It was great! We had a full house, both bands were magnificent, the Cypress Grove cheeses and several local wines were sublime, and we even made a few bucks. A real success overall. Click this link and the following one to read our original postings for the event. [here’s what we posted prior to the Read more
SLC Administrator
Double CD-Release Extravaganza With Indie Greats David Jacobs-Strain and Joanne Rand Dec. 4, 2009 Redwood Raks, Arcata TWO LEGENDS OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST MUSIC SCENE take stage with their bands in Arcata on Friday, December 4 for one of the hottest holiday shows of the year. Come prepared to dance! Blues great David Jacobs-Strain and Arcata singer-songwriter Joanne Rand offer Read more
Siskiyou Land Conservancy owns 80 acres of rare plant habitat on the North Fork Smith River, in Del Norte County. Botanists, including U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service scientist Dave Imper (quoted below), contend that this Stony Creek property ranks among the top 10 most biologically important private parcels in the north state, owing to its Read more
Siskiyou Land Conservancy President and Program Director Greg King recently added some clarity to the Klamath dam deals in the letters section of the North Coast Journal. The entire letter is pasted below. The letter was in response to the cover story, by Journal editor Hank Sims, on the Klamath water and dam deals. On Read more
This report to the City of Arcata describes a garden project organized by parents and Siskiyou Land Conservancy for Jacoby Creek Elementary School, in Arcata. The school leases city-owned land for the garden. Although SLC President Greg King issued this report last month, it is worth noting now that most of the “next steps” (at Read more
Dear friends, Given the recently released Klamath Hydroelectric Agreement, and that agreement’s “indivisibility” from the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement (KBRA), readers might be interested in revisiting the analysis of the KBRA that I wrote for the NEC in April of this year. Greg King President, Siskiyou Land Conservancy April 23, 2009 =================================== Analysis The Klamath Read more
The California Department of Fish and Game is overseeing efforts to create an “Incidental Take Permit” (ITP) that will allow farmers and ranchers to legally kill protected Coho salmon. For the first time, Fish and Game is allowing the agricultural communities themselves, in the form of the Scott and Shasta Resource Conservation Districts, to create the ITP, which is due out any day now.
According to Klamath Riverkeeper: “The currently proposed one-size-fits-all Incidental Take Permit system does not acknowledge the role of low flows in killing endangered species on the Scott and Shasta, and does not work toward restoring fisheries as the Endangered Species Act is intended to do in this context. Individual landowners must be held responsible for coho “take” due to de-watering.