Lots of activities for children and adults at the SpringTime Festival. Learn More!
Volunteer Day, Nisenan Land Appreciation/Earth Day! Join us for another fun day under the Cedar Trees planting Native Plants in the Nisenan Village Demonstration Garden at Marshall-Gold State park! Bring your gloves.
Part research project and part coordinated community effort to restore the pollinator flyway, traversing habitats affected by highways and housing tracts, from the Central Valley up through the forests and farms of the Sierra Foothills. Sierra Monarch Rescue is collecting community members from Amador, El Dorado, Placer, Nevada and Yuba counties for this 10+ year long Citizen Scientist and Land Steward project to provide year-around nutritious forage; and collect data showing the improved migration of our pollinators; along the route historically established by the Nisenan Tribes of the Sierra Foothills. You can bee part of the flyway with us!
Volunteers are welcome to join us to build out the the Nisenan Village Pollinator Demonstration Garden at Marshall-Gold State Park. The park provides wheel barrows, shovels and rakes. Please bring your own gloves. Typically runs 10:30-3pm. See events for next volunteer day.
In collaboration with Marshal Gold State Park, we are excited for the construction of the California Native Interpretive Garden and Monarch Waystation behind the Nisenan Village Oomachas.
Situated in the upper American River watershed, the "Nisenan Village" exhibit, managed by Marshal Gold State Park, welcomes 70,000 visitors each year. The village is nestled at the base of "Mother Rock," a significant granite formation used by the Natives as a communal kitchen, evidenced by over 20 deep grinding mortars. In 2005, the Wopumnes Tribe added cedar bark oomachas (bark teepees) to the exhibit. Notably, in 2007, a levee breach caused the American River to swell, submerging the parking lot and reaching the Mother Rock for several days.
November 2022, volunteers came out to help prepare the Red area by Sheet Composting. Many hands make little work.