We are working to reacquire the Tuuyshtak Range.
It will emerge as a global destination for agricultural and ecological tourism
Our Approach
Over the next 20 years, our Tribe plans to acquire 50,000 acres in the Tuushtak Range to establish the Muwekma Ohlone National Park. For our Bay Area neighbors, the park will serve as a world-class recreational asset. For our Tribe, it means culturally congruent eco-tourism that creates jobs for tribal members and grows the Tribe’s economy.
A Strategy for Land, Life, and Legacy.
Oaks whispering in the wind, meadows blooming with camas—hold our stories, but years of conquest, exploitation, and the vestiges of that colonial legal architecture have kept them out of our hands. Now, we're working together to bring them back, using state grants and support from foundations and philanthropic partners to acquire lands that bring back beaver and salmon habitats, to revive our traditional food systems, and to heal the land with sustainable long-term reforestation and watershed restoration work. These are practical steps toward what we've always known: the land is ours to care for.
This isn't just about owning land; it's about fixing what's broken for our kids and the earth. By getting these acres back, we're not only saving a place—we're keeping our ways alive, one steady effort at a time.