Save Mount Diablo Signs Agreement to Protect Smith Canyon Recreational Gateway to Curry Canyon

Save Mount Diablo staff and others explore the beautiful landscape in the proposed Smith Canyon acquisition

Clayton, CA—Save Mount Diablo (SMD) has successfully entered into a purchase agreement to buy and protect the beautiful and strategic 28.73-acre Smith Canyon for $650,000, east of Clayton. It could be a recreational gateway to Curry Canyon from Morgan Territory Road if the purchase is completed. The nonprofit land conservation organization is working quickly to raise funds because the purchase must be completed in just 28 days, by early April. It is one of several properties Save Mount Diablo hopes to protect with the final $2 million in fundraising of its $15 million Forever Wild Capital Campaign.

Protection of 28.73-acre Smith Canyon will provide legal and practical access from a public road to Save Mount Diablo’s conserved 1,080.53-acre Curry Canyon Ranch. Narrow Curry Canyon and Curry Canyon Road have been contemplated as an eastside entrance to Mount Diablo for more than 110 years, but complicated legal access issues have made public access difficult. Smith Canyon would provide a second, alternate access route into Curry Canyon with clear legal access rights.

View of Mount Diablo from Smith Canyon“The Smith Canyon property is an incredible recreational gateway to the magical Curry Canyon on the east side of Mount Diablo,” said Ted Clement, SMD’s Executive Director. “But what also strikes me about the property is that it has great potential as a beautiful stand-alone preserve by itself.

“You can imagine groups of school children experiencing it, working with volunteers to replant trees to restore former building pads, taking care of the land together, and hiking its trails up to the stunning view spots where they can sit to appreciate and connect with nature. I didn’t expect the beautiful vistas of North Peak and Mount Diablo that we discovered on the high points of the land.”

Smith Canyon grasslands and oak woodlands“How often do you get to save an entire canyon,” said Seth Adams, SMD’s Land Conservation Director. “Smith Canyon is lovely. It’s one main lushly wooded stream canyon with several smaller drainages rising to ridges on either side and toward a small peak on our neighboring Curry Canyon Ranch.

“Despite limited rain over the past month, it’s bright green and spring wildflowers are appearing everywhere. There were several approved subdivisions on the property that luckily never took place, but the large building pads show how threatened it has been. Its purchase would be another piece in our Curry Canyon puzzle and end that threat forever.”

Save Mount Diablo staff and others at Smith Canyon with blue oak woodlands rising behind them

In addition to its value for recreational and other access, Smith Canyon is important from a conservation perspective. The land has blue oak woodland and a live oak-bay riparian corridor. California red-legged frog and Alameda whipsnake are special status species likely to be present on the property. Further, the land is contiguous with Save Mount Diablo’s conserved Curry Canyon Ranch, so its protection will add to the important corridor of conserved lands in the Mount Diablo area, which is critical for wildlife and water resources. The land also affords beautiful scenic vistas to passersby on the public Morgan Territory Road.

People walking up Smith CanyonFurther, the oak woodland, oak savanna, and grasslands on the property serve as a carbon sink. In August 2019, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued a new report, Climate Change and Land, that focused on how land is under increased pressure from humans and climate change but also noted land is a critical part of the solution to climate change.

Land conservation mitigates against climate change in lasting ways. For example, forests and other undeveloped lands absorb greenhouse gases, thereby acting as carbon sinks, keeping those gases out of the atmosphere.

“We’re looking for angels,” said Karen Ferriere, SMD’s Development Director, about the immediate need to raise $650,000 in 28 days, “and talking to everyone we can.”

Smith CanyonThe money that Save Mount Diablo must raise for this proposed acquisition project will be part of the organization’s Forever Wild Capital Campaign. This campaign has an ambitious $15 million goal to help Save Mount Diablo expedite its land acquisition efforts while also giving the organization the resources to steward and defend its conserved lands in perpetuity. To date, almost $13 million has been raised against the $15 million goal. These funds have enabled Save Mount Diablo to do strategic land acquisition projects, like its Curry Canyon Ranch and North Peak Ranch projects, while also building a sizable permanent Stewardship Endowment Fund for the ongoing care of the organization’s protected lands.

As part of the Forever Wild Capital Campaign, Save Mount Diablo also recently signed an option agreement that will give the organization two years to raise over $1.04 million so that it can purchase a perpetual conservation easement on about 154 critical open space acres on the northeast slopes of Mount Diablo, a mile-wide property owned by the Concord Mt. Diablo Trail Association.

Map of Smith Canyon showing nearby protected lands and lands still at risk

History

Curry Canyon became well-known to generations of East Bay residents visiting the Curry Creek Park picnic area, which operated from 1925 to 1979, and then to the present day as a small trailer park. Sylvester Olofson, his wife Louise, and his brother Albert Olofson bought 1,430 acres on Curry Canyon in 1895; ran cattle; and in 1925, opened Curry Creek Park. Over time Curry Canyon was divided between the two brothers’ heirs. After World War II, Curry Creek Park and neighboring Wright Canyon were owned and operated by Sylvester and Louise Olofson’s grandson, Martin Wright, and his wife, Dorothy. The larger part of the property was a cattle ranch run by Albert’s sons Raymond and Robert Olofson.

Closeup map of the proposed Smith Canyon acquisition next to Curry Canyon Ranch and then Mount Diablo State ParkIn 1961 Ettore and Geraldine Bertagnolli bought most of the Olofson cattle ranch and renamed it Curry Creek Ranch, but it included limited access for anything but ranching. Ettore Bertagnolli soon started proposing small subdivisions, but he was blocked by the Wrights’ ownership of the road lower in the canyon. In 1968 he subdivided Smith Canyon off his property but retained a 60’ road easement, to be located and constructed later.  He used that “paper road” to complete several subdivisions in the canyon.

Albert and Bouwina Reyenga bought Smith Canyon in 1968 and proposed a four-unit subdivision there. Roads and large building pads were graded but without professional engineering.

The subdivision was approved in 1970, but subject to various improvements including engineering improvements to the roads and pads, and paving of the access easement to the Bertagnollis’ Curry Creek Ranch. The improvements were never completed, and the approval lapsed.

The same subdivision was proposed again by the Reyengas in 1992, but building regulations had become more stringent. For the first time Save Mount Diablo was involved, requesting that a public access into Curry Canyon be reserved.

The second subdivision wasn’t completed, once again because of the cost of the roads and other building improvements. In 2000 the Reyengas sold the property to the current owners, E & B Farms, who faced similar constraints including the access easement into Curry Canyon.

In 2013 Save Mount Diablo bought the 1,080-acre Bertagnolli property and renamed it Curry Canyon Ranch. The purchase included the partly improved and unrestricted access easement up Smith Canyon. Purchase of Smith Canyon would eliminate the threat of houses and further subdivision and avoid potential conflicts with access and recreational use.

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Save Mount Diablo

Save Mount Diablo is a nationally accredited, nonprofit land trust founded in 1971 with a mission to preserve Mount Diablo’s peaks, surrounding foothills, and watersheds through land acquisition and preservation strategies designed to protect the mountain’s natural beauty, biological diversity, and historic and agricultural heritage; enhance our area’s quality of life; and provide recreational opportunities consistent with the protection of natural resources. Learn more at www.savemountdiablo.org.

High resolution maps, photos, and press release files: http://bit.ly/SmithCanyon

Image credits: All photos—credit: Scott Hein.

Map credits: All maps—credit: Save Mount Diablo.

Captions:

  1. Save Mount Diablo staff and others gather in Smith Canyon, a natural recreational gateway to Mount Diablo State Park.
  2. View of Mount Diablo’s peaks from Smith Canyon.
  3. The lush beauty of Smith Canyon’s grasslands and oak woodlands.
  4. Save Mount Diablo staff and others enjoying Smith Canyon, with blue oak woodlands rising on a hill behind them.
  5. People hiking up Smith Canyon toward the adjacent Curry Canyon Ranch, Save Mount Diablo’s signature 1,080-acre property that is next to Mount Diablo State Park.
  6. Live oaks, bays, blue oaks, and other trees on the Smith Canyon property provide habitat for many wildlife species and serve as a carbon sink.
  7. Map of the Smith Canyon acquisition and Concord Mt. Diablo Trail Ride Association planned conservation easement showing their adjacency to other protected lands as well as lands still potentially threatened with development.
  8. Close-up map of the Smith Canyon acquisition showing its position between Curry Canyon Ranch and Morgan Territory Road, as well as its natural fit to allow people to access Mount Diablo State Park.

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