Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Haupt Creek grove wins a new inspection
A version of this article was published in the Independent Coast Observer on May 2, 2003. By Julie VerranCourtesy Independent Coast Observer, Gualala, CA Public agencies decided after intense debate at a Forest Practice Review Team Meeting in Santa Rosa on April 24 that they want to revisit an old growth redwood grove on Haupt Creek, inland from Stewarts …
Read More »Why local old growth redwood matters
This article was published in the Independent Coast Observer on April 11, 2003. By Julie VerranCourtesy Independent Coast Observer, Gualala, CA An 800-acre upland grove of old growth redwood said to overshadow Headwaters Forest stands only a few air miles from Gualala. Its heart could soon be cut out. The second – and likely final – review of Timber …
Read More »Letter to CDF re: Haupt Creek THP
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Letter to CDF re: Haupt Creek THP
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »COMMENTS – THP 1-00-484 SON – Haupt Creek
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Forestry: Legal & Regulatory
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Forestry: Related Issues
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Forestry: Groups
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Cassidy logging plan
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »An Impaired River
The Gualala is considered an “impaired” river under the federal Clean Water Act because of excessive sediment and high temperatures, both of which can be lethal to salmon and steelhead. The excessive sediment and high temperatures are primarily the result of past logging practices. When trees are logged selectively, forest habitat is preserved, and the remaining trees hold the soil …
Read More »State board turns down riverside logging plan
This article was published in the Independent Coast Observer on February 15, 2002. By Britt BaileyCourtesy Independent Coast Observer, Gualala, CA In October, 2001, the California Department of Forestry denied the Cassidy Timber Harvest Plan which would have logged Redwoods in the floodplain of two of Gualala River’s tributaries. This decision was based on the recommendation by the National …
Read More »Letter from GMAC re:Cassidy THP (2002)
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
Read More »Letter from GMAC re:Cassidy THP (2000)
Friends of the Gualala River protects the Gualala River watershed in Northern California and the species living within it.
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