COMING SPRING 2024
Tending the Land for Fire Resilience in Sonoma County
In Sonoma County, we ask a lot from the land. Some common land stewardship objectives are:
- Resilience to wildfire
- Wildlife habitat
- Drought and flood readiness
- Carbon sequestration
- Water and soil integrity
- Biodiversity
- Recreation
- Cultural Use
Sonoma County is full of expertise on how to achieve these objectives, but that knowledge can be hard to access, and for an individual landowner, management decisions can be overwhelming.
The Guide (previous working title ‘The Handbook’) distills guidance from a range of disciplines to help residents, landowners, and professional land managers define and achieve their land management goals. The Guide is accessible to a range of users, integrates a wide array of topics, and promotes science-based approaches through a website, written Handbook, and workshops.
The Guide shares Sonoma County’s experience and knowledge to help people feel comfortable and confident in the choices they make in caring for the land. We hope THE GUIDE is the first resource that land managers of all kinds will reach for when approaching the stewardship of a site in Sonoma County.
CORE PRINCIPLE
It’s possible to manage land for both fire risk reduction and ecological function.
PURPOSE
Support multi-benefit land management in Sonoma County’s natural and working lands.
AUDIENCE
Landowners of rural land and the professionals they hire and consult.
Fill out The Guide questionnaire!
We want to know what topics, management practices, and workshop formats you are most interested in. Tell us!
Project Team
Contact Eric Schoohs, Land Management Planner at Sonoma Ecology Center, eric@sonomaecologycenter.org
Sonoma Ecology Center does its work on the traditional territories of the Wappo, Miwok, and Pomo peoples, who have stewarded this land for generations.