A national monument stretching over seven counties was created in 2015 to protect impressive geological features, biodiversity and human history in northern California. We found that most people, including Forest Service employees, were unaware of its exact boundaries or even its existence. Yet, it was an area of stunning beauty that took us by surprise.
The approximately 330,000 acres of the national monument are managed by the US Forest Service, mainly as part of the Mendocino National Forest in the north, and by the Bureau of Land Management near Lake Berryessa in the south. Additionally, the University of California - Davis maintains a trail in a small section of the monument at the very southern bottom, where they are studying the effects of a highly destructive wildfire from 2015. All in all, the monument goes from the heights of the Snow Mountain at over 7,000 ft, covered in pines and California chaparral, to the oak savannah ecosystems in the middle portion, and the dry, arid mountains in the south.
We made our way into Berryessa Snow Mountain through the middle section, where in the sunset light a herd of Tule elk were feeding among the yellow grasses. Continuing north on gravel roads we reached the Mendocino forest where the following day we hiked in the Snow Mountain Wilderness. We spent the last day in the monument hiking up the Blue Ridge - Homestead trail in the portion where UC Davis is studying how the vegetation and fauna is returning after the wildfire. "The Berryessa Snow Mountain area is the heart of northern California's wild Inner Coast Range. Once covered by ocean waters, it is a landscape shaped by geologic forces of staggering power overlain with bountiful but fragile biodiversity. Anchored in the north by Snow Mountain's remote forests and in the south by scenic Berryessa Mountain, this area stretches through unbroken wildlands and important wildlife corridors, a mosaic of native grasslands, picturesque oak woodlands, rare wetlands, and wild chaparral" - this is how the Presidential Proclamation creating the monument opens. Adding on top of its natural beauty and importance, the Berryessa Snow Mountain area is also marked by thousands of years of Native American habitation and two centuries of settlers' history. The southernmost boundary of the monument is only a 1.5 hrs drive away from San Francisco.
Below is a selection of photographs in which we tried to capture some of the outstanding natural beauty of this place.
For a map of the national monument head here, although it's a pretty basic one. The US National Forest Service does have good maps of the Mendocino National Forest, which include the Snow Mountain Wilderness area in the national monument.