MROSD awards “ecological grazing” lease on Tunitas Creek

Press release

By on Tue, April 1, 2008

Last Wednesday night, the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District’s Board of Directors voted unanimously to award a five-year grazing lease for its Tunitas Creek property to local coastside rancher Doug Edwards.  Mr. Edwards has been running a year-round cow-calf operation on the property since July 2005 under a year-to-year lease with the previous landowner.

The District’s grazing management plan for the Tunitas Creek property is a guide to conservation grazing that is tailored to suit the resource management needs of the land.  Conservation grazing is the use of livestock

grazing as a management tool for enhancing the diversity of native plant and animal communities, controlling the spread of invasive non-native plants, and managing vegetative fuel for fire prevention.  The continuation of grazing on the Tunitas Creek property is also consistent with the goals of District’s Grazing Policy which include helping sustain the local agricultural economy and fostering appreciation for the region’s rural agricultural heritage.  The continuation of grazing on the property through the prescriptions in the grazing management plan is supported by the San Mateo County Farm Bureau and the San Mateo County Agricultural Advisory Committee.  .

The 708-acre Tunitas Creek property is tucked into the San Mateo coastal hillside about eight miles south of Half Moon Bay.  The property was purchased by the District in February 2007 from the Peninsula Open Space Trust.

Mr. Edwards is a local grazing operator with years of experience in ranching on the San Mateo County coast.  The District’s Coastside Protection Program commits the agency to working with current operators of agricultural lands provided that the operator has a willingness to support the District’s public use and resource management goals.

This is the second grazing lease awarded by the District in the past year.  Last December a five-year grazing lease was awarded to local rancher Vince Fontana for the former Big Dipper Ranch at Skyline Ridge Open Space Preserve.