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Sheep arrive at Cronan & Magnolia Ranch to graze on invasive plants and reduce wildfire threat

5/31/2025

 
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EL DORADO HILLS, Calif. – A flock of nearly 1,100 sheep have arrived at the Bureau of Land Management’s Cronan Ranch, and a flock of nearly 800 sheep will soon arrive at Magnolia Ranch, to graze invasive weeds and reduce wildfire threat. Sheep herders will manage the flocks, moving them across the grassy slopes and meadows with assistance from herding dogs and livestock protection dogs. The sheep will be grazing behind temporary fencing to allow the sheep herder to keep the sheep in an area long enough to have the vegetation uniformly grazed and/or trampled down.

“We’ve used sheep to manage invasive weeds like yellow starthistle and medusahead at Cronan Ranch for ten years now, and at Magnolia Ranch for the past three. These weeds push out native plants and harm vegetation diversity,” said BLM Mother Lode Field Manager Jeff Horn. “The sheep will remain at Cronan Ranch through August and at Magnolia Ranch through July.”

Vegetation monitoring has shown a marked decrease in yellow starthistle and a notable decrease in medusahead. These invasive weeds leave behind dense patches of thatch, or dead vegetation, which can contribute to wildfire spread. Grazing has also dramatically decreased the thatch, reducing fuel loading and the risk of wildfire. In addition, native species diversity has increased, and wildflowers are blooming across the recreation area this spring, including some that have not been seen on the ranch before.

Sheep operators use dogs to manage and protect their sheep by scaring off predators. Specifically, when sheep are present, the BLM advises the public to keep dogs on a physical leash. E-collars and voice commands are not sufficient. Other recommendations include stop and dismount if mountain biking, put your bike between you and the sheep and/or dog(s), walk your bike until you are well past the sheep, keep your distance from the flock, and remain calm and quiet if dog(s) or sheep approach.

Cronan Ranch Trailhead provides access to 12 miles of trails for non-motorized uses, including hiking, biking, horseback riding, fishing, bird watching and other recreation. There is a wide variety of terrain to explore including gentle slopes, challenging hill climbs, oak woodlands and gentle riverfront trails. Cronan Ranch connects to the American River Trail Corridor. More information is available online.

Magnolia Ranch Trailhead is located approximately five miles north of the town of Coloma along Highway 49 and the South Fork of the American River. It is situated between the Cronan Ranch Regional Trails Park and Greenwood Creek River Access on public lands. The Magnolia Ranch Trailhead takes you along the 2.5-mile Gerle Loop Trail, which is an easy to moderate, mostly flat trail across rolling hills and oak woodlands with scenic views and access to the American River. The Gerle Loop trail ties into a more extensive trail system west of Hastings Creek and leads you into the Cronan Ranch Regional Trails Park. 
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CLICK HERE to see the complete BLM Press Release. 

National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) reviews thrown out, gas/oil leases on federal lands will be completed in 6 months or less.

5/23/2025

 
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Tossing aside NEPA and 55 years of precedent of federal land environmental protections, the Department of the Interior today announced a Bureau of Land Management policy update designed to expedite the oil and gas leasing process on public lands. Through a newly issued Instruction Memorandum “Oil and Gas Leasing – Land Use Planning and Lease Parcel Reviews,” the BLM is committing to faster lease parcel reviews by aiming to complete the entire process within six months. 
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To meet this goal, the BLM will no longer defer parcels prior to completing all National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) reviews as has been required for the past 55 years. The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) is a United States environmental law designed to promote the enhancement of the environment. It created new laws requiring U.S. federal government agencies to evaluate the environmental impacts of their actions and decisions, and it established the President's Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ).

The Act was passed by the 
U.S. Congress in December 1969 and signed into law by President Richard Nixon on January 1, 1970. To date, more than 100 nations around the world have enacted national environmental policies modeled after NEPA. 

To read the BLM Press Release, CLICK HERE.


How a California library card can grant you free access to over 200 state parks

5/23/2025

 
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This includes Sutter’s Fort State Historic Park, Empire Mine State Historic Park, Folsom Lake State Recreation Area, Lake Tahoe State Recreation Area and many more within Northern California.

An unexpected item could be the catalyst to your California State Park-filled, outdoorsy summer: a California library card. The California State Library Parks Pass program offers library card holders free, day-use entry to over 200 different California State Parks.

For the full list of participating parks, click here.
The vehicle day-use passes can be easily checked out at your local public library before you make your trip to your desired park. If you do not already have a California library card, they are free for all by signing up at your local library. However, a library card does not give you access to every state park, according to the following note on the California State Park website:

“The Parks Pass is not accepted at units operated by federal and local government, private agencies or concessionaires, state vehicular recreation areas, parks not open to the public, for per-person entry or tour fees (such as museums), or at parks that do not have day-use vehicle fees.”

Some notable parks that are not participating include the California State Railroad Museum, the Governor’s Mansion State Historic Park and Leland Stanford Mansion State Historic Park, among others. Popular Bay Area tourist location, Angel Island State Park, is also not participating.

The full list of parks that are not participating can be found here. In order to find local libraries and narrow down which state parks are eligible for the program at the same time, you can use this interactive map

Check-out a Parks Pass from a library (each library's website is in their info/pop-up) and then head to a state park!

To see all state parks, visit the California State Parks website. For questions, contact [email protected].

To see the complete article and the Interactive Map on the KCRA-3 website, CLICK HERE.




State Parks Free Admission for Veterans and Military Members on Memorial Day

5/19/2025

 
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From California State Parks Press Release:
​Participating State Park Units for Free Admission for Veterans, Active and Reserve Military Members – Memorial Day, Monday, May 26, 2025

Here are the local area participating State Parks:

Auburn State Recreation Area (SRA)
Donner Memorial SP
Emerald Bay SP
Empire Mine SHP
Folsom Lake SRA
Malakoff Diggins SHP
South Yuba River SP
Tahoe SRA
Washoe Meadows SP


*Veterans, active duty and reserve military personnel must show a valid military ID, or proof of discharge in order to receive free admission.

CLICK HERE to see the complete Press Release from California State Parks

11th Annual BYLT Celebration of Trails Month

5/16/2025

 
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Bear Yuba Land Trust’s 11th Annual Celebration of Trails Month is June 2025.
Trail users of all ages and abilities are invited to join BYLT in an exploration of local trails throughout the month of June!

​This year’s 
Celebration of Trails includes the return of the super popular Summer Star Hike Challenge where folks search out stars across 20 trails and a chance to win raffle prizes (pre-registration required); Art in Nature Installations with site-specific artworks created by local artists, along with artist-led Walk & Talks; an outdoor, nature-inspired Dance Performance with Embodiment Dance Collective; a kick-off Happy Hour with Three Forks Bakery & Brewing Co. featuring the limited release of Celebration of Trails Pale Ale; and Trail Mix Celebration of Trails edition, where we’ll bring the community together for a trail project. And because it isn’t a celebration without a party, Celebration of Trails Month culminates on Saturday, June 28 with a special Hike for the Stars Challenge and a FREE Street Party along Commercial Street in downtown Nevada City, with live music from Jessica Malone, nature activities, awards, raffles, and more! Read on for event details.

To see the complete list of events on the BYLT webpage, CLICK HERE.



Lake Spaulding boat ramp, campground and parking area closed until August 1, 2025

5/12/2025

 
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Photo credit: YubaNet.net
PG&E: "The boat ramp, campground and parking area at Lake Spaulding are closed until Aug. 1 while we make repairs at the Spaulding 1 powerhouse. The parking area is being used for materials and equipment." PG&E is currently in the process of incorporating golden mussel monitoring into our existing quagga and zebra mussel monitoring program and currently assessing if further actions will be taken at any of PG&E’s approximately 48 reservoirs that allow motorized boating."

To see the total original article and updates in YubaNet.net News CLICK HERE

Public lands are a national treasure and must not be sold

5/10/2025

 
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Opinion from the Tahoe Daily Tribune - May 10,2025
Public lands are one of our country’s great equalizers. It doesn’t matter how much money you have—a billionaire and a bus driver both get the same access to our parks, deserts, rivers and forests. Each one of us owns these lands together. They are literally America’s common ground.

Like so many Americans, I’ve built a life around public lands—exploring them, defending them and working to ensure they remain open to all. From my early days in Montana to leading the Bureau of Land Management and now as president of The Wilderness Society, I’ve seen what these places mean to people. And I’ve never seen a threat to them as serious and shocking as the one we face right now.

For weeks, there have been indications that the Republican-controlled Congress was going to sell off chunks of this priceless shared heritage to pay for tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy. Not too long ago, that would have been an unthinkable idea. Surely, Congress or the administration wouldn’t sacrifice prime wildlife habitat, access to favorite places, lands along a quiet stream or a wildlife refuge, right? Surely, they wouldn’t auction this extraordinary legacy of clean air, clean water and open spaces as a one-time favor to donors and corporations?

But earlier this month, the Senate proved just how serious they were about it. Democrats offered an amendment that would block selling off our public lands in the budget bill. The vote failed along party lines, with just two Republicans voting to oppose a sell-off. Those two Montana senators who supported the amendment completely understood how their constituents feel about public lands.
But it’s not only Montanans who care. Public lands are figurative common ground, uniting people across the country. Poll after poll shows that people of all stripes support public lands and want them conserved to protect wildlife habitat and outdoor recreation areas for future generations.

While it is a nice proof-point to have, we don’t need polling data to tell us what people’s photo libraries, social media feeds, old family albums and bucket lists show us. Americans care deeply about public lands, intuitively understanding they are a national treasure.

These lands hold the long arc of the story of humankind, etched in petroglyphs on desert walls and handed down in the creation stories of Indigenous peoples that have stewarded them since time immemorial. Public lands are our shorthand for freedom and exhilaration. In car ads, they promise an escape from the ordinary. In books about finding ourselves, they are a proving ground for the soul. In our anthems, they bind us as one nation:

“This land is your land; this land is my land.”

My nephew caught his first trout on a fly rod while standing on public land along a clear, cold mountain stream. Over 25 years later, he still remembers everything about that moment. I expect he’ll bring his kids there one day. His is a common story.

Last summer, I happened upon a young couple on a large rock outcrop overlooking a wilderness in Oregon. They had driven all the way from the Midwest to take in the view. I offered to snap a photo for them and then found myself documenting a remarkable moment as he dropped to one knee, pulled out a ring, and wove the magnificent scenery into the intimacy of his proposal. People make lifetime memories on our public lands.

From that rim on Steens Mountain to that bank along Rock Creek, to Yellowstone and Yosemite, to the desert Southwest and the wilds of Alaska, to national forests in every state—these lands are our heritage, our common ground, and a key part of our American identity and story.
Public lands must never be for sale—at any price.

It’s not too late. Congress still has mountains of details to sort through to finalize the president’s budget and tax cut agenda. It’s up to them to stop the selloff of our national heritage, and it’s up to all of us to remind them that they must. When public lands are sold off for profit, we lose the places that define our country and unite us as Americans.

Tracy Stone-Manning is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversation about the West. She is president of The Wilderness Society and a former director of the BLM. She lives in Montana and Washington, D.C.

To see the original article in the Tahoe Daily News CLICK HERE

Mother Lode Trails supports the resistance to selling off public lands to give the richest of us a tax break.

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Republicans add 11,000 acres of public land sales to reconciliation bill

5/8/2025

 
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The House Natural Resources Committee approved its portion of the Republicans’ budget package Wednesday. Democrats were outraged over a late-night amendment allowing land sales in Utah and Nevada.

The House Natural Resources Committee early Wednesday muscled through their portion of Republicans’ tax, energy and national security megabill, but not without some fireworks.

A late-night Republican amendment ordering the sale of thousands of acres of public lands in Nevada and Utah sparked outrage among committee Democrats. While Republicans had discussed such sales, they didn’t include them in the bill released last week.
The committee voted 26-17 late Tuesday night to advance the legislation that seeks to rake in billions of dollars in federal revenues from new oil and gas leasing while rolling back environmental laws.
One Democrat, Rep. Adam Gray of California, voted for it after signaling earlier in the markup that he might do so. Nonetheless, Gray said that he will oppose the final package on the floor, especially if it is tied to cuts to food assistance and Medicaid.
The marathon Natural Resources markup saw the consideration of more than 120 amendments, almost all offered by Democrats. Republicans easily defeated each of them.
The lone adopted amendment arrived close to midnight from Republican Reps. Mark Amodei of Nevada and Celeste Maloy of Utah. It would sell about 11,000 acres of public lands in Nevada and Utah, though Republicans would not say for what purpose. Democrats were flabbergasted, with Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) calling it “deeply irresponsible.”
The bill’s passage is a win for Republicans after weeks of disappointing delays and setbacks on the massive legislation, which holds the keys to President Donald Trump’s domestic agenda and his promises to “drill, baby, drill.”
“We’re working to bring production back to America where we do it more safely, cleanly and efficiently than anyone else in the world,” said committee Chair Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.). “We are delivering on the American people’s mandate to restore common sense to the federal government and stop the fiscal bleeding.”
Republicans are looking to pass the bill through the budget reconciliation process, which allows the congressional majority to advance legislation on fiscal matters without needing to worry about the Senate filibuster.
Westerman is projecting his panel’s bill will produce about $18.5 billion in savings, largely driven by quarterly onshore lease sales, new offshore leasing in the Gulf and Alaska’s Cook Inlet and four new leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Democrats tried and failed to strip out many of the oil, gas and mineral provisions with their amendments, and railed against the Republican bill. Committee ranking member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) said the bill is the “most extreme, anti-environment bill in American history.”
They also raged against what they call a “pay-to-play” permitting provision. It would allow companies to pay a fee in exchange for expedited permitting and certain exemptions from judicial review.
“There’s the new pay-to-play permitting scheme, a cauldron of corruption unlike anything we have ever seen,” said Huffman said, next to a plasterboard with an image of President Donald Trump and the words, “WRECK-ONCILIATION.”
The markup roared to life after more than 12 hours of debate when Amodei introduced his public land sales amendment.
POLITICO’s E&E News reported in April that Republicans in the House and Senate were discussing using sales of public lands as an offset for the spending bill and to create opportunities for affordable housing. Such sales are a priority for Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chair Mike Lee (R-Utah).
“The disposal of this land would allow for more responsible development while giving a positive return to the American taxpayer,” Amodei said. “The lands included in this amendment were also identified by their respective counties in Nevada and Utah for disposal.”
“The CBO has scored provisions of this bill and estimates that this amendment would generate billions in federal revenue,” Amodei continued.
Specifically, the amendment would order the sale of more than 11,000 acres of lands in Utah and Nevada.
It caused an eruption among committee Democrats, who are staunchly opposed to selling public lands and assailed Republicans for introducing the amendment so late at night.
“This is just some truly odious sausage at 11:20 p.m. at the end of a long markup,” Huffman said. “Any member of Congress that votes for this is just surrendering any semblance of good process, the integrity of the legislative process is dead if you do this.”
Neguse, ranking member on the Federal Lands Subcommittee, said the proposal required more consultation with lawmakers whose districts would be affected.
“This has been the precedent … on bill after bill after bill that we’ve heard that members have the opportunity to be heard when the lands are being disposed of in their districts,” he said.
That prompted an angry response from Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Wis.), chair of the Federal Lands Subcommittee, who suggested Democrats have also pushed resources legislation without enough consultation.
“Save the outrage because I’ve seen it in my own state, by members on your side of the aisle,” Tiffany retorted. “Take your whining someplace else.”
A spokesperson for Westerman said the amendment is a “product of community-driven efforts by six Western counties.”
“The sales from these small parcels of land will generate significant federal revenue and have broad local support,” the spokesperson said. “It’s a tailored, parochial budgetary measure.”
Public lands advocates were quick to slam the amendment Wednesday morning.
“This is a dangerous precedent that is intended to pave the way for a much larger scale transfer of public lands,” said Michael Carroll, the BLM campaign director for the Wilderness Society. “Every member of Congress who cares about keeping public lands in public hands should reject this deceptive, middle-of-the-night effort to sell our national heritage.”
Earlier in the day, Huffman introduced an amendment to strip the new permitting provision from the bill.
Republicans for years have sought to speed up the environmental review process under the National Environmental Policy Act. While some Democrats are sympathetic to that cause, most argued at the markup that the new provision is a bridge too far and even borders on corruption.
“Instead of a serious NEPA review, polluters can write their own environmental impact statement, pay a special fee and have it quickly rubber-stamped and then get total immunity from legal challenges,” Huffman said.
Republicans are pitching the permitting provisions as narrow changes to NEPA that will speed up timelines and net the government about $1 billion in new revenues, meeting the budgetary nexus required by reconciliation.
Under the proposal, companies could pay a fee that’s 125 percent of the cost of NEPA’s mandated environmental scrutiny — roughly $6 million. Companies that pay the fee would get an environmental assessment within six months and an EIS within a year, along with some immunity from litigation under NEPA.

While the debate raged for hours, it was mostly one-sided. Throughout the hearing, Democrats goaded GOP members of the committee to engage in debate on their amendments, but the majority largely sat stone-faced.
Typically at committee markups, Republicans will argue against Democrats’ amendments and vice-versa. That did not happen Tuesday.
Democrats took advantage of the dynamic, lampooning Republicans for repeatedly avoiding direct challenges to engage in debate.
Neguse took several Republicans personally to task. He repeatedly asked Rep. Addison McDowell (R-N.C.) to debate him on the merits of renaming Washington Dulles International Airport. McDowell is the sponsor of a separate bill to rename the airport after Trump.
McDowell got up and left the hearing room during Neguse’s the questioning. A spokesperson for the congressman said he went to meet with constituents.
“I wish I could find a Republican member to engage in thoughtful debate about these policies,” Neguse said, suggesting that Republicans on the committee were under a gag order by House leadership, the White House or Westerman.
On two occasions, Huffman moved to adjourn the markup, which is a privileged motion that requires a roll call vote when it is made. Both motions were defeated, but nonetheless required Republicans who had left to rush back to the room.
“Now that we’ve got your attention, we hope you’ll stick around and actually participate,” Huffman said.
To see the complete article in Politico E&E News CLICK HERE.


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 Mother Lode Trails is YOUR local volunteer-run trail information and resource website. Here you can find
up-to-the minute information on trail alerts, links and trail news for Placer,  Yuba, and Nevada counties.
Mother Lode Trails is trademarked.