Bohemian Collaborative

In 2020, in the middle of the pandemic, a group of large-parcel landowners and organizations based in OAEC’s Dutch Bill Creek and adjacent watersheds began to meet online about collaborating on various fire and water restoration projects. Coming together over common challenges – from a lack of financial resources, to difficulty finding skilled labor, to the ecological scars left by our region’s history of intensive logging, vineyards, and rangelands – the group also recognized the wealth of shared opportunities and the impact we could have by approaching stewardship from a landscape-scale rather than parcel by parcel.

In January 2024, the Bohemian Collaborative held a gathering at OAEC’s Retreat Center with over 50 people, including a Q&A with representatives from the County of Sonoma, Sonoma County Ag + Open Space, CalFire, and Gold Ridge RCD. Photo by Brock Dolman.

 

Since then, this effort has grown and been formalized into the Bohemian Collaborative, a subcommittee of the 501(c)(3) Safer West County. The Collaborative is made up of over 40 large-parcel landowners (~50+ acres) representing nearly 20,000 acres surrounding the watersheds/firesheds of Dutch Bill Creek, Green Valley, Willow Creek, and Salmon Creek. The Collaborative strives to improve the ecological function and health of our diverse vegetation communities, while increasing the resiliency of the adjoining wildland-urban interface (WUI) communities of Graton, Forestville, Guerneville, Monte Rio, Camp Meeker, Occidental, Freestone, Bodega, and Bodega Bay.

Members of the Bohemian Collaborative meet regularly towards identifying shared priorities, pursuing potential grant opportunities, crowdsourcing knowledge, and determining priority projects we can tackle together. A joint Bohemian Collaborative Stewardship Plan is also in the process of being developed in collaboration with Gold Ridge Resource Conservation District to summarize this data into a comprehensive landscape-level plan to help guide future projects and improve the health of our forests, waterways, and overall resilience. By working with other community partners like Cal Fire and our local fire departments and resource agencies, this document will also serve as a Stewardship Plan that complies with State agency regulations, a requirement (and often big hurdle!) for landowners and organizations to pursue public funding programs.

Map of the Bohemian Collaborative Membership as of August 2024. Map created by Wuuii.

A number of successfully-funded projects have already come out of these collaborative efforts – from roadside fuel reduction and defensible space projects, to forest health and waterway erosion control initiatives. Beyond on-the-ground implementation, we also see the Bohemian Collaborative as a continuation of our Basins of Relations watershed organizing and a vehicle to continue stewarding ecological literacy, building relationships with our neighbors, and practicing participatory community governance. As one Collaborative member put it, “We lost our fire insurance this past year. This group is our fire insurance.”

Members worked with a Fire Chief from Cal Fire to identify top fire risks across the Bohemian Collaborative’s nearly 20,000 acres of public and private land ownership/management. Photo by Brock Dolman.

OAEC/Sowing Circle serves on the Bohemian Collaborative Steering Committee and hopes that this model of community-based organizing can inspire others to take a step towards collaborative, restorative action.

Bohemian Collaborative Steering Committee Volunteers include:

  1. Brock Dolman (OAEC & Sowing Circle)
  2. Craig Anderson (LandPaths)
  3. Dewey Watson (St. Dorothy’s Rest)
  4. Amy Beilharz, (Safer West County)
  5. Elizabeth Lawson (Safer West County)
  6. Ivan O’Neill (Safer West County & Madronus Wildfire Defense)
  7. Fred Euphrat (Forester, Occidental)
  8. Timothy Espinoza (Alliance Redwoods)
  9. John McDaniel (Camp Meeker Rec and Park District)

Interested in joining or learning more about the Bohemian Collaborative? Contact Safer West County here.