logo
#

Latest news with #MarinMunicipalWaterDistrict

Muir Woods hiking trail reopens after $1.8 million ‘historic style' restoration
Muir Woods hiking trail reopens after $1.8 million ‘historic style' restoration

San Francisco Chronicle​

time26-04-2025

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Muir Woods hiking trail reopens after $1.8 million ‘historic style' restoration

Near the top of a newly constructed switchback trail in Muir Woods is an enormous log bench carved from a salvaged ancient redwood trunk. It's there so hikers in the primeval Marin County forest can take a break from the hilly trek amid trees as old as 1,500 years. It's also there for contemplation as to how a bench weighing nearly a ton found its way onto a steep, slippery mountainside. The answer: It came down a 700-foot long zip line from a staging area — one of the many low-tech engineering miracles performed by a National Park Service crew on the 1.5-mile Ben Johnson Trail in Muir Woods National Monument. 'Muir Woods is a place for walkers and a place for hikers, and the Ben Johnson Trail is critical to the hiking experience,'' said Mia Monroe, who retired after 50 years as a park ranger there. 'It offers a link from Muir Woods to Mount Tamalpais. It is way out there. It is quiet and it is isolated, a place where people can have a redwood experience all to themselves.' The Ben Johnson Trail is named for the groundskeeper employed by William Kent, the businessman and philanthropist who donated the land to the government more than a century ago to protect it from logging. It rises 1,000 feet from the valley floor to Deer Park Ridge near the Pantoll Ranger Station in the adjacent Tamalpais State Park, which then offers access points to the Dipsea Trail to Stinson Beach, Steep Ravine, Bootjack and a network of trails and loops above Mill Valley. The bench can be reached by trail from either end. Johnson originally carved the canyon trail in 1904. It was rebuilt in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps, the federal agency that built the visitor amenities in Muir Woods while providing work during the Great Depression. In recent decades, the trail had been deteriorating to the point that 'only the hardiest of hikers could navigate it,' said Rudy Gustafson, the trail crew chief. It has never been heavily traveled because just to reach it requires either a 2-mile hike up the Bohemian Grove Trail or the Dipsea Trail from the parking lot at the Muir Woods Visitor Center, or a 1-mile hike down either Stapelveldt Trail or the Old Mine Trail from the parking lot at Pantoll. The rebuild cost $1.8 million, derived from visitor fees at Muir Woods, and it took as many as 20 park service trail crew members to construct. 'No pack mules were involved. Just humans,' said Gustafson, whose crew used hand tools to rebuild wooden steps and rock retaining walls up the hillside, as well as replacing a footbridge over a creek. 'We had a requirement to build in a historic style.' It was a slow process, made slower by the Northern spotted owl. The crew could only work from August through January over four years to protect the nesting season of the threatened species. In all, 200 old-growth redwood logs salvaged from Kent Lake, a reservoir in western Marin, were donated by the Marin Municipal Water District and used in the project to line the trails, prevent hillside erosion and create steps. Most prominent among them is the log used for the marquee wooden bench on the switchback, which weighs 1,800 pounds and is estimated to be 800 years old. After it was selected, it was trucked across the Golden Gate Bridge to the park service woodshop located behind the VA hospital in the Outer Richmond District of San Francisco, where Gustafson carved the bench himself. It was lowered into place in February. 'That was the finishing touch,'' Gustafson said, 'the cherry on top' of the whole project for him. The ribbon cutting on March 25 was held in the staging area at the top of the trail. The main attraction was that bench, which seats four. Monroe made the hike down just to sit on it and watch other people zigzag down and up the switchbacks beneath it. 'I had a lump in my throat and didn't want to go any further,' she said. 'The bench represents a place to pause and think about the beauty of the forest and all of the people who have cared for it.' Monroe sat on the bench for 45 minutes and would have stayed longer, but she wanted to give others the chance. She has since been back many times, reaching it from both directions. 'You are sitting among the old growth forest and looking down the layers of the canopy into the canyon,' she said. 'You are among the tops of the trees and feel an unusual sense of solitude. From there it is hard to believe that there are thousands of people down on the valley floor at that moment.'

This Bay Area county will pay you to replace your lawn with a sustainable alternative
This Bay Area county will pay you to replace your lawn with a sustainable alternative

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

This Bay Area county will pay you to replace your lawn with a sustainable alternative

The Brief Home and business owners in Marin County may qualify for a rebate if they replace their grass with a more sustainable option. The rebate amount was increased in February to drive more applications before the next Bay Area drought. The Cash for Grass program started in 2021. MARIN COUNTY, Calif. - The Marin Municipal Water District is rewarding homeowners who cut down on their water use. The county is now boosting the amount of rebates home and business owners can get as part of it's "Cash for Grass" program. The rebate increase is in an effort to drive more applicants before the next drought. The rebate amount has increased from $1.50 per square foot to $2.18 per square foot, the water district announced in its February newsletter. The offer provides a rebate for homeowners who install low-water-use gardens in place of lawns. The county first launched the program during a drought in 2021. Hundreds of homes and businesses have signed up for the program in the years since. According to the water district, the rebate is limited to 1,000 square feet for homeowners and 5,000 square feet for businesses. Dig deeper Rebate applicants are required to submit an application before starting their landscaping project. Home and business owners will then have a pre-inspection before starting the project. Once your application and project are approved, you're required to complete your landscaping within 180 days. To qualify for the $2.18 per square foot rebate, applicants have more flexibility with replacing their grass, the water agency says. For a larger rebate, the water district also offers a stricter, best practices program, which helps with long-term water savings. This program comes with a rebate of $3.68 per square foot. For the higher rebate, home and business owners have to meet stricter water requirements, like installing sheet mulch in place of lawn, planting low-water-use plants and installing a rain garden. For more information on the program, including how to apply, click here. The Source Marin County Water District

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store