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Bat Chat: Nocturnal Knowledge with Dr. Winifred Frick

October 21, 2025

They’re more than creatures that go bump in the night—bats are important mammals in the redwood forest. Learn more about the bats that call California home with Dr. Winifred Frick, Chief Scientist at Bat Conservation International and a professor in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC Santa Cruz.

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Aerial photography of the Saddle Mountain conservation area at the east entrance to Big Basin Redwoods State Park. This view looks west along California Highway 236 into Big Basin. The canopy is dominated by the crowns of redwoods, most of which were burned by the 2020 CZU wildfire. Photo by Jordan Plotsky.

NEWS: Legislation Cutting Green Tape for Expanding California State Parks Now Law

October 13, 2025

AB 679 cuts through green tape so California State Parks and conservation partners can move quickly to protect our majestic redwoods, expand parklands, and bring new life to Big Basin and other parks devastated by the CZU Fire.

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Felled redwoods crisscross Mill Creek, surrounded by lush forest floodplain.

Forest Stewardship: Creek to Sea

September 17, 2025

As we mark the four-year anniversary of the Mill Creek dam removal, we’re celebrating new signs of hope for coho and the interconnected habitats of the Santa Cruz Mountains—from creek to sea—exploring how they support one another, and how we support them.

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Sempervirens Fund Forest Fellow, artist Jane Kim, strolls under the redwoods with Sempervirens Fund's Chief Marketing Officer Matt Shaffer.

Behind the Scenes: A Botanical Survey of Castle Rock Hollow

July 23, 2025

Among the hallmarks of healthy redwood forests are trees of varying ages growing and thriving together. Achieving this diversity of ages, or chronodiversity, can improve old-growth conditions, which leads to greater habitat diversity—two essential outcomes for redwoods to thrive in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Read on to learn about the importance of chronodiveristy in coast redwood forests.

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NEWS: Sempervirens Fund welcomes Raj-Ann Rehki Gill to its board of directors

July 17, 2025

Raj-Ann Rekhi Gill joins Sempervirens Fund’s board of directors to help lead conservation efforts at California’s first land trust.

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A black and white photo from Sempervirens Fund’s historic archive shows three men—in early 20th century suits consisting of dark colored trousers, white collared long-sleeved shirts with ties, dress shoes, and a few accessories like suspenders, vests, and hats reminiscent of fashion just after the turn of the century—sit casually atop a rock outcropping rising above the surrounding brush and forest like a spire as the view of forested mountainsides fade off into the distance behind them.

125 Years

May 7, 2025

125 years in photos! In 1900, a group of citizen activists banded together to form Sempervirens Club—now Sempervirens Fund—and committed to protecting and nurturing coast redwoods. As we reflect on our legacy and look forward to the future, we are forever thankful to our vast community of supporters like you for your unwavering commitment to protecting redwoods.

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Chronodiversity in Redwood Forests

March 11, 2025

Among the hallmarks of healthy redwood forests are trees of varying ages growing and thriving together. Achieving this diversity of ages, or chronodiversity, can improve old-growth conditions, which leads to greater habitat diversity—two essential outcomes for redwoods to thrive in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Read on to learn about the importance of chronodiveristy in coast redwood forests.

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Redwoods Festival | May 18, 2025

March 1, 2025

On May 18, 2025, 125 years after Sempervirens Fund was founded, hundreds of supporters joined us at the historic Roaring Camp, for our first-ever Redwoods Festival to celebrate 125 years of protecting redwoods in the Santa Cruz Mountains! Thank you for your support!

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Lush, green redwood forest fades into the fog beyond, by Ian Bornarth

Why Cut Redwoods?

February 27, 2025

More than a decade ago, Sempervirens Fund was confronted with a choice: do we actively manage the forests we protect to improve their health, or do we continue to protect the redwoods as we have for more than a century and allow nature to heal on its own timeline? Active management to restore the forest would include the need to cut down trees for the benefit of the forest. With the increasing urgency to help redwoods recover from past human impacts and prepare for accelerating climate changes ahead, we collaborated with Bay Nature Magazine and author Audrea Lim to look at the shift in our redwood revolution and explore the outcomes.

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The orange hard hat of forester Nadia Hamey stands out among the lush green foliage of Deadman’s Gulch in San Vicente Redwoods as she assesses the canopy for potential old-growth redwoods, by Orenda Randuch

Growing Old-Growth

February 14, 2025

An old-growth redwood is huge. One of the largest living things to ever grace the planet. And their size isn’t just impressive, it’s important. In the Santa Cruz Mountains very few old-growth redwoods remain, but you’re helping to grow the old-growth of tomorrow, today. Together, we’re restoring redwood forests faster for the trees, for wildlife, for the fight against climate change, and for future generations.

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Honoring Herb Grench

February 12, 2025

Sempervirens Fund joins the conservation community in mourning the passing of Herb Grench, a visionary leader whose efforts helped shape the Bay Area’s open space landscape. Herb dedicated his life…

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Fire blazes within the rings of a resprouting redwood stump surrounded by painted birds and other forest fauna, by Jane Kim, Ink Dwell

Sempervirens in Elementis

February 5, 2025

In her new art series, Sempervirens in Elementis—Latin for ever living in the elements, Sempervirens Fund’s Forest Fellow Jane Kim explores the relationship between redwoods and the elements: water, fire, earth, and air.

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Media Inquiries?

Call (650) 949-1453 x207 or email redwoods@sempervirens.org

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