Donate NOW!

Signup for E-Newsletters

New Creekside Home for Salmon Activists

h3.New creekside home for salmon activists
By Peter Jamison

"It looks like a fairy-tale house," a local contractor said, leaning out the window of his pickup truck for a better look at the building that will soon house the Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (SPAWN). The new building's setting, if not quite up to fairy-tale standards, certainly has its allure. The
two-acre plot, just north of the green bridge in Lagunitas, is dense with redwoods, some of them hundreds of years old. Lagunitas Creek rushes along the bottom fringe of the property.
The building itself will be SPAWN's new office, Steiner said. The group, which seeks to preserve coho and steelhead salmon habitat in the San Geronimo Valley, is currently housed in a building in executive director Todd Steiner's backyard in Forest Knolls.

The Turtle Island Restoration Network, a sea-turtle advocacy that organization shares several of its staff members with SPAWN, will also move into the building. Outdoor education The two-acre property also has a sizable garage building, which Steiner said he hopes to convert into an education center for SPAWN's interns and volunteers. The property as a whole, he said, will serve as an "outdoor education center"; SPAWN plans to reintroduce species of native plants, such as redwood sorrel, creating a pristine creekside ecosystem. "Our goal is to have the lightest footprint we can on the property," Steiner said. "We don't have any big development plans, we don't plan on having large numbers of people here at any given time."

Several features of the property will be meant to highlight ways of "living in harmony with the creek," Steiner said. A water-catchment system on the building's roof will reduce SPAWN's
water usage. A permeable driveway will allow water to soak into the ground, reducing runoff and resultant erosion around the creek. `Fish-friendly lives'"What we're proposing to do is to create a model for living fish-friendly lives," Steiner said. He
was quick to add that such ideas have not been finalized; SPAWN is still consulting with architects on the building's overhaul. "Nothing has been approved or in writing," he said. Perhaps most important, Steiner said, is the section of creek adjacent to the property, which will now be protected under SPAWN's stewardship for the foreseeable future. Those waters house a spot where coho spawn, he said, easily observable from the creek's banks.

SPAWN bought the property for $675,000 from an East Bay man, who also owns an additional 23 acres running up to the ridge of the San Geronimo Valley, Steiner said, adding that the group hopes to eventually purchase the rest of the man's land. "That would give us a slice of the Valley all the way from the Valley floor to the ridgeline," he said. Steiner said "there's a lot of unknowns" surrounding the property right now, such as county permits and the details of renovating the main house, which has been empty for 10 years. Nevertheless, he said, he hopes to have SPAWN moved in next year. "If we're in there in six months, I'd be a happy man," he said.

Other pages in SPAWN in the News

Science - In Central California, Coho Salmon are on the Brink
Science, a globally respected journal, identifies Lagunitas Creek as Central California's best chance for coho recovery.

Marin's coho salmon on the brink of extinction

Rain aids West Marin salmon spawn

Chance to watch spawning salmon

Marin Voice: Community critical to coho recovery

Salmon Stranded in San Geronimo Valley

Endangered sea life: Trouble the water

Drought-stricken streams threaten California salmon

Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership of Marin Selects Julie Vogt as

KWMR Hot Tech, Cool Science show with SPAWN Biologist Chris Pincetich

SPAWN on KQED's Quest

Roof rainwater saves water and helps gardens and fish

Marin endangered coho numbers poor, 'multiple whammy' cited
Marin Independent Journal, March 9, 2009. By Mark Prado

KQED "The Calfornia Report" features SPAWN on "Drought and the Salmon Run"

Crisis Situation for Marin's Coho Salmon
Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer Saturday, January 10, 2009

Light run of endangered fish in Marin creeks worries biologists
Marin Independent Journal Jan 3, 2009 By Mark Prado

Lagunitas watershed gives hope to the species, report says By Andrea Blum
West Marin Citizen

SPAWN on ABC News, November 2008
SPAWN Director Todd Steiner shares his thoughts on the report "SOS: Native Fishes" by Dr. Peter Moyle and Dr. Joshua Isreal.

Water conservation plan eases droughts
Mill Valley Herald

Salmon initiatives course through Valley

Helping You Help the Watershed

Kinsey announces building moratorium near valley streams, County partners with SPAWN to protect coho salmon

Where have all the coho gone?

Missing coho in Redwood Creek may be latest fallout of oil spill

Spawner population crash - Biologists concerned about record-low coho countsWest Marin

Leading Scientists Criticize Marin County Supervisors Over Policies For Endangered Salmon
by Dan Bacher Bay Area IndyMedia

Will coho salmon survive us?
By Todd Steiner and Paola Bouley. Staff Report Article Launched: 08/02/2007 11:01:39 PM PDT

Harvesting rain for a dry day
Paola Bouley unscrews the lid on the fifth in a line of bulging plastic barrels behind the storage shed and leans forward, peering into its murky depth. "This is last year's water," she says. More accurately, it's last year's rain. Bouley, a biologist for the Salmon Protection and Watershed...

School saves on rainy days: Salmon group helps San Geronimo harvest runoff

Marin County Heat Rescue for Coho and Steelhead
Heat rescue for coho salmon and steelhead trout Annual event turns critical as water evaporates, warms

Take care of our water
By Todd Steiner, SPAWN Director 07/26/2006 04:19:00 AM PDT Wednesday Readers' Forum, Marin Independent Journal

Coho, steelhead counted as they head for open sea
By Mark Prado Marin Independent Journal

Coho home for the holidays
by Peter Fimrite, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer, San Geronimo Valley greets surge of spawning salmon

GREEN Salmon Season
SF Gate Article

New Creekside Home for Salmon Activists

Woodacre salmon passage restored

Unique Collaboration Spawns New Habitat for Endangered Coho

Salmon to get protection from Valley golfers

Fish catch a ride to safer waters

Marin creek's fragile salmon get extra help

Enormouswater tank provokes West Marin

Salmon returning to Marin creeks

Riparian connections run deep in Lagunitas Creek

County drops appeal of stream ruling

Court Ruling Challenges Widespread County Planning Practices

Get Involved Upcoming Events Take Action! Programs Newsroom Resources Reports Links Contact Us About SPAWN Back to Home Page Online Store Creek Monitoring Fish Rescue Workshops, Tours and Fieldtrips Habitat Restoration Citizen Training Land Acquisition 10,000 Rain Gardens Project Landowner Support