Volunteer Opportunities

New to Volunteering with Us? Start Here!

Thank you for your interest in volunteering with LandPaths in Sonoma County! Our full name is LAND PArtners THrough Stewardship and that means acting with you as stewards and fellow adventurers.  Whatever your lived experience, physical ability, time, skills, and interests, we have a place for you.  
Keep scrolling to get an overview of all the ways to participate as a volunteer!

Root Youth in Nature

LandPaths significantly reduce the barriers and expands opportunities to get outside. As a result, more youth experience joy and awe in nature, helping to build or expand on a sense of belonging and caring for the land and community.
owl camp kids running by John Burgess

Nature Camp

Owl Camp: Our long-running and popular nature camp for ages 6 to 13 years. We also have opportunities to volunteer at Winter Break and Spring Break Nature Camps!
LGBTQAI2+ Inclusive Camps: A fun and welcoming opportunity for LGBTQAI2s+ youth and allies between the ages of 7 to 18, to be in nature, learning and growing with their peers
Russian River Summer Teen Trek: Youth ages 12 to 18 to explore the natural world, while paddling down the Russian River in a kayak.

How You Can Help

Are you a teen between the ages of 14 – 19? Apply to volunteer at our spring, summer, or winter break nature camps! Click here to learn more!
From leading hiking adventures and craft projects to driving kids to camp to singing songs by a creek, you can help our staff create amazing, inclusive experiences for campers!
*If you have kayaking experience, please consider helping to with Russian River Teen Treks!

In-School Programs (Environmental Education)

In Our Own BackYard (IOOBY): Our ground-breaking environmental education program started in 1999. IOOBY connects local elementary school children and teachers to open space in Sonoma County. 
Inspired Forward (IF): Geared towards teens and young adults, Inspired Forward grows leadership, team-building, mental resilience, ecological literacy, and stewardship skills.

How You Can Help:   

Support our youth programs staff as they bring science curriculum to life and create connections to nature and community on field trips to open space preserves across Sonoma County. This opportunity takes place during the school year. This is a great volunteer opportunity for retired teachers that still want to be in community!

Branch Out Conservation for Everyone

With a dedication to equity and inclusion, we reduce the barriers to increase access for people historically excluded from positive connection with nature and the outdoors.

Community Gardens

Bayer Farm: Our two-acre community farm and hub in the heart of Roseland, in partnership with the City of Santa Rosa. Bayer is a beloved place for nature in the city, learning and refuge, especially for the people and the land most impacted by climate change, wildfire, and other crises. 
Jeff’s Garden at Andy’s Unity Park: Our newer community farm and hub in southwest Santa Rosa. Inspired by Bayer Farm, Jeff’s Garden offers similar ways to lend a hand.
Rancho Mark West: Our teaching garden at this community and learning hub in the Mayacamas Mountains above Santa Rosa was severely damaged in the Glass Fire; we need lots of people-power to help rehabilitate and rebuild the soil and the plants.
Ocean Song/Myers: A haven for pollinators, birds, and other creatures, this iconic garden is a place of respite and refuge in West County.

How You Can Help:

Lend a hand at the community gardens for either pre-scheduled or drop-in stewardship days. No garden or stewardship experience necessary, just a willingness to get your hands dirty and care for the land!
Help with food distribution throughout the year or during the free summer lunch program at Bayer Farm and Jeff’s Garden.
Do you have experience with native plants, vineyards, mulching, fruit tree pruning, or any other specialized gardening skill? Let us know as we can use those skills at all of the gardens!
iread at bayer farm

Let’s Read Outside

Love the idea of combining a love of nature with early childhood literacy, art, crafts, and reading aloud? Consider volunteering with Let’s Read Outside, which runs summer through fall at Bayer Farm and other open space partner locations.

How You Can Help:

Help gather and sort book donations, prepare the site for the reading activity, support arts and crafts activities or lead a reading circle!

Or why not share your love of nature as a docent?

Docents are instrumental to our mission of providing equitable public access opportunities. After a training process, docents are ready to lead unique outings and hikes, in English, Spanish, or both on preserves stewarded by LandPaths. Learn more about how to become a docent at Bohemia Ecological Preserve or Lafferty Ranch.

Grow Community with Nature

Acting with common purpose and courage, we care for the land and each other and respond to the changing needs of the community. Nature is one of our best hopes for dealing with the environmental and social crisis aggravated by climate change.

People-Powered Parks

Our approach to stewardship, the responsible management of resources, starts with the community. This means a lot of people with their hands in the dirt. In community, the task becomes lighter.
A volunteer works on burn piles at Riddell Preserve

How You Can Help

Maintain trails, do wildfire fuel and invasive species reduction and more. No experience necessary and we provide the tools! Drop-in stewardship days at the preserves throughout the year.
Monitor wildlife cameras, change SD cards and batteries, etc. Or do database work from the comfort of home such as identifying animals in photos and adding information to our database.  Participate in burn piles and learn about the relationship between the land and fire through our Good Fire Program. We also have programs specifically geared towards community members who identify as LGBTQ+ such as our Queer Forestry and Fire Progam.
For ages of 14 to 24, Young Stewards grow skills in land stewardship.

Other Ways to Help

Work remotely or from the LandPaths office in downtown Santa Rosa, helping with data entry, office and database organization, envelope stuffing, and other administrative tasks.
Support our Communications Manager with social media, photography, blog posts, making engaging TikToks, research, press releases, graphic design, or other creative ways to get the word out about LandPaths. Gain experience in branding and content creation within the environmental field!
Young woman talking a selfie of her and two friends in the forest

Let’s get started! Fill out the General Participation Survey and our Volunteer Coordinator will be in touch soon!

For any questions, contact:

Volunteer and Community Hub Lead Laura Revilla at [email protected]. or (707) 544-7284 – habla español

Stories + News

Stories from the Field

Our impact is made possible by volunteers like you, with a passion for growing community with nature.

What Happens Now? A Letter from Executive Director Craig Anderson to Friends of LandPaths

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The results of the U.S. presidential election, one week ago, sent shockwaves through our community, neighborhoods, and families. It makes a person pause, and it certainly should. At a time when it seemed there was momentum to move ahead, for many people what seems a U-turn has emerged, surrounding us. Click one of the tags above to read the entire post.

Community Gardens Internship  

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Are you interested in learning all about what it takes to run a successful community garden? Consider becoming a community garden intern with LandPaths! Bayer Farm, Santa Rosa’s Roseland neighborhood, and Jeff Bodwin Community Garden, in southwest Santa Rosa, together contain 120 garden plots adopted out to community members in addition to a teaching garden for students to learn about growing food and nutrition. The internship is offered on a part-time basis, unpaid, up to 20 hours per week, with an option of work in exchange for course credit. Click on one of the tags above to learn more.

Caring for the Land at Ya-Ka-Ama Indian Educational Center

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Stewardship is a strengthening of the relationship between person and land. When we steward, we connect directly with the plants and animals, fungi and watersheds, but we also connect with history. This is because for tens of thousands of years people have lived on this land and cared for it, as we try to now.

In Sonoma County, these people are the Pomo, Coast Miwok, and Mishewal Wappo. They are represented through various federally recognized and unrecognized tribes. On August 31, we had the privilege of joining community stewards and Sonoma Earth School in an amazing day of stewardship at Ya-Ka-Ama Indian Education and Development, Inc. Click one the tags above to read the entire story.

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