Wildflowers at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

Ookow
Ookow at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve. Photo by Bria Light

There’s still time to explore and learn at Save Mount Diablo’s Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve while the spring wildflowers are still blooming!

Native wildflowers that our staff have recently found at Mangini Preserve include

  • sticky monkey flower
sticky monkeyflower

Sticky monkey flower. Photo by Bria Light

  • black sage
black sage

Black sage. Photo by Bria Light

  • ookow
  • yarrow
Ookow and yarrow blooming at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

Ookow (purple) and yarrow (white) blooming at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve. Photo: Laura Kindsvater

  • royal larkspur
royal larkspur

Royal larkspur at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve this spring. Photo: Laura Kindsvater

  • hoptree
  • California poppy
california poppies

California poppy. Photo by Bria Light

  • Ithuriel’s spear
ithuriel's spear

Ithuriel’s spear. Photo by Bria Light

  • buttercup
  • owl’s clover
purple owl's clover

Owl’s clover. Photo by Bria Light

  • Pacific pea
  • blow wives
  • blue eyed grass
blue eyed grass

Blue eyed grass. Photo by Bria Light

  • buckeye
buckeye

Buckeye flowers. Photo by Mary Nagle

Get outside and immerse yourself in this extraordinary preserve!

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About Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

students looking at the view at Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

Conservation Collaboration Agreement at Mangini Preserve. Photo by Scott Hein

In spring of 2022, we unveiled the 208-acre preserve to the public for the first time.

Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve is the first educational preserve of its kind in Contra Costa County, free to use for groups of three to 100 people.

Visitors can have the preserve to themselves for a day. It’s a one-of-a-kind space within the county to immerse oneself within the solitude of nature—a short drive from the city.

mangini ranch educational preserve in concord california

Photo by Bria Light

People can walk through several distinctive habitats that intersect with each other. Habitats include streamside groves of trees, grasslands, oak savannas and woodlands, and a spring that supports the northernmost strand of desert olive.

You might also be lucky enough to spot an assortment of local wildlife including American kestrel, golden eagle, bobcat, and threatened Alameda whipsnake.

American kestrel perched on a wire

Keep an eye out for the American kestrel at Mangini! Photo by Brian Richardson

All of this can be enjoyed on a two-and-a-half-mile hike within the preserve. It’s a great family-friendly hike for warm summer days!

Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

Photo by Bria Light

Join us to save the remaining natural lands of Mount Diablo!

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