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Santa Margarita Ranch
San Luis
Obispo County
Voluntary
mitigation with viewshed and habitat protection
The historic Santa Margarita Ranch began as an
asestencia of the San Luis Obispo Mission in 1774. In 1841, a few years after
secularization, it was offered as a Mexican Land Grant and today large portions
of this spectacular 14,000-acre rancho remain an operating cattle and farming
ranch.The northern most segment of the
ranch was subdivided in June 1922 into 35 parcels each consisting of approximately
20 acres.Each 20-acre parcel could have
been sold with the right to build two homes, plus further subdivision. Those
parcels extended across 550 acres of farm fields, grasslands, and wetlands and
along Highway 101 for over 3,500 feet. Working with California Rangeland Trust,
the new landowners, the Rob Rossi family, voluntarily reduced the parcels sizes
to 5 acres each and permanently limited each parcel to one home. The
consolidated tract was moved away from the scenic Highway 101 corridor. In
addition, around the perimeter of the reduced subdivision, the landowner
donated a trail for public use, which has the potential to be linked to other
trails in the future. This resourceful planning created a parcel of 353 acres
with a 333-acre conservation easement, which the landowner donated to
California Rangeland Trust, to be permanently maintained in a combination of
farming, grazing and natural habitat.
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