Personal Story: Ali Meders-Knight

Thursday, Apr 24th, 2025

Ali Meders-Knight is the Executive Director of California Open Lands. She is a Mechoopda tribal member, mother of five, and traditional basketweaver based in Chico, CA. She has been recognized by the Mechoopda Tribe as a Master TEK practitioner, and works to form partnerships for federal forest stewardship contracting and tribal restoration programs on public lands. She has been a Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) practitioner for over 20 years, collaborating on environmental education and land restoration projects with Chico State University, the City of Chico, Tehama County Resource Conservation District, and more. She serves on the Tribal Relations Strategic Planning and Implementation committee for the US Forest Service in Region 5. In March 2022 she testified to the U.S. House of Representatives Environmental Oversight Subcommittee on the merits of TEK and Tribally-led workforce development to restore California forest resilience and address the problem of catastrophic wildfires. In 2009 she helped plan and establish Verbena Fields, a unique 17-acre interactive food forest and interpretive park in North Chico, to educate about the rich ecological heritage of the Mechoopda people through weekly community tending workshops.

Ali was a featured speaker at our 2025 Earth Day gathering at Llano Seco Ranch, where she shared a moving message about generational care, land stewardship, and working together across communities—closing with a couple fantastic bird calls that echoed the connection between people and place.

Click here or on the image below to watch her full speech.

 

Read more Stories of the Sacramento Valley here.

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