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Recent Press
MALT closes $2.7 million deal to preserve farmland
Tuesday, July 14, 2008
The historic 585-acre Dolcini Ranch will remain undeveloped following a deal involving landowners, the Marin Agricultural Land Trust and the federal government.(link to article)
Trust preserves scenic Marin mountain ranch
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
One of Marin's most scenic mountain ranches will remain undeveloped following a deal involving landowners, the Marin Agricultural Land Trust and the state. The 810-acre Panfiglio Ranch is perched in an isolated area on Three Peaks, a 1,160-foot mountain formation visible from Inverness and the Point Reyes National Seashore. (link to article)
Preservationists, ranchers, artists produce 'Ranches & Rolling Hills'
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
On one special weekend every spring, people line up outside the Druid's Hall on the picturesque Village Square in Nicasio to be first in line for an annual show of West Marin landscape paintings called "Ranches & Rolling Hills." (link to article)
Art show, book capture beauty of west Marin
Sunday, March 30, 2008
The beauty of the rural landscapes and ranchlands of western Marin County elegantly unfold in a lovely new art book, "Ranches & Rolling Hills: Art of West Marin -- A Land in Trust" (Windgate Press, $50). (link to article)
Recalling Stegner - and worrying about ecology
Monday, March 10, 2008
The ghost of Wallace Stegner hung over the rolling hills of West Marin this weekend, and judging by those gathered to honor his eloquent prose and essays about the American West, the ghost was not a happy one. (link to article)
Festival celebrates Wallace Stegner's West
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Point Reyes Station, that oddly blended enclave of businesses, farms and artists in rural West Marin, is about to be invaded by hundreds of fans of the modern American West's foremost man of letters: Wallace Stegner. (link to article)
MALT's Impressive Work is Adding Up
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
The nature of agriculture in West Marin is undergoing a transformation, with the families running ranches and dairies seeking out new ways to remain profitable and stay on their land. (link to article)
"Deal Bars Development at 2 West Marin Ranches"
January 3, 2008
Two Tomales ranches will not be developed for housing after owners cut deals with the Marin Agricultural Land Trust for development rights. (link to article)
"$1 Million Deal Prevents Development
at Ranch"
October 20, 2007
The 291-acre Crayne Ranch on Dillon Beach Road in Tomales is the
latest parcel to sell its development rights to the Marin Agricultural
Land Trust. (link to article)
"MALT's $4 Million Boost from a
Friend"
May 6, 2007
The Marin Agricultural Land Trust certainly knows the value of real
estate, especially when it comes to location. (link
to article)
"Bequests: Ag Land Trust gets $4
Million Estate in Marin"
May 7, 2007
The Marin Agricultural Land Trust received a bequest worth an estimated
$4 million, the largest gift in the nonprofit's 27-year history.
(link to article)
"$4 million Bequest to Protect Family
Farms"
May 1, 2007
The Marin Agricultural Land Trust, which protects West Marin farmland
from development, has received its biggest donation ever: a Mill
Valley estate valued at some $4 million. (link
to article)
"Ranches and Rolling Hills"
May 25, 2007
In 1980, a group of ranchers and environmentalists found the beauty
of West Marin so inspiring they formed the Marin Agricultural Land
Trust to work toward preserving the area’s farmlands for agricultural
use. Now artists draw inspiration from the pastoral landscape, with
more than 250 of their images for sale at the Ranches and Rolling
Hills art show. (link to article)
"Marin Ranchers Fear Countywide
Plan Would Invite Trespassers"
March 14, 2007
Marin farmers are angry about proposed new regulations that would
limit the size of the homes they could build and allow the county
to list their property as the site of future hiking trails. (link
to article)
"Cheese Producers Hailed as Model
for West Marin Development"
January 17, 2007
A Marshall couple has won approval for a sheep pasture and cheese
processing facility on a former cattle ranch. To property owners
Marcia Barinaga and Corey Goodman, the new ranch is the fulfillment
of a dream and the opportunity to join the growing number of artisan
cheese producers in Marin County. (link
to article)
"Keeping Farms in Business is Tricky"
January 10, 2007
MARIN is working hard to find ways to preserve the vitality of the
agricultural property. Making that task more difficult is the fact
those farms and ranches often are attractive to wealthy folks who
love the rural flavor but may not be worried about generating the
same farm-related income. (link
to article)
"Marin Ranchers Struggle to Pass
Legacy to Next Generation"
January 6, 2007
It's nearly the end of school vacation week, and Brigid Lunny's
two brothers are skiing in Lake Tahoe. Lunny, however, is managing
the little retail store at her family's cattle ranch and oyster
farm in Inverness. (link to
article)
"Tomales Land to Remain Open Space"
December 30, 2006
A 178-acre portion of the Tomales Farm and Dairy property known
as the Cerini Ranch will never be available for large-scale residential
development after a $1 million deal struck last week. (link
to article)
"$1 Million Land Buy Saves Ex-Dairy
Farm"
December 29, 2006
A conservation easement has saved a 178-acre former dairy farm from
possible development near Tomales in northwestern Marin County,
allowing
the owners to create a sustainable, organic creamery and produce
artisan
cheeses. (link to article)
"Marin Dishes Out its Best at Taste"
September 12, 2006
Scores of organic tidbits, Cuban music, a talk by best-selling author
and environmentalist Paul Hawken and a farmers market are all part
of this year's seventh annual Taste of Marin. The huge event, a
fund-raiser for Marin Organic, will take place Sundayfrom 4 to 9
p.m. at St. Vincent's School for Boys in San Rafael off Highway
101's Marinwood exit. (link
to article)
"The Roots of West Marin"
March 24, 2006
Julie Evans of Point Reyes said family farms have a bright future
in the county, but she wants to make sure the tradition stays strong.
"There always is the 'what if' factor," said Evans, who
runs Point Reyes Preserves, a line of pickled vegetables and jams
from her family's ranch. "We want the support of the county
and community and continue the farming tradition in West Marin.
That support increases our motivation." marinij.com
"On the Road"
August, 2005
The foods of Market Hall offer a daily invitation to tour
faraway places like Spain, Italy, France, and Thailand, but in fact,
most products for sale at Market Hall come from California. This
is no surprise when one considers the hospitable agricultural environment
and plethora of culinary innovators here in the Golden State. www.rockridgemarkethall.com
"Stewards of the land. Conservation
easements keep farm and ranchlands, vacation hideaways in the hands
of families and away from the paving contractor"
Sunday, February 6, 2005
It's a story you've probably heard: A family owned a cherished
vacation retreat, where the kids spent summers and traditions were
born. www.sfgate.com
"Opinion: Malt - a role model
in preservation"
Monday, January 30, 2005
THE MARIN Agricultural Land Trust is a local success story,
a terrific example of how environmental preservation and a strong
local economy don't have to be mutually exclusive.(link
to article)
"MALT buys 714-acre West Marin
dairy"
Friday, January 21, 2005
The development rights of the 714-acre Robert Giacomini Dairy
in Point Reyes Station have been purchased for $1.8 million by the
Marin Agricultural Land Trust, protecting the property permanently
for agricultural use and as open space. (link
to article)
"Taking Note of State Bonds' Contribution
to Open Space"
Point Reyes Light, May 27, 2004
The heads of California’s Coastal Conservancy and Farmland
Conservancy, along with others from Marin Agricultural Land Trust
and West Marin ranchers held an event for the press at James Grossi
Ranch near Stafford Lake highlighting the use of voter-approved
bond money to preserve agricultural land in Marin County.
www.ptreyeslight.com
"State bond funds
keep open spaces open"
Marin Independent Journal, May 26, 2004
State voters' approval of bonds to preserve open space is beginning
to have a local impact, and the Grossi ranch near Novato - where
ranchers and officials gathered yesterday - is a prime example.
Last December, the Marin Agricultural Land Trust (MALT) bought the
property's development rights for $1.8 million, essentially keeping
it from being developed.(link
to article)
"Land Trusts Offer
Solutions to Save Farm Acreage"
Capital Press, Agriculture Weekly, April 23, 2004
Every second, two acres of America’s farmland is paved, and
land trusts are fighting to stop this trend, said a trust representative
this week.
“It’s not accidental that we have so much open space
in Marin County,” Constance Washburn, education director for
the Marin Agricultural Land Trust, told a small crowd at the San
Francisco’s Ferry Building Farmers Market April 13. “We
are the foremost organization in the country leading the fight to
protect farmland and its easements.” www.capitalpress.info
"Back on the Ranch"
Marin Independent Journal, April 13, 2004
THE FIRST-GRADER is missing two front teeth, but his sense of smell
is working just fine.
"Ewww stinky," he exclaims, adding, moments later, "Did
I just step in a stink bomb?"A few feet away, Mimi Luebbermann,
surrounded by a gaggle of other first-graders on a field trip from
Mary E. Silveira School, is smiling. She wants the kids to smell
a bit of what she calls "real life." (link
to article)
"MALT Uses Big
Names to Help Save Farmland"
San Francisco Chronicle, Friday, June 7, 2002
Saving the Bay Area's remaining acres of farmland is as patriotic
as baseball and apple pie. That's the subtle message of a new advertising
campaign that features, in part, an abstract image of an American
flag. www.sfgate.com
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