Trail Days 2024 dates announced

Join our annual celebration of local trails and parkland!

Santa Monica Mountains Trail Days is a time for individuals, families, and groups to give back to the parks by working together to maintain the trails. There’s an important task for everyone, from seasoned trail builders to first-time volunteers, as well as age-appropriate activities for children.

This year’s event will be held over the weekend of April 19th-21st (Friday-Sunday) at Danielson Group Campground in Point Mugu State Park. Registration is required.

More information.

Come out just for the day (Saturday or Sunday) to help clean up trails with the Sierra Club work party — or perhaps stay for the weekend, and enjoy a night or two of free camping, waking up both mornings to hot beverages and bagels. Volunteers can also look forward to a complimentary BBQ dinner on Saturday night, and a jumbo thank-you gift drawing on both days, generously sponsored by our organizers and community members.

(Event registration is handled by another of the organizing parties, the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council, who will contact registrants directly).

Featured image by Denise Pomonik

Trail Days 40th Anniversary on Earth Day Weekend (April 21st-23rd)

Santa Monica Mountains Trail Days is a beloved, free-to-attend annual celebration of our local trails and parkland. Held in Point Mugu State Park over the weekend of April 21st-23rd (Fri-Sun), it is a time for individuals, families, and groups to give back to the parks by working together to maintain the trails. There’s an important task for everyone, from seasoned trail builders to first-time volunteers, as well as age-appropriate activities for children.

We are proud to have been one of the festival’s founders, and it has continued to be the highlight of the SMMTF trail crew’s yearly schedule since its inception. Other organizing partners for the event include the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council, California State Parks, National Park Service, and the Concerned Off-Road Bicyclists Association (CORBA).

More information

Join us on Saturday, April 22nd (Earth Day) join us as we restore several recreational trails surrounding Danielson Group Campground at the 40th annual Santa Monica Mountains Trail Days — whether it’s with the Sierra Club work party (details) or another of the work crews — and perhaps stay for the weekend, and enjoy a night or two of free camping, waking up both mornings to hot beverages and bagels. Volunteers can also look forward to a complimentary BBQ dinner on Saturday night, and a jumbo thank-you gift drawing on both days, generously sponsored by our organizers and community members.

Registration is required.

Featured image by Jessy Lu

Sign up for Trail Days with the Sierra Club Trail Crew

To participate with the Sierra Club trail crew on Saturday, April 22nd, just send us an email (smmtaskforce@gmail.com) by April 17th with the following information for each registrant:

  • Name
  • Home address
  • Phone number (best number to reach you in emergency)
  • Emergency contact (name, phone number)
  • Camping on Friday night? yes/no
  • Camping on Saturday night? yes/no
  • Barbecue on Saturday night? yes/no meat/vegetarian
  • Additional trail work (with a non-Sierra Club crew) on Sunday? yes/no

An Act of Hope

Oak trees play a critical role in the ecosystem of the Santa Monica Mountains. 5000 species of insects, 150 birds, 105 mammals, 58 reptiles and amphibians, and 5 fish are dependent on oaks for their survival.

Often, following a wildfire or in response to combating climate change, there is a community response to plant trees in order to “do something”. Many areas of the mountains do not support trees, however, and some areas that do now may not in the future. It’s crucial to avoid indiscriminate tree planting in places where planting is not necessary or successful, and to focus restoration efforts in areas where trees can persist into the future.

The LA County Native Tree Priority Planting Plan is a coordinated effort by land managers and ecologists to consider the anticipated effects of climate change, and the recent impacts from the seven-year drought and Woolsey Fire, regarding restoring and expanding native oak and riparian woodlands within the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.

The plan articulates strategies to maintain biodiversity and resiliency of local trees and woodlands that provide critical habitat and linkage connectivity, as climate change creates significant stressors to their long-term survival.

During the trail crew’s off-season this summer, some of our volunteers spent a morning at Trippet Ranch in Topanga State Park with the Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains, who have been working with CA State Parks to restore 10 acres of oak woodlands that were devastated during the last drought.

“Growing trees that will outlive us gives us a tangible, real action to take in the face of the myriad climate associated problems facing our planet,” said Rosi Dagit, Senior Conservation Biologist for the Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains. “Planting them in places where they have a chance to live long lives means taking a thoughtful approach to our restoration efforts, and using the info we have to make the best possible choices so that the trees survive.”

• • •

DEVELOP is a NASA program which partners with organizations like the RCDSMM that are interested in integrating NASA Earth Science observations to inform their environmental decision making. The program addresses environmental and public policy issues through interdisciplinary research projects, building capacity in partner organizations to better prepare them to address the challenges that face our society and future generations around the globe.

Under this program, the Santa Monica Mountains Climate Team at JPL is using data collected by two airborne NASA Earth Observations (satellites) to isolate vegetation and monitor the changes to said vegetation over time.

UAVSAR (Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle Synthetic Aperture Radar) senses physical properties, and areas of vegetation are isolated by looking for rough or complex surface returns. AVIRIS (Airborne Visible / Infrared Imaging Spectrometer) measures over two hundred spectral bands, making it very sensitive to variations in spectral reflectance between the live and dead vegetation within these areas.

To learn more about how the NASA program informs the Native Tree Priority Planting Plan, watch this video (run time 3:00).

• • •

As we helped water and monitor the hundreds of young coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) trees that were recently planted to mitigate for the loss experienced in the park, Rosi described the project as an “act of hope”, in reference to the fact that none of us will see these young trees reach maturity for ourselves.

SMMTF hike leader Ernie Scheuer celebrates 90th birthday

Sierra Club hikers in their 60’s and 70’s can often be heard to say, “We want to be like Ernie when we grow up.” It’s easy to see why.

Ernest M. Scheuer made the Los Angeles Westside his home around 25 years ago, after retiring in 1993 from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. Before JPL, he taught at Cal State Northridge for more than two decades.

In his search for new places to hike — and new people to hike with — on the Westside, Ernie turned to the latest issue of the Sierra Club Angeles Chapter’s Schedule of Activities, where he learned of the Tuesday Conditioned Hikers (TCH) and subsequently its sister group, the Tuesday Moderate Hikers (TMH). These two groups, both sponsored by the Santa Monica Mountains Task Force, have been leading the public on hikes in the Santa Monica Mountains since the early 1970’s.

And so began his many years of exploring the peaks and trails of the Santa Monica Mountains.

Ernie leading a hike for the Sierra Club | Photo by Bob Cody

Ernie became a Sierra Club outings leader in 2007, and has subsequently been a mentor and provisional evaluator for several others. He is well-known to be a “quietly rock solid leader” who many find to be a calming presence on the trail. He has been described as “selfless” and “stalwart”.

In Ernie you will also find a great conversationalist: thoughtful, knowledgeable on a number of topics, and forever curious — he always takes a great deal of interest in anything his hiking companions share with him. He is also, according to his friend and TCH hiker Jeri Segal, “a bit nerdy (in the very best sense!)”

Ernie has done a great deal to support TMH and TCH off the trails, too, including serving as Outings Chair for TCH, taking the lead in scheduling the weekly hikes and writing them up for the schedule, maintaining the sign-in sheets, and additionally undertaking the role of Safety Chair for both groups. In 2015 he received the Outings Service Award from the Angeles Chapter for his dedication to the program.

To mark his milestone birthday in July, Jeri Segal conspired with his friends in the Club and beyond to surprise him with a “birthday book”, bringing together an astonishing number of heartfelt tributes, special memories, cherished photographs, and entertaining anecdotes.

Fellow hiker Craig Percy said of his friend, “One thing that makes Ernie special for me is his eyes and smile. He always, always, has an impish grin and sparkle. He always looks like he’s ‘up to something.'”

Happy 90th birthday, Ernie!