Out of all the choices, I chose to go to San Bruno Mountain. San Bruno Mountain runs through four parts of the Bay Area: South San Francisco, Daly City, Colma, and Brisbane. Before the cities and building were built, San Bruno Mountain was home to the Ohlone Tribe. The Ohlone Tribe used San Bruno Mountain as sacred burial sites and as shell mounds. "Shell mound, also called Kitchen Midden, in anthropology, prehistoric refuse heap, or mound, consisting chiefly of the shells of edible mollusks intermingled with evidence of human occupancy" (The Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica). The shell mounds that we saw contained mainly shells and animal bones.
What I learned about San Bruno Mountain was how simple the Ohlone Tribe lived. They used the plants and trees for all their uses and used them as if they were their own ancestors. The experience was truly beautiful.
After our 2 hour hike, we went to the sand dunes of San Bruno Mountain. There I learned that one flower that is going extinct lives there. This flower grows in only 2 places out of the entire world. What is preventing the flower from growing are ice plants indigenous to South Africa. Because the ice plants can grow in any conditions, it overlaps and takes up all the space of the sand dunes. So what we did was take out the ice plants. Doing this allows the flowers more space, so that they have adequate room to grow and allows it to makeup the resources that the ice plants were taking.
Overall even though it was tidious and a lot of work, giving back felt good. It makes me feel accomplished knowing that I helped the world even just a little bit.
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