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Zorro

(17,512 posts)
Fri May 30, 2025, 08:42 AM May 30

Treasured California dairies to close. Point Reyes locals say it's conservation gone mad

With fog-kissed streets featuring a buttery bakery, an eclectic bookstore and markets peddling artisanal cheeses crafted from the milk of lovingly coddled cows, Point Reyes Station is about as picturesque as tourist towns come in California.

It is also a place that, at the moment, is roiling with anger. A place where many locals feel they’re waging an uphill battle for the soul of their community.

The alleged villains are unexpected, here in one of the cradles of the organic food movement: the National Park Service and a slate of environmental organizations that maintain that the herds of cattle that have grazed on the Point Reyes Peninsula for more than 150 years are polluting watersheds and threatening endangered species, including the majestic tule elk that roam the windswept headlands.

In January, the park service and environmental groups including the Nature Conservancy and the Center for Biological Diversity announced a “landmark agreement” to settle the long-simmering conflict. The settlement, resolving a lawsuit filed in 2022, would pay most of the historic dairies and cattle ranches on the seashore to move out. The fences would come down, and the elk would roam free. Contamination from the runoff of dairy operations would cease. There would be new hiking trails. More places to camp. More conservation of coastal California landscapes.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-03-21/point-reyes-historic-dairies-ousted-over-environmental-concerns

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Treasured California dairies to close. Point Reyes locals say it's conservation gone mad (Original Post) Zorro May 30 OP
Pizza Cheese is the only thing keeping multigraincracker May 30 #1
Shock to me. quaint May 30 #2
I got spoiled in Italy. multigraincracker May 30 #3
Hard disagree. Gouda or die! And Point Reyes is very special, though I'm not a Blue fan. LauraInLA May 30 #6
Camp grounds and hiking trails open the door to a different kind of pollution Auggie May 30 #4
My great grandparents were ranchers and dairy people. hunter May 30 #5

quaint

(3,894 posts)
2. Shock to me.
Fri May 30, 2025, 10:01 AM
May 30

We export a lot.
It's my main source of protein.
Charcuterie boards are quite popular.

LauraInLA

(2,060 posts)
6. Hard disagree. Gouda or die! And Point Reyes is very special, though I'm not a Blue fan.
Fri May 30, 2025, 03:24 PM
May 30

I wish they could figure out some way to coexist. At least one cheese maker is a woman-owned business, too. And it’s going to hit the community, especially the migrant workers, very hard.

“The settlement contains some money to help workers and tenants make the transition; it has been reported to be about $2.5 million, but many in West Marin think that is insufficient to replace people’s homes and livelihoods.”

Auggie

(32,332 posts)
4. Camp grounds and hiking trails open the door to a different kind of pollution
Fri May 30, 2025, 11:13 AM
May 30

If the goal is to return the area to nature, then return the area to nature

Not only will elk thrive but so will their natural predators and the local ecosystem.

hunter

(39,542 posts)
5. My great grandparents were ranchers and dairy people.
Fri May 30, 2025, 12:44 PM
May 30

My dad's mom and aunt were born to a California coast dairy family but the two young women didn't like cows or dairymen and ran away to work and play in the glamorous Hollywood of the 1920s.

It's sad that a way of life is disappearing but protecting what little remains of natural California coastal ecosystems is more important. There's nothing sacred about cows.

I understand the melancholy. It must have been sad for my great grandmother when she sold her last shares in her family's dairy business and moved in with her daughter.

Reflecting on the original post, here's the obituary of a California Dairyman of my own acquaintance,whose cows lived an idyllic life compared to many dairy farms in California's Central Valley:

https://www.montereycountynow.com/news/local_news/lou-calcagno-a-lifelong-dairyman-and-longtime-monterey-county-supervisor-dies-at-87/article_afdb188c-4ced-11ee-bd91-77dc2e40f584.html

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