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Hidden Springs Ranch
California Central Coast winemakers Steve and Pamela Storrs are taking
steps to ensure that wildlife has a home on their Corralitos property.
For the last twenty years, the Storrs have produced high quality wines
from grapes grown by others in Santa Cruz Mountains. Over time, their
dedication to quality has been recognized with multiple awards, including
two gold medals for Storrs Winery at the San Francisco Chronicle Wine
Competition this year for their consistently high-performing chardonnays.
It wasn't until more recently that they purchased 56 acres situated in
the Lower Corralitos watershed of Santa Cruz County. Dubbed “Hidden
Springs Ranch,” the Storrs replaced a low value apple orchard with
a new vineyard of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes. About forty percent
of the property remains in a natural state. By no means an oversight,
the Storrs plan to leave the majority of this area wild and make additional
improvements to benefit wildlife. They are providing wildlife paths, protecting
water quality with filter strips of native grasses and wildflowers, supporting
beneficial insects, and restoring the property’s oak woodland community
surrounding the vineyard. Wild Farm Alliance and Community Alliance with
Family Farmers (CAFF) are assisting with these improvements with funding
through the Wildlife Conservation Board.
With a long-term vision of increasing biodiversity on their property while
maintaining the productivity of cultivated areas, the couple plans to
build a winery with a tasting room open to the public by appointment.
The property will become a destination and demonstration site where their
customers see first hand how their nature-friendly wines are produced.
The inaugural planting was a line of native shrubs and trees snaking along
the edge of the property that is bordered by a road. Located outside of
the fencing, the original intent of this hedgerow was to provide local
wildlife with a safer, sheltered corridor for movement. It ended up serving
an educational purpose, as well, when the Storrs graciously opened their
property to students from Renaissance High, a local continuation school
bent on giving kids likely to slip through the cracks a second chance.
Two vanloads of students learned about the importance of biodiversity
in the context of agriculture and helped get plants situated in the ground
and mulched. They enjoyed visiting the farm, and plans for their involvement
in future plantings are underway.
At first glance, the uncultivated portions of Hidden Springs Ranch appear
fairly intact. Willow, oak, black walnut, elderberry, mugwort, monkeyflower,
and other native shrubs, forbs, and sedges form an abundant and diverse
matrix of vegetation. But the disturbed nature of the site has facilitated
the introduction of problematic invasive species, such as French broom
and pampas grass. Invasive species are one of the principal threats to
biodiversity, and reintroducing native plants will help stop the further
spread of non-natives and increase habitat value for native wildlife that
have co-evolved with native plants.
In addition to improving existing habitat, project plans include buffer
zones between cultivated and natural areas. In October, a swathe of native
grasses and wildflowers was seeded between vine rows and a riparian drainage
to guard against soil erosion and support beneficial insects. This November,
native shrubs and trees will be planted along the upper portion of the
drainage, connecting two pieces of habitat and providing wildlife with
an additional option for movement and shelter.
The Storrs are doing their part to make a real contribution to the health
of California’s Central Coast ecosystems, both through on-the-ground
installation of native habitat and through education. With the support
of WFA and CAFF, they are implementing change while demonstrating how
agricultural lands can provide landscape-level environmental benefits
to the region.
For information on Storrs Winery and Hidden Springs Ranch, visit www.storrswine.com/
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