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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260426T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260426T160000
DTSTAMP:20260418T230402
CREATED:20260326T030536Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260326T033806Z
UID:3677-1777194000-1777219200@lossenderos.org
SUMMARY:Pamo Valley Ramona
DESCRIPTION:April ride will be hosted at Pamo Valley in Ramona. \n \nDirections – \nEast County – Hwy 67 thru Ramona. Turn left on 7th Street.  7th Street turns into Elm. Turn right on Haverford\, then left on Pamo Rd. Follow Pamo road down the hill and continue til you see the Los Senderos sign on the right. \n  \nFrom Julain – Hwy 78 towards Ramona\, Turn right on 7th Street.7th Street turns into Elm. Turn right on Haverford\, then left on Pamo Rd. Follow Pamo road down the hill and continue til you see the Los Senderos sign on the right. \nTHE HISTORY OF PAMO VALLEY: \nMost of the valley bottom of Pamo Valley is owned by the city of San Diego public utilities department’s enterprise water fund\, said Pasek\, an avid hiker. The city leases the land to Bob Neal\, a Ramona rancher\, who maintains\, patrols and fences the 3\,769 acres while grazing cattle. \n“The city came to own this land in the 1950s as a reservoir site\,” Pasek said. “While there are no plans to build a reservoir here now\, no other good reservoir sites are left in San Diego County.” \nThe city holds the land if it ever needs such a reservoir in the future. \n“That’s good\, because the land then can’t be sold for development\,” Adams said. \nAs a result\, Pamo Valley remains relatively pristine as ranch land\, which it has been since at least the 1860s. \nHomesteaders started ranching here about then\, according to an extensive website that covers the history of Pamo Valley. The Foster family\, which maintains the website\, pamoranch.com\, began dairy and stock ranching here in the early 1900s. The family also formed a water company that considered damming for a reservoir here. Neal had worked for the Foster family on their ranch. \nWe bushwhacked our way through tall green grasses\, reaching ridges that offered panoramic views of this verdant valley. Wildflowers were in full bloom. Leslie Woollenweber\, conservation programs director for the conservancy\, identified ivory-colored cream cups\, bright yellow tidy tips\, yellow/orange deerweed and ever-present chamise\, which she said is highly flammable and helped spread the devastating fire that ravaged this land in 2007. \nIn the lower reaches of the valley\, near Santa Ysabel Creek\, oak woodlands still harbored healthy old oaks that survived that fire. Sycamores and cottonwoods lined the free-flowing creek\, where we had to take our shoes off to cross. \nSeveral gatherings of granite boulders were dotted with morteros and metates. The old acorn grinding holes revealed this area to be a major campsite for the Northern Diegueno Indians who lived here for hundreds of years before the homesteaders. \nThe word “Pamo” probably comes from the Diegueno word\, “paamuu\,” according to “California Place Names” by Erwin G. Gudde and William Bright. They cite an Indian rancheria called Pamo in Spanish records as early as 1778\, and the Valle de Pamo\, or Santa Maria\, land grant was dated 1843. \nThe land here hasn’t changed much since then\, it seems. “You turn down a road here and you’re in old California\,” said Charty Bassett\, a conservancy board member. \nPriscilla Lister is a freelance writer from San Diego.
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