Robin Wainwright could
have cashed-in on pristine grassland and forest he owned along the border with
Yosemite National Park — building an upscale resort for a few fortunate guests.
Associated
Press report continues:
Wainwright
and his wife Nancy, however, decided to take a slight loss on their investment and
sold it to a land trust, which donated it Wednesday to Yosemite.
It
expands the park by 400 acres, Yosemite's largest addition in nearly 70 years.
The
public will soon be able to enjoy the wildlife and natural scenery, such as the
explosion of flowers that blossom each spring and bears that often stroll
through the property.
"To
have that accessible by everyone to me is just a great thing," Robin
Wainwright said. "It was worth losing a little bit of money for
that."
Ackerson
Meadow is located along Yosemite's western boundary. The area was purchased
from private owners by the Trust for Public Land, a nonprofit conservation
group, for US$2.3 million and donated to the park.
Officials
told The Associated Press that Yosemite will preserve the land — historically
used for logging and cattle grazing — as habitat for wildlife such as the great
grey owl, the largest owl in North American and listed as endangered by
California wildlife officials.
Shaun
Crook, president of the Tuolumne County Farm Bureau, said that not everybody
supported turning the private property over to the government.
For
at least a century, the grassy Ackerson Meadow has fattened beef cattle and
been used for logging, he said.
"That
will no longer happen," he said, adding that both industries are being
squeezed out of business. "I fear we'll lose the value of that
meadow."
The
park's boundary has seen some minor changes over the years, but this expansion
is the largest since 1949 to the park of nearly 750,000 acres total, park
spokesman Scott Gediman said.
More
than 4.5 million people are expected to visit Yosemite this year, which Gediman
said would set a record for the park that celebrated its 125th anniversary in
2015.
Other
draws to the park include the massive Half Dome rock and the sheer, granite
face of El Capitan — both admired by visitors from floor of Yosemite Valley.
Elsewhere
in the park stand groves of giant sequoia, some of the oldest and largest
living things on Earth.
Visitors
pass Ackerson Meadow on their way to Hetch Hetchy reservoir, which provides
drinking water to San Francisco.
The
land was bought with US$1.53 million from the Trust for Public Land and US$520,000
from the Yosemite Conservancy, which supports a variety of projects in the
park. Anonymous donors contributed the rest, Gediman said.
"We
are delighted and proud to make this gift to Yosemite and the people of
America," said Will Rogers, president of the Trust for Public Land.
The
land completes the park's original plans from 1890, which included Ackerson
Meadow, said Yosemite Conservancy's President Frank Dean.
"It's a stunning open meadow surrounded by forest habitat, which supports a wide variety of flora and fauna," said Park Superintendent Don Neubacher.
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