Habitat Restoration & Land Management — San Francisco Bay Area
Healthy land isn't one thing — it's many ecosystems woven together. We work with landowners, conservation organizations, and public agencies to restore and steward that complexity, one landscape at a time.
The Mosaic Approach
Restoration that focuses on a single species or a single patch rarely holds. We take a landscape-scale view — working across riparian zones, coastal scrub, wetlands, grasslands, and oak woodland to rebuild the connections that make ecosystems resilient.
Prior experience
Land Management Services
Each landscape is different. Our services are tailored to where you are, what you're working with, and what the land needs most.
Site assessment, native planting plans, erosion control, riparian revegetation, and long-term monitoring — designed to restore function to degraded landscapes and support biodiversity at every layer.
Learn moreAssessment, treatment, and follow-up monitoring to remove invasive plants that crowd out native species and degrade habitat structure. We focus on lasting removal, not just surface clearing.
Learn moreUnderstanding both beaver behavior and human land needs to find solutions that work for both. Mitigating conflict through flow devices, site modifications, and management strategies that keep beavers on the landscape as the ecosystem engineers they are.
Learn moreDetailed site evaluations and written reports for landowners, municipalities, conservation districts, and state agencies — recommendations you can take to funders, boards, or contractors.
Learn moreKnowledge & Community
Whether you manage 500 acres or a backyard, understanding how ecosystems function — and what they need — changes how you see and interact with the land around you.
Learn from us
Practical writing from the field — restoration techniques, species profiles, case studies, and guides written for landowners and curious people alike. No jargon required.
What you can do
You don't need to be a professional to make a real difference. Small actions — removing one invasive, planting one native, protecting one riparian edge — add up across a landscape.