-acre White Ranch on the Eel River from the Witter family, which gave the group a two-year option to buy the Lone Pine Ranch.

The organizati­on, based in San Bernardino County, obtained the $25 million from a recent $10 million state budget appropriat­ion, state grants, the Center for Biological Diversity and a Packard Foundation loan through the national nonprofit Conservati­on Fund. Fundraisin­g efforts continue to repay the $8 million debt.

The property is among more than 20 preserves in California run by the Wildlands Conservanc­y. Most of the sites are open to the public free of charge.

 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? The Eel River, which spans both Mendocino and Trinity counties, will become the site of a public preserve.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle The Eel River, which spans both Mendocino and Trinity counties, will become the site of a public preserve.
 ?? ?? State Sen. Mike McGuire, one of the chief proponents of the Great Redwood Trail, walks along the Eel River as he tours the property.
State Sen. Mike McGuire, one of the chief proponents of the Great Redwood Trail, walks along the Eel River as he tours the property.
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 ?? Sources: Wildlands Conservanc­y, OpenStreet­Map contributo­rs Todd Trumbull / The Chronicle ??
Sources: Wildlands Conservanc­y, OpenStreet­Map contributo­rs Todd Trumbull / The Chronicle
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 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Clockwise from top: Calves run on the Dean Witter plot, set to become the Eel River Canyon Preserve, which spans Mendocino and Trinity counties; the Wildlands Conservanc­y bought the nearby 3,000-acre ranch; the former residence of investor Witter.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Clockwise from top: Calves run on the Dean Witter plot, set to become the Eel River Canyon Preserve, which spans Mendocino and Trinity counties; the Wildlands Conservanc­y bought the nearby 3,000-acre ranch; the former residence of investor Witter.

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