- Author: Igor Lacan
On Aug. 23, UC ANR leaders visited UC Elkus Ranch and UCCE San Mateo/San Francisco offices to meet with our county partners and local stakeholders, and learn about the research, education, extension and outreach programs offered to residents of the two counties.
Brent Hales, associate vice president, led the visit alongside Vice Provost Daniel Obrist, Director of Cooperative Extension Lynn Schmitt-McQuitty, and Director of Workplace Inclusion and Belonging Elizabeth Moon.
The visit started at the CalFresh Healthy Living, UCCE offices in South San Francisco where the leaders met with our federally funded nutrition education program staff and learned about the impactful projects in school cafeterias and early education centers.
The visit continued at Elkus Ranch, where ANR leaders toured the grounds, learning about the school visit programs – the mainstay of the Elkus mission – but also learning about the ranch facilities and our other activities. Our UC Master Gardener and Master Food Preserver program volunteers were on hand to introduce their respective programs and impacts – and to share some wonderful, preserved food.
Our guests then settled into a working lunch, meeting our local partners from county agencies, elected officials, community groups and local stakeholders, for whom we organized multiple tours of the ranch.
In the early afternoon, the visit continued at the Phoenix Garden at the San Mateo Juvenile Justice Facility, where the educators from our Youth Development program and our county partners described the groundbreaking work with youth in gardening, food production, and even beekeeping – followed by honey tasting!
The tour concluded at the Gardening Education Center at the San Mateo County Event Center. Here our Master Gardener program volunteers were once again the tour guides, showcasing not only the unique GEC facilities that they have constructed in partnership with the San Mateo County Fair to propagate plants and offer hands-on classes, but also demonstrating their ability to grow some truly impressive tomatoes!
With honey and tomatoes in hand, and having connected with our many partners, stakeholders and friends, our guests departed, impressed with the reach, impact and breadth of services that our Cooperative Extension office provides to the residents of San Mateo and San Francisco counties.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
The New Year's Eve storm ushered in 2023 and took out the bridge crossing Purisima Creek to Elkus Ranch Environmental Education Center. On June 1, Elkus Ranch reopened to the public with a new bridge.
Igor Lacan, interim director of UC Cooperative Extension in San Mateo and San Francisco counties and UCCE Bay Area environmental horticulture and urban forestry advisor, is grateful to everyone involved in getting Elkus Ranch's bridge replaced.
“Our construction office folks – Jeff Couture, Luzanne Martin and Alexander Cain – were hands-on from the first day to the bridge opening,” Lacan said. “I think they are now familiar with every square inch of our bridge, every pipe connection in our water system, and every idiosyncratic little detail of Elkus!”
For the five months until the bridge was completed, Elkus Ranch staff had to ride a bucket lift daily to get into the ranch to feed Sassy the donkey, the goats, sheep, rabbits, cats and other animals that live at Elkus Ranch, as well as do their other work.
“Our two ranch maintenance staffers, Augustine Aguilar and Bruno Acosta, waded the stream, cleared debris, carried water and hay bales for the animals, and in general did everything that needed to be done in order to both keep our animals alive AND to get everything ready for construction,” Lacan said.
“Our educators Beth Loof, Terri Pacheco, Holly Bono and Doug Meyer, and ranch manager Leslie Jensen ensured that both the animals were cared for and that our school clients were up-to-date on our repair progress.”
While the bridge was out, the local schoolchildren couldn't visit Elkus Ranch. Led by ranch educator Beth Loof with support from 4-H youth development advisor Sally Neas, the educators took their show on the road directly to the schools.
“Our office manager, Kathleen Stewart, kept everyone apprised of the situation, day-to-day, and ensured everyone's safety,” Lacan said.
In addition, Brian Oatman and David Alamillo in Environmental Health and Safety were instrumental in liaising with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other agencies to secure support for repairs.
Tu Tran, associate vice president for business operations, stepped in several times not only to facilitate high-level discussion and ensure funding, but also to help resolve some unexpected issues on the ground, Lacan said.
On June 10, the team welcomed visitors to the annual Sheep to Shawl at Elkus Ranch to see sheep being sheared, watch wool spinning and try dying wool.
Coastside Magazine interviewed Jensen and other Elkus Ranch employees about the reopening: https://www.hmbreview.com/coastside_magazine/page-m-001/page_6437e17a-0a55-59d6-b468-1b27bb09ade5.html.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
As 2023 roared in like a lion, ushering in a series of storms, many Californians experienced some impact from flooding, power outages, fallen trees, road closures and even evacuations.
UC ANR colleagues at Elkus Ranch are continuing to deal with fallout from the storms, which swept away the bridge crossing the creek at the entrance to the property and knocked out the water pump.
“The New Year's storm washed out our bridge and severely restricted our access to Elkus Ranch,” said Frank McPherson, UCCE Bay Area director, by email on Jan. 11. “We currently have no vehicle access to the ranch and a few critical team members are only able to cross the stream via a bucket lift.
Staff members – as well as the goats, sheep, rabbits and other animals that live at Elkus Ranch – are fine, McPherson said. However, all events at Elkus Ranch for January and February events have been cancelled. McPherson is concerned not only that the facility isn't available to the San Mateo County community, but also because fees charged for events are used to pay for animal feed, veterinary services and some staff salaries.
He has been directing people who want to help to the donation button on the Elkus Ranch website.
As of Jan. 30, the power has been restored, but Elkus Ranch staff members are still slowly crossing the 30 feet over Purisima Creek by bucket lift to feed and care for the animals and tend to critical ranch operations.
“If all goes well, we should have a bridge in six weeks,” said Leslie Jensen, Elkus Ranch coordinator.
After the bridge is replaced, McPherson hopes to bring in portable toilets and bottled water while the water system is being repaired to reopen Elkus Ranch and resume programs by April.
- Author: Ricardo A. Vela
Un grupo de 120 estudiantes de quinto y sexto grado de la Escuela Primaria Cherryland, localizada en la Ciudad de Hayward, participaron recientemente, en el taller de 11 semanas del programa 4-H Water Wizards que incluyó además un viaje de aprendizaje al Centro de Educación Ambiental UC Elkus Ranch, en Half Moon Bay en donde aprendieron diferentes aspectos sobre la importancia del agua.
"Encontré tantas cosas, vi un cangrejo ermitaño, una estrella de mar, una anémona de mar", exclamó un estudiante de quinto grado participó en taller donde aprendió temas como:los ciclos del agua, las cuencas hidrográficas, la salinidad, la densidad del agua y los problemas del agua.
4-H Water Wizards es un programa de estudio patrocinado por Extensión Cooperativa de la Universidad de California, UCCE que tiene como propósito que estudiantes de bajos recursos, la mayoría latinos y afroamericanos tengan acceso a la ciencia práctica desde temprana edad a través de actividades que desarrollan con científicos latinos de UCANR que hablan en su idioma y se identifiquen con ellos.
En un mundo cada vez más complejo es crucial que los estudiantes adquieran habilidades, que los ayuden a analizar información, recaudar datos, observar y proponer ideas para resolver problemas y esto es precisamente lo que se aprende en 4-H Water Wizards que brinda a los niños y adolescentes la oportunidad de conocer y platicar con varios científicos y explorar oportunidades en las ciencias, tecnología, educación y matemáticas, grupos de estudio, conocido como STEM.
"Estoy muy feliz nos haya invitado al Rancho Elkus para que mis estudiantes puedan ser parte de esta gran oportunidad de experimentar la vida del rancho y conocer más sobre el mar", dijo JoDana Campbell, maestra de quinto grado de Cherryland Elementary.
Maestros y estudiantes hablaron con numerosos científicos sobre el agua, su uso y conservación. “Nos explicaron cómo funciona el agua, no solo en California, sino en general, en el mundo", dijo Campbell.
En el viaje de aprendizaje práctico, los estudiantes aprendieron, a través de una maqueta que representaba un modelo del medioambiente a pequeña escala, cómo es que el agua de lluvia se transporta a través de una comunidad.
Los jóvenes colocaron casas de plástico en la maqueta que simulaba el medioambiente y formaron arcilla en las paredes y presas para proteger sus casas de una posible inundación, tras observar una lluvia intensa, simulada en su comunidad y luego hablaron sobre los resultados.
"¡La presa lo empeoró!", dijo un estudiante.
"Tal vez deberíamos eliminar la presa", dijo Cassie Bonfil, estudiante de postgrado de UC Davis. "El agua podría fluir naturalmente hacia el río, con esto estamos impidiéndole ir al río y, va a subir hacia las casas".
Samuel Sandoval Solís, especialista en Extensión Cooperativa de la UCANR demostró a los estudiantes el movimiento del agua, cómo se va filtrando del suelo hacia el subsuelo y cómo es que el agua se bombea de los acuíferos hacia los pozos.
“Es muy importante que los jóvenes latinos y de otras etnias vean y escuchen a científicos que son como ellos, que les hablan en español sobre temas tan vitales para nuestra entidad como es el abastecimiento y conservación del agua”, dijo Sandoval Solís.
Entre otras actividades efectuados en el UC Elkus Ranch, se alentó a los estudiantes a tocar y oler plantas que podrían usarse para hacer jabones, ungüentos y otros productos.
Los estudiantes además interactuaron con las ovejas, cabras, conejos, pollos y otros animales que viven en Elkus Ranch. Beth Loof, educadora comunitaria juvenil de 4-H, discutió el papel de los animales en la agricultura, así como sus relaciones con el suelo, el agua y los sistemas alimentarios.
“Me gusta mucho”, dijo Isaac, uno de los estudiantes participantes. “Me gustan mucho los ranchos, ha sido una gran experiencia, no es mi primera experiencia con animales, porque yo también soy de un rancho”, agregó entusiasmado el estudiante de quinto grado de la escuela Cherryland.
El viaje de aprendizaje práctico y el curso en sí, es el primero de una serie de eventos similares que tendrán lugar en los próximos cinco años con el fin de que jóvenes de comunidades menos privilegiadas puedan experimentar los beneficios de la ciencia en el medioambiente, especialmente en el agua y la crianza de animales de rancho.
El plan de estudios y el educador son subsidiados por el Instituto Nacional de Alimentos y Agricultura del USDA, pero para contratar más autobuses y transportar a los estudiantes a Elkus Ranch para el aprendizaje práctico al aire libre, McPherson está ejecutando una campaña de recaudación de fondos. Las personas que deseen hacer algún donativo favor de enviar su cheque al proyecto Bay Area 4-H Water Wizards , también se puede donar a través de este enlace: https://donate.ucanr.edu/?program=California 4-H&county=Alameda.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
Curious goats milled around the masked elementary school students who were raking out the livestock stalls. After a year of social distancing due to COVID-19 precautions, the goats were enthralled by the youngsters who visited UC Agriculture and Natural Resources' Elkus Ranch Environmental Education Center in San Mateo County.
“The animals were missing kids, they're used to getting more loving,” said Beth Loof, 4-H youth community educator at Elkus Ranch. “Goats are really social. They get distressed when they are alone.”
Tucked behind the rolling green hills of Half Moon Bay off state Route 1, Elkus Ranch is a working landscape that, in a normal year, hosts people from all over the San Francisco Bay Area for field trips, conferences, community service projects, internships and summer camps.
During the pandemic, UC ANR has limited visitors to “social bubbles” of children and adults for outdoor education at the 125-acre ranch, which has implemented a variety of COVID protocols for the safety of visitors. During Adventure Days, young people spend four hours caring for animals, tending gardens, making a nature-themed craft project and hiking around the property.
“We would love to bring children from urban areas of the Bay Area to Elkus Ranch,” said Frank McPherson, director of UC Cooperative Extension for Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and San Francisco counties. “So they can learn where food comes from, before it gets to the grocery store.”
On a sunny spring day, 11 students from Share Path Academy in San Mateo visited for Adventure Day, as their first field trip of the year.
“Coming here and having the hands-on learning, being able to hold objects, touch objects, interact with things, it's all part of learning,” said Erin McCoy, a Share Path Academy teacher. “In science, you can talk about certain things in classes, but when you come out here and you actually apply it to what they're doing and it's tactile for them, at this age, it's really important.”
The group – composed of McCoy, nine fifth-graders, a fourth-grader, a sixth-grader and a couple of parents – spent the day outdoors petting the donkeys, goats, chickens, rabbits and sheep and learning about the animals that live at Elkus Ranch.
“I think it's been a great opportunity for our children to be outdoors and to enjoy nature, to reconnect with the environment – animals, plants, just the outdoors,” said parent Christina Cabrera. “It's great for the children and the adults accompanying them.”
Inside the barn, Loof invited the students to sit on straw bales – not the hay bales, which are food for the livestock. She showed the students how wool that is sheared from sheep's coats is spun into yarn. First, they carded the wool. “You're going to card it like this. It's like brushing your hair, but it has a little resistance so it can be a workout,” Loof said, cautioning the students wearing shorts to be careful not to brush their skin with the sharp, wire teeth of the tool. “Get all the fibers nice and flat, lined up, going one way. Fibers are what we call all the strands of wool.”
After twisting the wool by hand into yarn, the students fashioned the natural-colored fuzzy strands into bracelets.
“We love Elkus,” said McCoy, whose son has attended summer camp at the ranch. “This place is awesome.”
Taking a break for lunch, the group walked down the dirt path from the barn past the livestock pens to wash their hands, then sat at primary-colored picnic tables to eat next to a garden.
After lunch, the students exercised their creativity with buckets of clay to mold into animals or roll out and cut with cookie cutters.
In the chicken coop, Loof, who is one of four community educators who work at Elkus Ranch, shared animal science facts such as, “Eggs are viable for two weeks after the hen sits on them in the nest.” She also told funny stories such as how Dora, the white bantam, escaped the coop and ate all the chard in the garden.
“I wish this was my school,” said one student as he held an egg-laying hen.
The visit ended with a garden tour and a game of hide and seek among the raised beds of onions, squash and other vegetables.
“Being outdoors is an important counterbalance to being on a computer,” said Cabrera, who is also a San Mateo High School wellness counselor. “It's a great addition to what we're doing. Just to be with animals.”
Elkus Ranch is still offering Adventure Days for children; the cost is $425 for 10 people. Small groups are also invited for 90-minute visits.
“If all goes well, we plan to offer a three-day mini-camp Monday through Wednesday of Thanksgiving week,” said Leslie Jensen, Elkus Ranch coordinator.
For more information about Elkus Ranch activities, visit ucanr.edu/adventure or contact Jensen at LKJensen@ucanr.edu.