logo
After a century of logging, lands along California's Klamath River returned to tribe

After a century of logging, lands along California's Klamath River returned to tribe

Along the Klamath River in Northern California, where logging companies once cut ancient redwood trees, vast tracts of land have been returned to the Yurok Tribe in a years-long effort that tribal leaders say will enable the restoration of forests and the protection of a watershed that is vital for salmon.
The effort, which unfolded gradually over the last 23 years, culminated in May as Western Rivers Conservancy turned over 14,968 acres to the Yurok Tribe. It was the last portion of 47,097 acres that the nonprofit group acquired and transferred to the tribe in what is thought to be the largest 'land back' deal in California history.
Members of the tribe say they are celebrating the return of their ancestral lands along Blue Creek, a major tributary that meets the Klamath about 40 miles south of the Oregon border. Blue Creek holds cultural and spiritual significance for the Yurok, and its cold, clear waters provide a refuge for salmon.
'We are salmon people,' said Joseph L. James, chairman of the Yurok Tribe. 'The river takes care of us, and it's our job to take care of the river.'
In all, the tribe now owns an additional 73 square miles along the lower Klamath River, including much of the Blue Creek watershed. The conifer forests, which were heavily logged over the last century, will be managed by the tribal government as two protected areas, the Blue Creek Salmon Sanctuary and the Yurok Tribal Community Forest.
Yurok leaders say regaining stewardship of these lands contributes to larger efforts to revive the ecological health of the Klamath watershed, where last year the removal of four dams farther upstream restored a free-flowing stretch of the river and enabled salmon to reach spawning areas that had been inaccessible for more than a century.
'This land is back home with us now, and we'll continue that work that we have done as Yurok people to protect the land, protect the streams, provide for our people and provide for the environment,' James said.
In addition to Blue Creek, the land includes other streams that flow into the Klamath.
The tribe plans projects to create healthier stream habitats for fish, and to restore meadows and prairies. In the forests, they plan to use controlled burns to thin vegetation that has built up.
Some old logging roads are being decommissioned, while other roads are set to be upgraded.
'We're going to continue to work to bring back our wildlife population, our fish population,' James said. 'It's going to take a lot of work, but a lot of people are going to benefit from this.'
Beyond the local benefits, James said the effort serves as an example for the Land Back movement, in which Native people in many areas are seeking to regain ancestral lands that were taken from them generations ago.
'This is what it looks like when we talk about land back,' James said. 'Land back means giving the land back to its original people with no strings attached. Let them provide their traditional knowledge to heal the land, the environment.'
He said reaching this successful conclusion involved years of efforts by leaders of the tribe and Western Rivers Conservancy, as well as help from other partners. He said the deal should start more discussions nationwide about how other tribes can advance toward regaining their traditional lands.
'It's a big win for Indian Country,' he said. 'Here is a model that people could use, from our experience, to get land back.'
The effort has more than doubled the tribe's landholdings. The lands were previously owned by Green Diamond Resource Co. and its predecessor Simpson Logging Co., which harvested timber there for nearly a century. The last time logging occurred on the property was in 2007.
Western Rivers Conservancy, a Portland, Ore.-based nonprofit, signed a purchase agreement with Green Diamond in 2008 after five years of negotiations and efforts to identify funding. The lands were gradually acquired by the group between 2009 and 2017, and were transferred to the tribe in multiple phases.
The conservation group used an innovative funding strategy, assembling $56 million from foundations, corporations and philanthropists, as well as other sources such as tax credits, public grants and the sale of carbon credits.
State funding and support for the effort came from the California Wildlife Conservation Board and the California State Coastal Conservancy, as well as other agencies.
'We put together this mosaic of different funding sources,' said Nelson Mathews, president of Western Rivers Conservancy. 'This is the result of commitment, persistence and tenacity.'
Mathews' organization focuses on protecting rivers for fish, wildlife and the public, and was drawn to the project for its conservation benefits. By establishing the salmon sanctuary in Blue Creek, the deal safeguards a vital cold-water habitat for fish including Chinook salmon, coho salmon and steelhead.
'With climate change, cold water is at a premium for these rivers, and it's critical,' Mathews said. 'So having complete protection of that watershed is important.'
He said the deal shows how conservation goals and tribes' efforts to regain lands can align in ways that bring tremendous benefits.
'It's good for the soul to protect these rivers, and it's a double benefit to see the tribe get their land back,' Mathews said.
Members of the Yurok Tribe say this effort and others like it are a critically important step in grappling with the lasting effects of colonization.
During the 1800s, California's Native population was decimated by diseases, displacement and violence, including state-sponsored killings.
The Yurok reservation was established by the federal government in 1855, confining the tribe to an area that covered only a tiny fraction of their ancestral territory. In the late 1800s, white settlers and speculators found ways to secure additional lands along the Klamath River where they could extract valuable redwood, in some cases by bribing U.S. General Land Office officials as they fraudulently acquired thousands of acres of timberlands.
Today, the Yurok Tribe is the largest tribe in California, with more than 6,400 enrolled members.
'We are trying to recover from colonization,' said Amy Bowers Cordalis, a lawyer for the tribe and executive director of the Ridges to Riffles Indigenous Conservation Group. 'And we are just now getting into a place where we are starting to see some of the fruits of our efforts, between dam removal and now land back efforts.'
Regaining these lands enables the tribe 'to start rebuilding and to start taking care of our land and our resources,' she said. 'We are strongly committed to living in a balance with the natural world.'
She said for members of the tribe, visiting the cold, clear waters of Blue Creek is a spiritual experience. 'It's one of the most wild places in all of California, and it is glorious.'
It's possible to see some of the area by boat, traveling from the Klamath River to the mouth of Blue Creek. But for now, access to the area is limited.
James said that could change in the future, once restoration and other work is completed.
'At some point in time, we have an opportunity to turn that into a big, beautiful park,' James said. 'We've got to heal it first, put our resources in it, and it's going to take some time.'
He said the tribe's members feel delighted to be once again stewarding these lands and waterways, as their ancestors once did.
'It's a beautiful feeling knowing that we'll have this land in our hands moving forward for the next seven generations, for our Yurok people and our grandchildren.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How YouTube Is Shaping a New Generation of Chefs
How YouTube Is Shaping a New Generation of Chefs

Bloomberg

timea day ago

  • Bloomberg

How YouTube Is Shaping a New Generation of Chefs

It was the fall of 2023, and James Lowe, the London-based chef who'd made Lyle's one of the UK's best restaurants, realized he needed help. Despite 20 years of cooking experience, including stints in elite kitchens such as the Fat Duck and the River Cafe, the 45-year-old had never butchered a bluefin tuna. The UK had just awarded local licenses to catch the fish, though, so Lowe had ordered a 180-kilogram specimen from a favorite supplier in Cornwall. Carving up the pricey fish—especially a daunting behemoth of 400 pounds—is no small endeavor. 'Almost none of my chefs had prepped it before, and every piece has a different name,' Lowe says. Not even the knives they used regularly were meant for the task.

Nagasaki cathedral blesses a bell that replaces one destroyed by the US atomic bomb
Nagasaki cathedral blesses a bell that replaces one destroyed by the US atomic bomb

Associated Press

time5 days ago

  • Associated Press

Nagasaki cathedral blesses a bell that replaces one destroyed by the US atomic bomb

TOKYO (AP) — A Nagasaki cathedral has blessed the final piece to complete its restoration nearly 80 years after being destroyed by the second U.S. atomic bomb dropped on Japan: a reproduction of its lost bell restored by a group of Americans. The new bell was blessed and named 'St. Kateri Bell of Hope,' by Peter Michiaki Nakamura, archbishop of Nagasaki, at the Urakami Cathedral in a ceremony Thursday attended by more than 100 followers and other participants. The bell is scheduled to be hung inside the cathedral, filling the empty bell tower for the first time, on Aug. 9, the anniversary of the bombing. The U.S. bomb that was dropped Aug. 9, 1945, fell near the cathedral, killing two priests and 24 followers inside among the more than 70,000 dead in the city. Japan surrendered, ending World War II days later. The bombing of Nagasaki destroyed the cathedral building and the smaller of its two bells. The building was restored earlier, but without the smaller bell. The restoration project was led by James Nolan Jr., who was inspired after hearing about the lost bell when he met a local Catholic follower during his 2023 visit to Nagasaki. Nolan lectured about the atomic bombing in the southern city and its history about Catholic converts who went deep underground during centuries of violent persecution in Japan's feudal era, to raise funds for the bell restoration. 'I think it's beautiful and the bell itself is more beautiful than I ever imagined,' Nolan, who was at the blessing ceremony, said after he test-rang the bell. He said he hoped the bell 'will be a symbol of unity and that will bear the fruits of fostering hope and peace in a world where there is division and war and hurt.' A sociology professor at Williams College in Massachusetts, Nolan is the grandson of a doctor who was in the Manhattan Project — the secret effort to build the bombs — and who was on a survey team that visited Hiroshima and Nagasaki shortly after the bombings. Nolan, based on materials his grandfather left behind, wrote a book 'Atomic Doctors,' about the moral dilemma of medical doctors who took part in the Manhattan Project.

Coastal 'rollback' cash receives mixed reactions
Coastal 'rollback' cash receives mixed reactions

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Coastal 'rollback' cash receives mixed reactions

Residents at risk of losing their homes to coastal erosion have told the BBC they are not sure a "rollback" scheme will help them find new places to live. Great Yarmouth Borough Council's cabinet voted on Tuesday to accept the Environment Agency grant that would help develop alternative land for homeowners who face being displaced. The £1.6m will be used to cover the demolition costs of their existing homes and transfer planning rights to a new site. James Bensly, whose borough council ward includes Hemsby, said: "If we hadn't had this [funding], the residents would be in a worse state than they are now." The fund, which will be for residential properties only, will not be used as compensation for the estimated 30 households on The Marrams, who would have to buy new homes on the yet-to-be-identified site. Bensly – who owns the Beach Cafe, which is the nearest business to the village's eroding coastline – said people whose homes were under threat could effectively sell the planning rights of their homes back to the council, allowing the authority to transfer those rights to a new plot of land. The councillor added: "What we are talking about is a lump sum to the residents for them to explore all possibilities themselves. We can't tell them what to do or how to do it." David Pegg, 84, who has dementia, and his wife Marion, 71, are worried that if they are forced to leave their home, they will not have enough money to buy one of the properties built for those affected. "How would we afford somewhere else? You put your money into your home and that is your home," said Mrs Pegg. "You can't just suddenly up roots and build another house at our age. I think [this scheme] isn't any good for us, personally." Bensly said: "In a perfect world we would love fishtail groynes to help the beach mature and become more healthy by catching all of the [sand], but this is one of the only things that's possible at the moment." Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. Related stories Home on the edge of a cliff sold to buyer Visitors worry resort will vanish without defences Labour pledges to change coastal defence funding Related internet links Great Yarmouth Borough Council

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store