We've made it easy for you to join others in taking simple actions to reduce
the threats to our nearby national forests and to enjoy, protect and restore
them. Click here to join the Southern California Forests
Campaign today.
95 People Applaud Chris Brennen's
"Canyoneering:
Top to Bottom in the San Gabriels"
In March the Sierra Club's Forest Committee presented a special program filled with adventure and excitement presented by Caltech Professor Chris Brennen. The title of Chris's talk was "Canyoneering: Top to Bottom in the San Gabriels." The event took place on at the Eaton Canyon Nature Center in Pasadena with a full house of 95 people in attendance.
Chris, a long-time canyoneering expert, told stories about his exploration of the rugged canyons and waterfalls in our beloved San Gabriel Mountains and how they needed to be better protected to preserve rappelling and other backcountry recreational opportunities. Chris shared his experiences about rappelling down dozens of waterfalls while traversing parts of canyons most hikers never visit. See more on San Gabriels canyoneering.
The Forest Committee's next program is Wednesday, May 28th at the Eaton Canyon Nature Center. Christopher Nyerges will present "Forest Food and Wilderness Survival." Nyerges has conducted hundreds of classes, lectures, outings and field trips in outdoor skills, Native American themes and wild plants over the last three decades. His School of Self-Reliance and his many books tell how to find and use edible and medicinal plants, make fire without matches, find and purify water, and the uses of home survival kits and primitive shelters. His program offers innovative ways to feel more confident in the wilderness or at home in an emergency.
A social reception at 7:00 p.m. precedes the program at 7:30 p.m. at Eaton Canyon Nature Center, 1750 N. Altadena Drive, Pasadena. From the 210 Fwy in Pasadena, take Altadena Drive north toward the mountains about 1.5 miles, and 500 feet after crossing New York Drive, turn right into Eaton Canyon Park. For information, email donbremner@earthlink.net.
Photo © Christopher Earls Brennen; used with permission.
Sierra Club Volunteers Explore Proposed Cucamonga Wilderness Additions
This fall 12 intrepid Sierra Club volunteers hiked up 8,300 foot Timber Mountain on the eastern flank of the San Gabriel Mountains, starting out from the popular Ice House Canyon trail in the 13,000 acre Cucamonga Wilderness. Their objective was to view a potential expansion of the existing wilderness area to the north and east that would almost double the size of the Cucamonga Wilderness.
Our campaign photographer, Andrew Harvey, joined the happy trekkers and you can click here to see a sample of the pictures he took along the way.
From the summit of Timber our volunteers could see 10,000 foot Mt. Baldy in the distance to the northwest and east towards Lytle Creek, where the Forest Service has recommended additions to the Cucamonga Wilderness. This new area is home to Nelson's bighorn sheep, some of the largest sugar pines in southern California, and opportunities for remote hiking and nature viewing. The Forest Service recently recommended expansion of the Cucamonga Wilderness based on requests from the public--including over 1000 Sierra Club members--when the agency issued new management plans for the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests.
How can you help make the Forest Service's recommendations become a reality? The first thing you can do is join our Forests Campaign by clicking here. Additionally, you can help out by joining our efforts to better protect the San Gabriel Mountains and the San Gabriel River. To read more about our new San Gabriel Mountains campaign, see below.
120 People Attend Launch Parties To Celebrate New Effort To Better Protect San Gabriel Mountains

The Southern California Forests Campaign launched its new San
Gabriel Mountains Wilderness and Living Rivers Campaign in May. Over
120 people attended community meetings in Pasadena on May 23 rd and
Claremont on May 31 st , which featured brief presentations on
mountain and river issues and offered Forests Campaign members the
opportunity to get involved.
The twin goals of the new campaign are to improve the health of our
mountains and rivers as we expand the opportunities for kids,
families, and everyone to improve their own physical and spiritual
health. Key campaign priorities will be to add wilderness areas and
wild and scenic rivers to the Angeles and the western San Bernardino
National Forests while enhancing water quality and recreational
opportunities along the North, West, and East Forks of the San
Gabriel River.
 Assemblyman Anthony Portantino's field representative presents Bill Corcoran from the Sierra Club a certificate of recognition in honor of the new San Gabriel Mountains Wilderness and Living Rivers Campaign.
Claremont City Council member San Pedroza offered his support for the
campaign at the Claremont meeting as did Bill Hacket at the Pasadena
meeting on behalf of Assemblyman Anthony Portantino. Bill is the
assemblyman's field representative. The Forest Campaign's Juana
Torres served as host for the parties. Representatives of Friends
of the River and the National Hispanic Environmental Council also
attended the launch events and offered their support, too.
Farley and Ann Olander, authors of Call of the Mountains, led off
the meeting with a special presentation on the magnificence of the
San Gabriels to remind us of the importance of protecting our
natural heritage. Cathy Roberts, who helped spearhead a UCLA study
of the San Gabriel River, provided a moving program segment entitled
Saving the San Gabriel River: Our Forest, Our River, Our Backyard.
The UCLA study documents the challenges that thousands of largely
Latino visitors face when they visit the forks of the San Gabriel
River: lack of basic facilities, including toilets, trash cans, safe
river access, educational materials and forest rangers, let alone
rangers who speak Spanish. The study also offers solutions and an
initial vision of how we can enhance the visitor experience, improve
water quality, and protect habitat for river creatures. Forest
Campaign members who participate in the new San Gabriel Mountains
campaign will have the opportunity to help contribute to the
development of this new vision.
The San Gabriel Mountains constitute over 70% of the open space in
Los Angeles County. However, only 12% of the Angeles National
Forest -- home to most of the San Gabriel Mountain range -- is protected
by official wilderness status, the gold standard of land protection
that requires an act of Congress. Expanding wilderness protection
is important before pristine backcountry areas fall victim to growing
threats from massive power transmission lines, illegal off-road
vehicle use, and even toll roads. Click here to read the Forest
Campaign's threats report.
All of the proposed wilderness areas have either been recommended for
protection by the Forest Service or actively considered for
recommendation in the recent forest management plans developed by the
agency.
You can be part of winning a great natural legacy by ensuring that
crown jewels of the Angeles backcountry such as Pleasant View Ridge
and additions to the Cucamonga Wilderness frequented by bighorn sheep
are protected and kept undeveloped for future generations to enjoy as
places of natural beauty. You can help out with our new forest
protection efforts by joining the Southern California Forests
Campaign. Click here to join us.
Bienvenidos a La Campaña Forestal del Sur de California.
Para más
información sobre nuestros bosques locales y los riesgos que enfrentan
haga clic aquí . Si quiere ayudar a proteger nuestros bosques por favor
mandele un mensaje a la Agencia Forestal para decirle que mejore los Planes
Forestales, haga clic aquí, y lo llevara
a una carta que usted facilmente puede llenar. O hable al (213) 387-6528 ext
226 para hablar con Juana Torres. También
hay información disponible acerca de nuestro nuevo reporte que documenta
los 10 riesgos más grandes que enfrentan nuestros bosques. Para leer
un resumen y la historia de los riesgos al popular Rió de San Gabriel
haga clic aquí.
150 YEARS AGO, our local forests harbored condors, grizzly bears
and bighorn sheep and fed creeks that teemed with steelhead trout.
100 YEARS AGO, few roads crossed our local mountains
and development around the region's new national forests was minimal.
50 YEARS AGO, undeveloped open space still connected
most of our four local national forests -- the Los Padres, Cleveland,
Angeles, and San Bernadino national forests -- creating a web of life
that stretched from Carmel in the north to San Diego in the south.
NOW, these four forests have mostly become islands
in a sea of sprawl. Worse, development on the forests themselves threatens
to destroy scenic views, scar the land and put wildlife at risk. From
proposed oil drilling in the Los Padres National Forest above Ventura
to a proposed toll road through the Cleveland National Forest, energy
and mining companies and government agencies are making our forests less
wild, less beautiful. Stretching from Big Sur to Mexico, these four national
forests need better management if they are to survive the 21st Century.
Join the Sierra Club's Southern California Forests Campaign.
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