CDFW to Maintain Public Outreach Assembly on Lake Earl Wildlife Space in Del Norte County
The California Division of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) will maintain an in-person public outreach assembly Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022, to solicit enter on the administration of the Lake Earl Wildlife Space in Del Norte County. Matters to be mentioned embrace public entry, habitat situations, present and future restoration efforts.
Members of the general public and partnering organizations are inspired to attend. The assembly will happen from 3 to five p.m. on the Howonquet Corridor and Group Heart, 101 Indian Court docket, Smith River, Calif. The assembly may also be accessible nearly via the Microsoft Groups platform. Please e-mail CDFW’s Northern Area Lands and Wildlife Program Supervisor Shawn Fresz at Shawn.Fresz@wildlife.ca.gov for a gathering hyperlink and directions for submitting feedback and questions.
Lake Earl is a 6,100-acre wildlife space that borders the Pacific Ocean. Sand dunes extending inland are lined with scattered seashore grasses and different vegetation. The realm encompasses Lakes Earl and Tolowa, two lagoons related by a deep channel often known as “The Narrows,” and bordered by saltwater and freshwater marshes. Lake Earl is the most important coastal lagoon on the West Coast. Farther inland, the realm ends in upland fields and forest of Sitka spruce and pine bushes. Among the numerous wildlife species discovered on the areas embrace quail, grouse, canvasback, western grebe, coastal black-tailed deer and beaver.
Leisure actions well-liked on the Lake Earl Wildlife Space embrace fishing, boating, mountaineering, birding and waterfowl looking.
CDFW Photograph of American wigeon
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Media Contacts:
Shawn Fresz, CDFW Northern Area, (707) 601-6281
Peter Tira, CDFW Communications, (916) 215-3858