A Historic Moment for the Washoe People

© Elizabeth Carmel

Celebrating the Return of a Vast Wild Landscape

We are excited to announce the Wášiw-šiw Land Trust’s plan to acquire 10,274 acres in the homelands of the Wel-Mel-Ti (Northern Washoe people) in January 2026. This is a historic and long-awaited moment for our people – the return to Washoe ownership and care of land our ancestors stewarded for thousands of years.


Play the audio files to hear the pronunciation of these words.

Mule deer, Norman Williams

Pronghorn © Andrew Wright/Lighthawk Photo

Long Valley © Elizabeth Carmel

The landscape is vast and diverse, rising from sagebrush scrub and grasslands in the east to conifer forests, aspen groves and mountain meadows in the uplands to pinyon pines, rocky crags, springs and creeks in the west.

Loyalton Ranch, © Elizabeth Carmel

Loyalton Ranch © Elizabeth Carmel

Pronghorn, mule deer, mountain lions, and gray wolves all move through this land, as they have for thousands of years. Keeping the habitat healthy for animals is key to sustaining the entire ecosystem.

Mule deer, Norman Williams
Gray wolf, Eveline Larrucea

Gray wolf, Eveline Larrucea

Loyalton Ranch © Elizabeth Carmel

The Land Is Calling Us Back

This landscape is the first of many we hope to return to the care of the Washoe people. (See project map.) In our Northern homelands alone, we hope to expand our land ownership to more than 20,000 acres in the coming years. Lack of management has scarred the lands, from wildfire to water erosion. Traditional Washoe stewardship practices have not been present. The land is calling us back and we are answering her call.

Washoe women grinding acorns in Loyalton (1915), Milton Gottardi Museum

Loyalton Ranch © Elizabeth Carmel

What This Land Means to Our People

Deep Thanks

We would like to express deep thanks to the Feather River Land Trust and the Northern Sierra Partnership for working with us over the past four years to arrive at this important moment. And we would like to thank the leaders of California’s Wildlife Conservation Board for helping us acquire this spectacular land.

West side of Loyalton Ranch © Elizabeth Carmel

Join Us

We need your help. Whether you are a member of our tribe or simply a friend, you have an important role to play. Working together, we can start to heal the deep pain created by the forced displacement of the Washoe people from so much of our homeland. Your leadership in supporting the return of lands to tribal ownership and stewardship is a powerful act of respect and cultural justice.

We are just getting started.

Join us