California’s driftnet fishery for swordfish harms a wide range of marine life, including whales and dolphins. This fishing method indiscriminately captures and drowns these animals. #EndCADriftnets by taking this action…
Take action to protect 157 acres of land forever by sending an email to Marin County Supervisors.
Send an email to help protect sharks and rays in the last major shark diving spot in Brazil.
Tell the Pacific Fisheries Management Council that you care about endangered sperm whales and sea turtles. Ask them to close this deadly drift net fishery once and for all.
The Gulf of Mexico is home to five of the world’s species of sea turtles including the critically endangered Kemp’s ridley which nests in Texas. In 1978 all sea turtles…
The recent purchase of the San Geronimo Golf Course by Marin County has opened up a conservation opportunity for Marin-based ocean and coastal watersheds protection nonprofit, Turtle Island Restoration Network.
The next generation of coho salmon eggs are now resting, protected by six inches of gravel at the bottom of Lagunitas creek. While that’s a wrap on coho spawning season in West Marin, we have a lot of great adventures to reflect back on.
On January 1, 2018, the San Geronimo Golf Course ceased operations and shortly thereafter the 157-acre property ownership was transferred to the Trust for Public Land (TPL), who brokered the deal on behalf of the Marin County Parks department, which aims to take ownership over the next couple years.
On November 14, 2017, after a raucous public hearing attended by nearly 300 residents, Marin County Supervisors voted unanimously to purchase the 157-acre San Geronimo Golf Course to create public open space and to benefit endangered coho salmon.
Earlier this week, in Northern California, the Marin County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the purchase of a failing golf course with the intention of returning this land to protected public lands and habitat for critically endangered coho salmon.