Land Trust News/Events
Please note that this page is no longer being updated. Click here to visit our new news and events page!
Don't forget to sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date with all of the latest from AMLT!
Fall 2017 Newsletter
AN INTRODUCTION FROM CHAIRMAN VALENTIN LOPEZ
LETTER FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
MY EXPERIENCE OF THE AMLT COASTAL STEWARDSHIP SUMMER CAMP
By Alexis Moreno, 16, Amah Mutsun Tribal Band member and UwiSmak singerMy experience at the AMLT Coastal Stewardship Summer Camp at Costanoa Lodge will be one to remember. I was fortunate to participate in such a fascinating experience that will always be with me in the future. It was a great opportunity to meet each and every one of my cousins that live throughout California individually. We learned about our ancestors, cultural activities, sacred places, sacred songs and ethnobotany. Read more.
RETURN TO MT. HUMUNHUM - PLACE OF THE HUMMINGBIRD
September 14, 2017 was a great ceremony day for our people, the Amah Mutsun. The day started early, and up 3,486 feet atop Mt. Umunhum, which means “Place of the Hummingbird” in the Mutsun language. The clouds were surrounding us and it was cold at first, but as the day went on the sun slowly came out and the valley below shown though. Although the radar tower loomed above us it made no difference to our feeling of blessings and happiness... continue reading.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH ON THE COAST OF SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
Text by Rob Cuthrell, AMLT Research Associate In 2016, Amah Mutsun Land Trust partnered with California State Parks and researchers at UC Berkeley to begin a two-year research project to explore how Native groups lived on the coast of northern Santa Cruz County. The study includes excavations and analysis of materials from five archaeological sites that range in age from less than 200 years old up to nearly 7000 years old. The ultimate goal is to understand how Native people used natural resources in the landscapes around them, and whether these resources and landscapes may have been stewarded to enhance their productivity and sustain their use. Read more.IN PICTURES: 2018 AMLT COASTAL STEWARDSHIP SUMMER CAMP
Compiled by Jay Scherf, AMLT Program Coordinator This summer, the Amah Mutsun Land Trust organized two weeks of summer camp for 15-18 Amah Mutsun and Native youth along the central coast. Funded by the California Coastal Conservancy and hosted at Costanoa Lodge, the summer camp was a time for getting together in the Amah Mutsun's coastal homeland and passing on traditional knowledge. Check out our favorite photos!AMAH MUTSUN ETHNOBOTANY
By Sara French, AMLT Research Associate Do you want to learn more about the useful and culturally significant plants in the California landscape? Each AMLT newsletter will highlight a native plant that is used by the Amah Mutsun. Click here to read about ethnobotany of the California wood rose.WISDOM FROM ASCENCION
UPCOMING VOLUNTEER DAYS
AMLT has regular volunteer work days in the Mutsun Gardens at Pie Ranch and at San Juan Bautista State Historic Park. Volunteer work days at Pie Ranch (MAP) are on the third Saturday of each month, from 1:00-5:00. The next volunteer day will be Saturday October 21st from 1:00-5:00 pm. Please RSVP for this workday by emailing Julisa Lopez at jujlopez@ucsc.edu. Volunteer work days at San Juan Bautista Historic State Park (MAP) will be regularly scheduled on the second Saturday of each month, from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm. However, this month is an exception, as it will be hosted by the Native Stewardship Corps on Friday, October 13th from 10:00-2:00 pm. Please RSVP for this work day by emailing Jay Scherf at jscherf@amahmutsun.org.
Volunteer days are a great opportunity to meet new people, learn about the Amah Mutsun Land Trust and Tribal Band, and do something positive for Mother Earth. We hope you will join us!
EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT:
Presentation on the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band - December 9thLearn about the Tribe’s history and current issues. College and high school students are encouraged to attend. Anticipate an informative 60 - 75 minute presentation followed by 30 - 45 minutes for Q & A.
Morgan Hill Library, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm, 660 W. Main, Morgan Hill
Gilroy Library, 3:30 – 5:30 pm, 350 W. Sixth Street, Gilroy
For more information contact:
Valentin Lopez, Chairman
Amah Mutsun Tribal Band
Winter 2017 Newsletter
AN INTRODUCTION FROM CHAIRMAN VALENTIN LOPEZ
FROM THE DESK OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
QUIROSTE VALLEY AND THE VALUE OF COLLABORATIVE ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH ABOUT NATIVE HISTORY
Ten years ago, a group of researchers led by UC Berkeley Professor Kent Lightfoot came to the Amah Mutsun Tribal Council with a novel kind of proposal. They wanted to work with the Tribe and State Parks to begin a scientific project to learn more about the long term history of relationships between Native people and the natural world... Click to read more.
RECENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELDWORK ON THE SANTA CRUZ COAST
A collaborative team of researchers from the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band, California State Parks, UC Berkeley, and UC Santa Cruz initiated archaeological fieldwork on the Santa Cruz coast in the summer of 2016. Our study used our eco-archaeological approach to research different-aged sites across a large area to broaden the study of indigenous landscape management on the Central California coast... Click to read more.
NOTES FROM THE NATIVE STEWARDSHIP CORPS
By Nathan Vasquez, AMLT Native Steward The AMLT Native Stewardship Corps reconnects tribal members with traditional cultural practices, places, and knowledge through conservation fieldwork and cultural education. Here Nathan Vasquez describes his work with the AMLT Native Stewardship Corps and shares some of his artwork featuring prominent Amah Mutsun cultural symbols. Read more.AMAH MUTSUN ETHNOBOTANY
By Sara French, AMLT Research Associate Do you want to learn more about the useful and culturally significant plants in the California landscape? Each AMLT newsletter will highlight a native plant that is used by the Amah Mutsun. Click here to read about ethnobotany of red maids.WISDOM FROM ASCENCION
UPCOMING EVENTS AND VOLUNTEER DAYS
Good news! AMLT has established regular volunteer work days in the Mutsun Gardens at Pie Ranch and at San Juan Bautista State Historic Park. Volunteer work days at the San Juan Bautista State Historic Park (MAP) will be the second Saturday of each month, from 10:30-2:30. Volunteer work days at Pie Ranch (MAP) will be the third Saturday of each month, from 1:00-5:00, followed by a potluck and barn dance with Pie Ranch. Please RSVP for a volunteer day or ask any questions by sending an email to sreid@amahmutsun.org. Volunteers should bring the food and water you will need for the day, sun protection, and clothes that can get dirty.Volunteer days are a great opportunity to meet new people, learn about the Amah Mutsun Land Trust and Tribal Band, and do something positive for Mother Earth. We hope you will join us!
Press Release
ANNOUNCING THE NEW COTONI-COAST DAIRIES NATIONAL MONUMENT
January 13, 2017 The Amah Mutsun Land Trust is very pleased by the news that President Obama has, by Presidential Proclamation, included Cotoni-Coast Dairies property as part of the California Coastal National Monument. The Amah Mutsun Tribal Band was an important part of the organizing effort to support this designation. The Cotoni-Coast Dairies property, located near Davenport in Santa Cruz County, contains significant cultural and ecological resources and was home to the Cotoni people, whose descendants are part of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band. The AMLT and the Bureau of Land Management have established a Memorandum of Understanding to work together to protect natural and cultural resources at Cotoni-Coast Dairies and our work to steward Native cultural sites and sensitive fish populations is already underway. You can read the full press release from Chairman Valentin Lopez here.AMLT in the News
AMAH MUTSUN OPPOSE GRAVEL MINE AT SACRED SITE
San Jose Inside recently featured the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band's opposition to the proposed gravel mine at Juristac, a sacred site and historic Mutsun village also known as Sargent Ranch. The 317-acre site is culturally, spiritually, and environmentally significant to the Tribe and would be irrevocably harmed by mining operation. Read the full article here.Event Announcement
COLLABORATIVE ARCHAEOLOGY RESEARCH PRESENTATION AT UC BERKELEY CAMPUS
This past summer, Native Stewards from the Amah Mutsun Land Trust joined researchers from UC Berkeley and staff from California State Parks to investigate some of the earliest known archaeological sites on the Central California coast. They were looking for early evidence of indigenous burning, and wondering how indigenous management practices shaped the landscape. The findings of the project will be of direct relevance to California State Parks and the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, who are generating plans for the ecological restoration of selected public lands in the Santa Cruz region. On December 8, 2016 from 7:00 - 8:00 pm research participants will present their results in a panel discussion hosted by the Archaeological Research Facility at UC Berkeley. All are welcome to attend this free event. Click here to download a flyer with more information.Fall 2016 Newsletter
A MESSAGE FROM CHAIRMAN VALENTIN LOPEZ
During our first interview we immediately recognized that EK understands the social justice issues facing our AMLT and has the experience we need to build organizational capacity. It is for these reasons that we are proud to introduce EK as the new and first Executive Director of the AMLT...continue reading
WHY I HAVE JOINED THE AMLT
By EkOngKar Singh Khalsa, AMLT Executive Director
As the first Executive Director of the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, I am honored to have this opportunity to work with the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band as its members renew their stewardship of tribal lands. The Amah Mutsun Land Trust was founded to fulfill a sacred covenant and to restore balance to the relationship between humans and nature. The trust intends to help us move forward to a time when, in the words of M. Kat Anderson, “conservation and stewardship are everyday practices”...read more
PRESCRIBED FIRE AT SAN VICENTE REDWOODS
NOTES FROM THE NATIVE STEWARDSHIP CORPS
The AMLT Native Stewardship Corps reconnects tribal members with traditional cultural practices, places, and knowledge through conservation fieldwork and cultural education. Here Tribal Elder, Eleanor Castro, describes her role as a mentor, spiritual leader, and teacher in the Native Stewardship Corps... continue reading
NATIVE STEWARDSHIP CORPS, AUGUST 2016: IN PICTURES
By Jay Scherf, AMLT Project Assistant The Native Stewardship Corps spent two weeks this August camping and working along the Central Coast. By all measures, this episode of NSC was a great success. We welcomed back our core group of veteran Native Stewards, and also welcomed Tribal Elder Eleanor Castro and our newest steward Natalie Garcia to the NSC. Over the course of this episode, the stewards removed thousands of invasive plants from culturally significant landscapes; learned and honed traditional skills; and spent countless hours renewing their relationship to their Tribal homeland and strengthening Tribal bonds... view slideshowAMAH MUTSUN ETHNOBOTANY
By Sara French, AMLT Research Associate Do you want to learn more about the useful and culturally significant plants in the California landscape? Each AMLT newsletter will highlight a native plant that is used by the Amah Mutsun. Click here to read about ethnobotany of the California bay tree."RAIN FOREST," A POEM
WISDOM FROM ASCENCION
UPCOMING EVENTS AND VOLUNTEER DAYS
- Saturday November 5th, 2016. Meet and Greet with AMLT Executive Director at Pie Ranch. Click here for more information and to RSVP.
- Saturday November 12th, 2016, from 10:30-2:30. Planting and weeding in the Mutsun Garden at the San Juan Bautista State Historic Park. Please send an email to sreid@amahmutsun.org if you plan to attend.
- Saturday November 19th, 2016, from 10:00-2:30. Maintenance in the Mutsun Garden at Pie Ranch. Please send an email to sreid@amahmutsun.org if you plan to attend.
- Thursday December 8th, 2016. Save the date. Presentation at UC Berkeley about recent archaeological research along the Santa Cruz coast. Check back on this page for more information as we near the event.
AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST NEWSLETTER Q&A
Press Release and Event Announcement
AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST HIRES FIRST EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Summer 2016 Newsletter
A MESSAGE FROM CHAIRMAN VALENTIN LOPEZ
ETHNOBOTANY: A RELATIONSHIP WITH PLANTS
By Sara French, AMLT Research Associate
Ethnobotany is the study of the human relationship with plants. We all engage in ethnobotanical relationships every day, but for many of us our relationship with plants is disconnected. We buy plant based foods and medicines from a store rather than gathering or growing them ourselves, but in the not so distant past our ancestors got the foods, medicines, and raw materials they needed directly from the land...read more
MARIA ASCENCIÓN SOLÓRSANO {DE GARCIA Y DE CERVANTES}
A CONVERSATION THROUGH TIME: TRANSCRIBING THE HARRINGTON NOTES
Though it feels strange at times reading words that Doña Ascencion Solorsano spoke to John P. Harrington ninety years ago, we realize that in a way Doña Ascencion was speaking to us as well. She didn’t give Harrington tens of thousands of pages worth of information for nothing. She must have known how much she was leaving to her people; that she was providing invaluable records of Mutsun culture and history so her descendants could fulfill their sacred obligation to the Creator. Read more.
AMAH MUTSUN ETHNOBOTANY
By Sara French, AMLT Research Associate Do you want to learn more about the useful and culturally significant plants in the California landscape? Each AMLT newsletter will highlight a native plant that is used by the Amah Mutsun. Click here to read about ethnobotany of the California blackberry.WISDOM FROM ASCENCION
AMLT MUTSUN GARDENS - Updates and Volunteer Days
We have accomplished great things in the Mutsun Gardens at Pie Ranch and at San Juan Bautista thanks to the hard work of our volunteers, the generous donations from local nurseries, and two new grants from the California State Parks Foundation and The Christensen Fund. A local newspaper recently wrote about the Mutsun Garden at San Juan Bautista, which you can read about here. Would you like to join the AMLT in caring for culturally significant native plants? Attend an upcoming volunteer day on July 23, August 13, or August 20. Click here for more information about volunteer days.AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST NEWSLETTER Q&A
AMLT in the News
AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST FEATURED IN INDIAN COUNTRY TODAY
Indian Country Today Media Network, one of the foremost Native news publications in North America, recently published a story featuring the AMLT's partnership with the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District and their efforts to open Mt. Umunhum to the public as a ceremonial site. Read the full story here.AMAH MUTSUN AND BLM SIGN COAST DAIRIES AGREEMENT
The Amah Mutsun signed an historic Memorandum of Understanding with the Bureau of Land Management this week, granting the Tribe formal access to the 5,800-acre site in their traditional territory to conduct ceremonies and steward biological and cultural resources. The agreement is the first MOU the BLM's Central Coast Office has signed with any tribal organization. Read the Santa Cruz Hilltromper's full story here.AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST FEATURED IN SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL
The Santa Cruz Sentinel recently featured the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, describing the background of the Land Trust in the context of Tribal history as well as some of its long-term goals and strategies to advance indigenous stewardship. Read the full story here.AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST FEATURED IN SAN JOSE INSIDE
San Jose Inside recently featured the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, describing the historic agreement signed with the Bureau of Land Management granting the Amah Mutsun access to the Cotoni/Coast Dairies property near Davenport. Read the full artile here.Spring 2016 Newsletter
AN INTRODUCTION FROM CHAIRMAN VALENTIN LOPEZ
AMAH MUTSUN LAND TRUST FEATURED IN BAY NATURE MAGAZINE
INDIGENOUS STEWARDSHIP AND CONSERVATION IN A CHANGING WORLD
YERBA SANTA, A MEDICINAL PLANT EXTRAORDINAIRE
One of the more common shrubs growing in California’s chaparral and woodlands, yerba santa (Eriodictyon californicum) is also one of the state’s preeminent medicinal plants. In pre-mission California, there was hardly a tribe with yerba santa in its territory that did not use this plant for medicine. Click to read more.