Donor Spotlight - Amy Boyer

In the before-Tuleyome days, Andrew Fulks and Sam Bledsoe were leading hikes in the area, and I went on a few of those. Then Andrew and several other co-conspirators founded Tuleyome, which started hosting Andrew's Yolohiker.org web page, and thus I followed the virtual trail to Tuleyome.
I started donating to Tuleyome because I was thinking about my donations in terms of climate change and local action. Land protection is critical both for slowing down climate change, by protecting those natural carbon sinks, and for making adaptation possible, by keeping the landscape healthy. Tuleyome is incredibly effective at getting land protected.
I really appreciate how committed Tuleyome is to environmental education and getting people to understand their home place and be able to enjoy it, especially groups that historically have had less access. They're also committed to working with all kinds of groups that appreciate the outdoors; they're inclusive.
I want my donations to contribute to organizational stability. Most grants have a lot of restrictions, and funders often want the next new thing. But organizations like Tuleyome also need money to maintain what they've built and just keep the lights on. Individual donations make it possible for Tuleyome to keep going.
The Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument just wouldn't exist without Tuleyome. They led the campaign to get it designated, and they kept at it for years. Then they led the campaign to get that wonderful ridge, Molok Luyuk, added to it. And now they are working on good stewardship of this place that has such amazing biodiversity.
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