Santa Cruz Sentinel

California redwood forest returned to native tribal group

- By Brian Melley

The descendant­s of Native American tribes on the Northern California coast are reclaiming a bit of their heritage that includes ancient redwoods.

Save the Redwoods League planned to announce Tuesday that it is transferri­ng more than 500 acres on the Lost Coast to the InterTriba­l Sinkyone Wilderness Council.

The group of 10 tribes that have inhabited the area for thousands of years will be responsibl­e for protecting the land dubbed Tc’ihLéh-Dûñ, or “Fish Run Place,” in the Sinkyone language.

Priscilla Hunter, chairwoman of the Sinkyone Council, said it’s fitting they will be caretakers of the land where her people were removed or forced to flee before the forest was largely stripped for timber.

“It’s a real blessing,” said Hunter, of the Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians. “It’s like a healing for our ancestors. I know our ancestors are happy. This was given to us to protect.”

The transfer marks a step in the growing Land Back movement to return Indigenous homelands to the descendant­s of those who lived there for millennia

before European settlers arrived.

The league first worked with the Sinkyone council when it transferre­d a 164-acre (66-hectare) plot nearby to the group in 2012.

The league recently paid $37 million for a scenic 5-mile (8-kilometer) stretch of the rugged and forbidding Lost Coast from a lumber company to protect it from logging and eventually open it up to the public.

Opening access to the public is not a priority on the property being transferre­d to the tribal group because it is so remote, said Sam Hodder, president and CEO of the league. But it serves an important puzzle

piece wedged between other protected areas.

Steep hills rise and fall to a tributary of the Eel River that has steelhead trout and Coho salmon. The property was last logged about 30 years ago and still has a large number of old-growth redwoods, as well as second-growth trees.

“This is a property where you can almost tangibly feel that it is healing, that it is recovering,” Hodder said. “You walk through the forest and, even as you see the kind of ghostly stumps of ancient trees that were harvested, you could also in the foggy landscape see the monsters that were left behind as well as the young redwoods that are sprouting from those stumps.”

The league purchased the land two years ago for $3.5 million funded by Pacific Gas & Electric Co. to provide habitat for endangered northern spotted owl and marbled murrelet to mitigate other environmen­tal damage by the utility.

PG&E was set to emerge Tuesday from five years of criminal probation for a 2010 explosion triggered by its natural gas lines that blew up a San Bruno neighborho­od and killed eight people. It’s been blamed since 2017 for sparking more than 30 wildfires that wiped out more than 23,000 homes and businesses and killed more than 100 people.

In an effort to reduce its liability and the chance of vegetation contacting power lines and sparking fires, PG&E has been criticized for destroying many large and old trees.

“Thanks to Save the Redwoods League for seizing on any opportunit­y to protect lands on the Lost Coast that are vital to its conservati­on,” said Michael Evenson, vice president of the Lost Coast League, which advocates for protecting water and wildlife in the area. “But PG&E getting a green merit badge after all the destructio­n they’re doing ... is not palatable.”

 ?? MAX FORSTER — SAVE THE REDWOODS LEAGUE ?? This undated photo shows some of the 523acres of redwood forestland in Mendocino County that was donated to the InterTriba­l Sinkyone Wilderness Council.
MAX FORSTER — SAVE THE REDWOODS LEAGUE This undated photo shows some of the 523acres of redwood forestland in Mendocino County that was donated to the InterTriba­l Sinkyone Wilderness Council.

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