Damp chilly seeped into my bones because the solar disappeared over Estero Bluffs State Park, close to the city of Cayucos, California. I picked my method throughout tide swimming pools, maintaining an eye fixed out for octopuses hiding between rocks. I used to be on a foraging tour with the group Kelpful, studying to gather and put together seaweed, simply because the Chumash and Salinean Individuals who first inhabited these lands did for hundreds of years.
For the previous decade, a number of Indigenous teams throughout the state have been working to create a protected zone alongside this a part of California’s Central Coast. The thought was first proposed in 2015 by Chief Fred Collins of the Northern Chumash Tribal Council and stored alive by his daughter, Violet Sage Walker—now the council’s chairperson—after he died in 2021. “My father believed we should do higher for Mom Earth, the animals, and one another,” Walker informed me. “It’s an honor to hold his legacy ahead.”
Robert Schwemmer, NOAA
Final September, the Biden administration designated some 4,500 sq. miles of coastal waters, stretching from San Luis Obispo to the Gaviota Coast of Santa Barbara county, because the nation’s first marine sanctuary that’s comanaged by Indigenous peoples. The Chumash Heritage Nationwide Marine Sanctuary protects seashores and shorelines, and likewise extends 60 miles into the Pacific Ocean, safeguarding quite a lot of flora, like dense kelp forests, and fauna, together with leopard and horn sharks, blue whales, and black abalone. Simply as essential, it acknowledges “tribal burial grounds, ceremonial websites, and spiritually vital locations,” Walker stated.
Indigenous-led excursions of the sanctuary are coming quickly. Within the meantime, vacationers can go whale-watching with Greatest Day Ever Boat Adventures or lease a kayak, like I did, from Avila Seaside Paddlesports.
For my father, our ancestors, and elders who’ve handed, they’d be most excited figuring out that space will likely be perpetually protected.”
To study Chumash life, a superb first cease is the Santa Ynez Chumash Museum & Cultural Middle, which opened final 12 months. Guests enter via a big ‘Ap, a standard dome-shaped home, which has iron doorways engraved with pictographs and handles constructed from clapper sticks (a musical instrument utilized in songs and ceremonies). Guests may wander via a 3.5-acre backyard that has native crops like dogbane and yerba mansa in addition to displays about Chumash basketry, redwood canoes, and different traditions.
The museum’s location can be vital: it faces Level Conception, a rugged headland to the west that the Chumash name Humqaq, the place their ancestors left the bodily world to enter the spirit realm. “For my father, our ancestors, and elders who’ve handed,” Walker stated, “they’d be most excited figuring out that space will likely be perpetually protected.”
A model of this story first appeared within the February 2025 challenge of Journey + Leisure underneath the headline “Sacred Waters.”