Article 1. Wild Flowers of California Government Code >> Division 2. >> Title 3. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 7. >> Article 1.
By a four-fifths vote the board of supervisors may designate
as wild flower reserves, during appropriate times of the year for
not to exceed ninety (90) days at any one time, any portion of the
public domain of the United States, any unsold or unleased public
State land, and any privately owned lands whose owners, without
expense to the county, consent in writing thereto.
The board may protect any land designated as wild flower
reserves by prohibiting any person from driving, herding, or grazing
herbivorous animals in groups of sizes designated by the board on or
over such lands during such periods.
This article does not apply to any public grazing land
within the scope of an act of Congress entitled "An act to stop
injury to the public grazing lands by preventing overgrazing and soil
deterioration, to provide for their orderly use, improvement and
development, to stabilize the livestock industry dependent upon the
public range, and for other purposes," approved June 28, 1934, and of
Article 2, Chapter 4, Part 4, Division 6 of the Public Resources
Code.