We are the San Diego Regional Group of the Power In Nature Coalition

Sky Oaks

The Sky Oaks property conservation purchase will forever protect 638 acres of extraordinary natural land bordering expansive other conserved lands in the rural northern San Diego County headwaters of the Santa Margarita and San Luis Rey rivers. The purchase will help ensure permanent protection of a regionally significant wildlife movement corridor, special ecosystems, and abundant biological diversity in a transition zone between semi-arid chaparral lands and arid desert lands.

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About This Project

 

Who is proposing this project?

Lead Organization: The Chaparral Lands Conservancy

Contact Information:

www.chaparralconservancy.org

 

What is proposed?

The Sky Oaks property conservation purchase would complete an important legacy of  conservation and scientific research on a special natural landscape and resources in northern  San Diego County. The singular and overarching goal of the Sky Oaks property conservation  purchase is to permanently protect the property from development and add protected land to an  existing larger area of conserved lands supporting regionally significant natural resources. 

The Adams family of San Diego is an enthusiastic willing seller of the Sky Oaks property. From  1998 to 2010, the family donated or sold approximately 2,500 acres of their original larger property in Chihuahua Valley for conservation and scientific research including the area that is  now a part of the BLM’s Johnson Canyon Area of Critical Environmental Concern that borders  the Sky Oaks property for sale and San Diego State University’s nearby Sky Oaks Field Station. 

The Sky Oaks property is located at the very edge of California’s mediterranean climate in the  headwaters of two major southern California watersheds, the San Luis Rey and Santa Margarita  rivers and supports many sensitive ecosystems including oak woodlands, open grasslands,  great basin sagebrush meadows (unusual in San Diego County), springs, riparian scrub, and  undisturbed ribbonwood and chamise chaparral shrublands. The property is part of a critical  regional wildlife movement corridor for mountain lions, deer, and other larger mammals that  connects the otherwise isolated Palomar Mountain and Santa Ana mountains with a larger area  of conserved lands in northeastern San Diego County and southwestern Riverside County  including Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, BLM lands, the Cleveland National Forest, and the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument and San Bernardino National  Forest. Several special species have been documented on nearby conserved lands and are  very likely to occupy similar habitat on the Sky Oaks property including arroyo toad, badger,  Bell’s sparrow, burrowing owl, mountain lion, Quino checkerspot butterfly, southern mule deer,  Stephen’s kangaroo rat, western spadefoot toad, and Orcutt’s brodiaea among others. 

Development is a real threat to the Sky Oaks property if it is not purchased for permanent  preservation. The Sky Oaks property is for sale and could easily be developed with hundreds of  new homes under existing zoning and new state laws favoring subdivision and denser  development. Energy developers are interested in the area for industrial solar energy facilities and abundant groundwater could be mined from several wells on the property. Development for  residences, energy, or water would result in the direct loss of habitat and sensitive species as  well as harmful edge effects like noise and lighting in the heart of a relatively intact natural  landscape. Development would also likely impact scientific research at the nearby Sky Oaks  Field Station. And any development would be dependent on wells and groundwater pumping for  water supplies that would deplete the important aquafer supporting perennial water and riparian habitat and species in the headwaters of the San Luis Rey and Santa Margarita rivers.

 Project Location

Nearest City and Distance To: Temecula, 35 miles west/northwest via Highway 79

Specific Location (Address): (Multiple addresses) 31225 Chihuahua Valley Rd; 31475  Chihuahua Valley Road; 31750 Chihuahua Valley Rd, Warner Springs, CA 92086

The Sky Oaks property is located in Chihuahua Valley, a rural residential community in the  unincorporated County of San Diego near the border with Riverside County. The property  borders thousands of acres of federal public land owned by the U.S. Bureau of Land  Management (BLM) and is a part of a contiguous natural landscape across hundreds of square  miles of other state and federal conserved lands. The property is located at approximately  4,500ft elevation so is subject to all four seasons including cold winters with snow fall and hot summers with thunderstorms. Most of the property is valley terrain and vegetation typical for the  mountainous region of eastern San Diego County with large relatively flat meadows covered  with oak groves, Great Basin sagebrush, and grasslands or in rolling hills and ravines with  various chaparral vegetation communities. Nearby terrain steepens into 6,000ft mountains with  more chaparral and some pine trees or drops into canyons with the headwaters of the San Luis  Rey and Santa Margarita rivers.

Why is this project on the 30×30 list?

This project promotes the 30×30’s goals of increasing climate resilience, protecting biodiversity,  and benefiting the (human) community. The project increases climate resiliency because it will  protect large, native, old-growth oak trees and chaparral vegetation that serve as effective  carbon sinks, because it will protect a large, contiguous landscape of native ecosystems that  are more resilient to climate perturbations, and because it will prevent development that would  produce significant vehicle miles traveled and other climate impacts. The project will protect  significant biodiversity values because it’s part of a large, contiguous landscape of native  ecosystems, because it’s located in an important regional wildlife movement area, and because  it provides habitat for several sensitive and listed species. And the project will benefit the human  community by improving access to two popular state recreation trails, the California Riding and  Hiking Trail that crosses the property and the nearby Pacific Crest Trail as well as by increasing  climate resiliency and protecting biodiversity.

 How will this project be completed?

This project will be completed with the purchase and transfer of title for the Sky Oaks property  by and to one or a combination of agencies and non-profit organizations, the County of San  Diego Parks and Recreation Department, United States Bureau of Land Management, Wildlife  Conservation Board, and The Chaparral Lands Conservancy.