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Sonoma Mountain Zen Center

Buddhism in the San Francisco Bay AreaBuddhist temples in CaliforniaReligious buildings and structures in Sonoma County, CaliforniaSan Francisco Bay Area building and structure stubsZen centers in California
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Sonoma Mountain Zen Center
Sonoma Mountain Zen Center

Sonoma Mountain Zen Center (or, Genjoji) is a Soto Zen practice center located on 80 acres (30 ha) in the mountainous region of Sonoma County in California—near Santa Rosa—carrying on the tradition and lineage of Shunryu Suzuki. Founded by Jakusho Kwong and his wife Laura Kwong in 1973, Kwong-roshi is the current guiding teacher of the Zen center. Offering residential training, Saturday Community and group retreats. Sonoma Mountain Zen Center also offers a practice regimen for members of the surrounding area and elsewhere who are not residents.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sonoma Mountain Zen Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sonoma Mountain Zen Center
Sonoma Mountain Road, Santa Rosa

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Wikipedia: Sonoma Mountain Zen CenterContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.366944444444 ° E -122.57833333333 °
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Address

Sonoma Mountain Road 6421
95442 Santa Rosa
California, United States
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Sonoma Mountain Zen Center
Sonoma Mountain Zen Center
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Nearby Places

Fairfield Osborn Preserve
Fairfield Osborn Preserve

The Fairfield Osborn Preserve is a 450-acre nature reserve situated on the northwest flank of Sonoma Mountain in Sonoma County, California. There are eight plant communities within the property, oak woodland being the dominant type. Other communities include chaparral, Douglas fir woodland, native Bunch grass, freshwater marsh, vernal pool, pond and riparian woodland. The flora is extremely diverse including many native trees, shrubs, wildflowers, grasses, lichens and mosses. A diverse fauna inhabits this area including black-tailed deer, coyote, bobcat and an occasional mountain lion; moreover, there are abundant avifauna (including some neotropical migrants), amphibians, reptiles and insects. Copeland Creek and its tributaries drain the Preserve as they wend their way down steep ravines toward eventual discharge to the Laguna de Santa Rosa. The property was originally a Spanish Land Grant holding, devolving to private ownership and eventually given to The Nature Conservancy; the preserve is now owned and managed by Sonoma State University as a research and education site. An understated natural trail system weaves through the property to provide access to creek canyons, ridges and marshy areas. The preserve is situated at elevations 1,350 to 2,300 feet (411 to 701 meters) above sea level and features a landscape riddled with basalt exposures that betray the volcanic prehistory of Sonoma County. The climate at the Preserve is mild, with most rainfall occurring in the winter months and with some influence of the Pacific Ocean providing moderating temperatures and some marine fog on early summer mornings.