The New York Times published a travel article where they list the 52 places across the globe where travelers can be “part of the solution” and Santa Cruz County made the list. Video Player | Central Coast Spotlight: Big Basin Redwood State Park”Our annual list of destinations to visit this year looks at spots where visitors can be part of the solution to problems like over-tourism and climate change,” reads the article. Santa Cruz County made the list at number 44. “Appreciate old trees on new trails after wildfires threatened their future,” the piece said about the Santa Cruz Mountains. The article talks about how the CZU Lightning Complex threatened the historic forest of Big Basin Redwoods and Henry Cowell Redwoods State Parks. The profile concludes by talking about the Cotoni-Coast Dairies National Monument which will open in 2022. “The area’s designation as a national monument will help protect its rich ecology and cultural history, including ancestral sites of the Indigenous Cotoni people,” wrote author AnneLise Sorensen. You can see the full list here.
The New York Times published a travel article where they list the 52 places across the globe where travelers can be “part of the solution” and Santa Cruz County made the list.
Video Player | Central Coast Spotlight: Big Basin Redwood State Park
“Our annual list of destinations to visit this year looks at spots where visitors can be part of the solution to problems like over-tourism and climate change,” reads the article.
Santa Cruz County made the list at number 44.
“Appreciate old trees on new trails after wildfires threatened their future,” the piece said about the Santa Cruz Mountains.
The article talks about how the CZU Lightning Complex threatened the historic forest of Big Basin Redwoods and Henry Cowell Redwoods State Parks.
The profile concludes by talking about the Cotoni-Coast Dairies National Monument which will open in 2022.
“The area’s designation as a national monument will help protect its rich ecology and cultural history, including ancestral sites of the Indigenous Cotoni people,” wrote author AnneLise Sorensen.