WA DNR News


10 outdoor escapes near Seattle
Seattle is undeniably awesome — a world-class city with a vibrant history, shopping, nightlife, arts and culture, food, and more.
But when you find navigating the urban core a chore, it might be time to put the evergreen back in your state of mind.
Just outside the bustling city, you’ll find myriad outdoor activities on state recreation lands managed by Washington State Parks, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
These agencies have joined forces to bring you a taste of what you can find just beyond the Seattle city limits. Find your next adventure just 30, 60, or 90 minutes from the heart of Seattle.
30 Minutes… Lake WashingtonLake Washington is huge — the second largest natural lake in the state and the biggest in King County. This freshwater outdoor recreation mecca is just a short hop by car or bus from both Seattle’s and Bellevue’s metro centers. Fishing, hiking, boating and paddle sports are all within easy reach of Lake Washington’s shore.
What to doFishing — It’s open season year-round at Lake Washington where you can catch largemouth and smallmouth bass, yellow perch, cutthroat trout, black crappie, and other panfish species. For more information on public piers and fishing opportunities, download the public piers of Lake Washington guide here.
Hiking —Saint Edward State Park in Kenmore offers a top-notch urban hiking experience. The quiet, forested grounds were once home to a seminary. The park offers the longest stretch of undeveloped shoreline on the lake. Or, trot over to Bridle Trails State Park for a stroll or a horseback ride along the 28 miles of classic Pacific Northwest forest trails.
Boating and paddle sports — Lake Washington’s generally tranquil waters are a hotspot for boating, sailing, kayaking and paddle boarding. Launch your craft from the WDFW ramp in Kenmore, just north of Saint Edward State Park.
Edmonds Pier and Edmonds MarshNo boat, no problem. Try out fishing at the Edmonds Pier with generous seasons for salmon fishing, shellfishing (as seasons allow) and some great September squid fishing.
What to doFish— King salmon (Chinook) fishing peaks between mid-July and mid-August. But salmon fishing is open year-round here.
Squid jigging — Reel in a different kind of catch this summer and fall. Squid begin arriving in June and July. But starting in September, scores of migrating squid show up to feed by night. Bring your flashlight, and tackle to the pier and try something new!
Birding — One of the few urban saltwater estuaries remaining in the Puget Sound, Edmonds Marsh is a stop on the Great Washington State Birding Trail – Cascades Loop. Stroll the boardwalk, and see how many of the 90 species of birds that frequent this marsh you can spot.
Lake Sammamish State Park and the Sammamish RiverSeattleites and visitors to the area are lucky when it comes to great places to play on, in and near beautiful waterways. Lake Sammamish State Park in Issaquah offers wide-open spaces, tranquil waters, two swimming beaches and a state-of-the art, ADA-compliant playground. In addition, the park hosts youth programs, summer concerts, stewardship projects, boating events and more!
What to doPaddle — Boating is big on Lake Sammamish. But you don’t need a second mortgage — or your own kayak or paddle board — to enjoy a day on the water! Rentals are available.
Fish — The Sammamish River connects Lake Sammamish with Lake Washington. Both are excellent fishing lakes. If you enjoy angling, try for smallmouth bass on the river when the weather warms and they begin to feed.
Hike — Enjoy a trek along beautiful Issaquah Creek and watch for songbirds.
Swim — If it’s warm, go for a swim at the park’s Sunset or Tibbetts beach.
Saltwater State ParkA beach within reach! Located on the Puget Sound, Saltwater State Park in Des Moines is a quick ride down Interstate 5 from Seattle. It offers all the fun of a day at the shore without the long drive to the coast.
What to doCamp — A night under the stars with just a short drive from the city? Yes, please! The park’s 47 sites do fill up quickly, but you can reserve them up to nine months in advance.
Explore tidepools —McSorley Creek’s fresh water meets the salt water here, and the volume of creatures that call it home are vast and varied. Wade in the shallows and turn over rocks (gently) to make discoveries. In the fall, you may see salmon spawning on the creek!
Dive —Saltwater is the only state park with an underwater artificial reef for diving. It is also a protected marine sanctuary.
Picnic — You’ll find ample picnic tables, shelters, and barbecue pits to cook up a great lunch or dinner.
60 minutes … Tiger Mountain and Raging River state forestsLooking for that wow factor you can only get from high above the city? Look no further than Tiger Mountain. Located in the foothills of the Cascade Mountain Range, the mountain offers spectacular sweeping views of Issaquah and Seattle. This day-use recreation area and working forest boasts more than 13,000 acres of soaring peaks, roaring river lands, and miles of sun-dappled forest trails.
What to doHike — You could spend years exploring the many trails at Tiger Mountain. We recommend starting with Tiger Mountain Trailhead and Tiger Summit Trailhead off Highway 18. Want more? Head over to West Tiger Mountain Natural Resources Conservation Area for another 41 miles of spectacular hiking.
Bike — Like to bike? Bomb down the Raging River State Forest’s 17-mile bike oriented single-track system. The trails range from easy to expert-only riding levels. This recreation area is expanding, so if you have ridden it before, try it again soon!
Soar — Fly like an eagle at Poo Poo Point! Local hang or paragliding aficionados are likely familiar with this popular launch spot. Not that much of a daredevil? Why not take a hike there and watch gliding enthusiasts riding the breeze — and catch some great views.
Mount Si Natural Resources Conservation AreaClimb on, let’s go! Mount Si NRCA is home to four incredible mountain peaks just waiting for you to summit! A diverse landscape of peaks, streams and lakes, the area is also home to old-growth forest, wildflowers and host of forest creatures including black bear, elk, deer, cougar, coyote and mountain goats.
What to doHike — If mountain hiking is your bag, this is your destination. Get to the top of popular Mount Si, Mount Tenriffe and Green Mountain, then put a pin in Little Si. Once you complete all of these, go ahead and yodel — you definitely earned it.
Climb — Not every crag has a mountain and not every mountain has a crag, but these do, and they are amazing. The Mount Si NRCA has multiple locations to challenge you with world-class rock climbing. Watch out for goats!
Middle Fork Snoqualmie Natural Resource Conservation AreaThe Middle Fork Snoqualmie NRCA is positive evidence that an Ice Age is not a bad thing. Soaring peaks and glacier-carved basins make these DNR-managed lands near North Bend a diverse outdoor playground. You’ll find legendary hiking and mountain-climbing opportunities here but also some perfect destinations for a weekend family picnic.
What to doHike — Middle Fork NRCA is home to one of Washington’s top hiking destinations: Mailbox Peak. Those who make it through the jagged, steeply-rising switchbacks to the summit have the opportunity to leave behind a letter to the universe in — you guessed it — the mailbox at the top. But Mailbox is not the only gem. Hike up to Granite Peak to take in views of Russian Butte, or along Granite Creek Trail to Granite Lake to view some glacially carved awesomeness.
Picnic — Not all hikes need to go to the top of something to be wonderful. Plan a weekend trip with the kids to Champion Beach. Once the snow is gone, hikers of most ages should be able to manage this gentle, 1-mile hike. Bonus: kids (and kids at heart) can explore the banks of the Snoqualmie River after lunch.
Dash Point State ParkLooking to put your toes in the sand? Craving a classic day at a sandy oasis near home? Dash Point State Park is your destination! It won’t seem like it, but you’ll be right near the heart of Federal Way — just a short drive to the store if you forget the marshmallows!
What to doCamp — Dash Point is a larger park than Saltwater, with many more campsites for both tents and RVs. Don’t have either? Try a cabin! Small, cozy cabins — each with its own fire ring to gather around — are available to rent as well.
Skim board — Long, wide stretches of fine sand make Dash Point a skim boarder’s paradise. A cross between surfing and skateboarding, skim boarding carries risks but can be an invigorating pastime with practice. Get used to falling — it’s definitely part of the learning process.
Fish — You can score from the shore at Dash Point! Bring your tackle, and catch your lunch or dinner.
Fly a kite —Round up your favorite kite-flying partner, and enjoy a breezy afternoon at the beach.
Hike and/or bike — Stroll or roll. Dash Point is as nice a park for a cool, forested afternoon hike or ride as a warm day at the beach.
90 minutes… Blake Island Marine State ParkThanks to geological forces, Western Washington is rich in islands, large and small. Blake Island Marine State Park is a favorite spot for kayakers, boaters and tourists. From the island you get a commanding view of Seattle, but you feel like you’re a million miles away…
What to doTillicum Village — Argosy Cruises offers unique excursions from Pier 54 in Seattle that take you on a tour of Northwest native history, culture and traditions. Tours include a live storytelling show and traditional salmon feast. Tillicum Village is not a part of Blake Island State Park, but Argosy also offers shuttle service to the island for campers as well as beach exploration programs and kayak excursions.
Kayak — As a stop on the Cascadia Marine Trail, Blake Island is a favorite among human-powered boat enthusiasts. Once ashore, you can hike in and camp at one of the three marine trail campsites, or choose from one of the 44 standard campsites. Get there in time for sunset — you won’t be sorry.
Boating — Blake Island is meant for mooring, with 1,500 feet of moorage dock, 24 mooring bouys and a pumpout station. Electrical service is available at the park’s dock. Moor, then head into the interior to explore the island’s network of trails!
Reiter Foothills State ForestA dramatic landscape of mountain peaks, lush forest, rivers and cascading waterfalls awaits you at Reiter Foothills State Forest. Motorized and non–motorized recreationists can find something to love in Reiter Foothills.
What to doGo moto! — Reiter Foothills has miles of fun, challenging 4×4 trails and ATV single-track trails with more planned for the future. Bring your favorite rig, and stir up a little dust!
Go non-moto! — Miles of hiking and biking trails snake through Reiter Foothills.
Before you go, you should know:The Discover Pass is your ticket to state recreation lands managed by State Parks, WDFW and DNR. An annual pass is $30, and a one-day pass is $10. (Transaction fees apply in some cases.)
Fishing: Pick up your fishing license and download a copy of the 2019 fishing pamphlet. (TIP: Check with the Department of Health before consuming certain kinds of fish.)
Water access sites: Where are the boat ramps? WDFW offers a comprehensive list.
Boating safety and education: Do you have a Boater Education Card? Do you know if you need one? Washington State Parks’ Boating Program has more information.
Trail etiquette: Do you know who has right-of-way on a trail?
Getting there. Don’t have a car? Try taking the bus: King County Metro Transit, Community Transit (Snohomish County). King County Metro also offers its Trailhead Direct service from late April through late October. Also, ZipCar offers a Discover Pass to its members!
Make a reservation: Book your state park overnight stay online, or call (888) CAMPOUT or (888) 226-7688.
Looking for more inspiration?Our agency websites offer a wealth of information you can use to plan your next dream outdoor vacation. Visit us today!
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Washington State Department of Natural Resources
What to do if you encounter smoke or fire on the trail
Wildfire knows no boundaries. Not state, federal or private. Not wilderness or trail. As hotter, drier weather conditions return for summer in Washington, wildfire is an unfortunate inevitability.
Wildfire touches more parts of our lives than ever before and preparedness extends beyond clearing brush around your home. What happens when wildfire reaches our favorite recreation areas? Do you know what do you do if you encounter smoke or fire while out on the trail?
Before you head out for summer adventures, use this guide to ensure your trip is fun and safe.
Before your tripWashington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has several resources you can use during wildfire season to stay up-to-date on what is happening on the landscape.
Before you load your pack and head out check fire conditions and DNR Wildfire Twitter alerts for emergency information in the area you plan to visit. There are a few key things you want to know before you go:
- Are there fire closures in the area or nearby where you plan to visit? Always obey these closures for your safety and the safety of our fire crews.
- What are the weather advisories? Look out for red flag warnings — low humidity, windy, and hot conditions — that indicate severe fire danger.
- Are there campfire bans or restrictions? These can apply to specific locations, elevations, counties, and regions. If there aren’t campfire restrictions, brush up on how to properly extinguish your campfire. On DNR-managed land, campfires are only permitted in approved campground fire rings.
If you determine the place you are planning to visit is safe, pack your bags with wildfire preparedness in mind. Hot, dry summers mean wildfires can spark at any time across the state. While you already know you should never hit the trail without the 10 Essentials, your maps and water are more critical than ever.
Make sure you have physical maps that display the terrain of the area you are visiting so you can easily navigate the landscape should fire and smoke divert you from the trail. Your phone isn’t always a reliable resource in the backcountry.
Pack a little more water than usual. Wildfire conditions are likely to leave you thirsty, especially if an emergency arises and you are away from water sources longer than anticipated.
If you own colorful gear, now is the time to pack it. In case of emergency, colorful gear will be easier for fire crews to spot you from the ground or the air.
If you see a smoke column on the trailIf you are out on the trail and see a smoke column or dense smoke in the distance, don’t ignore it. You need to act.
If you don’t have cell reception, assess the situation. Are you in the forest? On a ridge? In a saddle between peaks? In a chute? Is it windy? These are dangerous scenarios as fire can move quickly across these types of terrain. Don’t panic, but get moving. Observe which direction the smoke is flowing and head in the opposite direction. Keep an eye on the conditions. Shifting winds can change the fire’s direction of travel in a snap.
If the smoke and fire are not blocking your exit, the safest thing you can do is turn around, head back to your car, and drive to safety. Call 911 or DNR wildfire dispatchers at 800-562-6010 as soon as you regain cell reception.
If you see fire on the trailSituational awareness is paramount.
While you are on the trail, make mental notes of any bodies of water, large swaths of clean, exposed rock, and open areas with little vegetation that you pass. Though it is unlikely that you will find yourself caught in extreme fire danger if you followed the above tips before you set out, wildfire is unpredictable. These areas can offer potential refuge in extremely dire situations.
If you get caught in an area where you can see the actual fire, try to run in the opposite direction. If that is not possible, find the best refuge you can. You are looking for rock fields with minimal brush, green meadows with minimal brush, and bodies of water with objects you can behind to protect yourself from radiant heat. If you are on a ridge and see fire below you, find refuge on the opposite side of the ridge. Fire typically travels upslope.
Other things to keep in mindBreathing in smoke is unhealthy. Even if there isn’t an active fire burning near the area you would like to visit, wildfire smoke often blankets the state throughout the summer. Breathing in wildfire smoke can cause you to have itchy eyes, a sore throat, runny nose and shortness of breath, and chest pains in more extreme circumstances. Sensitive groups like children, older people, and people with asthma are especially susceptible.
You can lessen your chances of suffering from the adverse effects of wildfire smoke by checking local air quality reports before you head outdoors. It is best to avoid exerting yourself, i.e. doing activities that cause you to breathe deeper and harder, in areas with poor air quality.
Fire safety and awareness toolsExplore your public lands with Geocaching
With 1,200 miles of trails and 80 campgrounds, it’s no surprise that Department of Natural Resources-managed lands offer some of the most diverse ways to experience the outdoors.
You can cross-country ski in the shadow of Mount Rainier, enjoy one of over 25 beachfront campsites in the San Juan Islands, test out your skills on one of our expert-only downhill-only mountain bike trails or rock climb at some of the state’s most brag-worthy destinations. If you look closely, you might even find one of 3 million hidden containers, called Geocaches.
“My agency is committed to creating more opportunities for people to get out and explore our public land,” said Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz. “That’s really what geocaching is all about – discovering more outdoors.”
This summer, we’re in on the game. We’re hiding five geocaches at some of our most popular trails and campgrounds. Check Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz’s social media pages over the next few months for hints.
How Geocaching WorksTo find geocaches hidden along DNR trails visit Geocaching.com or use the Geocaching app and find coordinates in an area near you. Using the app or a GPS-enabled devise, navigate to the geocache’s coordinates.
Image credit: Groundspeak Inc. (dba Geocaching HQ)Once you find a geocache, you can log your experiences online to earn points. Some geocaches can contain small items to reward navigators – make sure to replace the items with something of similar or of higher incentive for future geocachers.
Before you leave on your next geocaching adventure, don’t forget to download our mobile-ready trail maps, which will help you navigate in real-time while you’re out exploring. View and download our mobile maps at dnr.wa.gov/MobileMaps. (It’s a great idea to bring along a printed version, too!).
Leave No TraceAnytime you’re on the trail, it’s important to be a good steward of the land. Here are some tips to cache in and trash out.
- Stay on trail, don’t create your own
- Pack out all of your waste
- Respect wildlife
- Share the trail with others
- Don’t damage trees & plants
- Do your part to protect our public lands
If you’re inspired to do more, look into volunteering and taking action. Geocache’s Cache In Trash Out program is an environmental initiative supported by the geocaching community.
Image credit: Groundspeak Inc. (dba Geocaching HQ)Since 2002, CITO has helped preserve the natural beauty of cache-friendly spaces. In that time, more than 363,000 people have volunteered at 18,000 CITO events.
DNR also hosts dozens of work parties throughout the year for trail maintenance. Learn more here.
About DNRIn addition to providing opportunities for geocaching and other recreation, DNR also generates revenue for public services statewide, keep forests development-free, support clean air and water and uphold some of the highest environmental standards available.
To start exploring DNR trails, visit dnr.wa.gov/go. To learn more about geocaching, visit geocaching.com.
Is my Tree Dying? How Climate Change and Drought are Changing the Landscape
The problem first gained attention in bigleaf maple trees, which have been dying off since 2011 in some parts of Washington and Oregon.
The Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR), the University of Washington, the U.S. Forest Service, the Oregon Department of Forestry, and Oregon State University tried to find out why. They investigated a wide variety of insect-related diseases and disease-causing fungi to determine if any of those could be the cause of the sick and dying bigleaf maples.
Despite many attempts to uncover the cause and treat the trees in Western Washington, by the end of 2018 there were no signs of recovery. The most recent decline symptoms include partial or entire crown dieback, discoloration and reduced size of the leaves, crown thinning, and death.
A University of Washington study suggests that increased human development, higher summer temperatures, and severe summer droughts are linked to the declining health of bigleaf maples.
Now scientists fear that other Pacific Northwest tree species are suffering a similar fate. Across Washington, people are reporting diebacks not only in big-leaf maples, but Douglas-fir, western red cedar pines, and western hemlock, Washington’s official tree.
Damage and mortality in Douglas-fir and western red cedar was immediately noticeable during the drought in 2015. Symptoms included entirely red crowns, red tops and scattered red branches, with symptoms becoming more severe during record-breaking heat in spring 2016. It was more difficult to notice in western hemlock, because many dying hemlocks dropped foliage without color change.
DNR has received a number of calls from people who have seen tree dieback on their property. Read on for more information about why it’s happening and how to help your trees.
Droughts and tree health
Branch flagging in Douglas-fir in Thurston County caused by drought stress.Droughts occur when average temperatures increase and average precipitation decreases. As explained by the Oregon Department of Forestry, drought conditions can “create water stress inside the tree and can reduce growth or cause mortality.”
In Washington, drought conditions have reached moderate to severe levels since 2012, leaving many of Washington’s native trees struggling to survive because they can’t get enough water. And drought conditions are expected to get worse with climate change.
It is important to care for trees that are exposed to drought conditions, as they become more vulnerable to pathogens, insects, and diseases. The Oregon Department of Forestry suggests the following 10 tips to mitigate drought stress on trees:
- Select native and local drought-tolerant species that are appropriate for your site and soil conditions.
- Thin stands during normal years, not within a drought if possible, as thinning can cause a short-term increase in water stress. Remove damaged, stressed or overly mature trees.
- Control vegetation (especially grasses) that compete for soil moisture.
- Remove or destroy freshly dead or dying trees and slash or blowdown created in the previous year to prevent insect infestations and outbreaks.
- Avoid damaging and compacting soil around tree root zones from vehicles, grazing animals, etc. – especially during the wet season.
- Irrigate landscape trees during dry weather. Apply water slowly over many hours so it penetrates to tree roots, or use drip irrigation.
- Apply mulch to landscape trees to retain soil moisture.
- Do not alter drainage patterns near established trees.
- Do not fertilize during droughts. Fertilizer stimulates foliage production and can increase water requirements.
- It may be less effective to use systemic pesticides, which are absorbed into a plant’s tissues, on drought-stressed trees because these pesticides rely on water translocation within the tree.
Research on bigleaf maple decline
Many bigleaf maple trees in Washington have exhibited symptoms of decline, including partial to entire crown dieback, discoloration and reduced leaf size, loss of leaves and death.In 2011, more and more bigleaf maples in Western Washington seemed to be sick or dying. Some of the most prominent symptoms were yellow flagging of large branches, small leaf size, and partial or entire crown dieback. Sixty-one sites were sampled to determine if Verticillium wilt was the causing factor.
In 2014 and 2015, DNR, the U.S. Forest Service, Oregon State University, and the Oregon Department of Forestry conducted a survey to determine if microscopic root diseases were the cause of the bigleaf maple’s dieback. By mid-2016, many causes had been investigated such as armillaria root disease, verticillium wilt, fungal pathogens neonectria and nectria, and other small pathogens. All of these causes were ruled out.
By the end of 2018, there was no improvement in the condition of the bigleaf maples in Western Washington, but increased drought conditions correlated with the declining health of the trees.
Climate change, drought, and the forest
Seven out of the past 10 years have been warmer than average in Washington state, supporting projections by the Climate Impact Group at the University of Washington.
The group’s report found that “the Pacific Northwest is projected to warm rapidly during the 21st century, relative to 20th century average climate, as a result of greenhouse gases emitted from human activities.”
Regarding precipitation patterns, Washington has seen a mix of wetter, normal, and drier years over the past 10 years. This mixed precipitation pattern is also supported by the Climate Impact Group’s report, which suggests that seasonal precipitation changes will be mixed but “most models project drier summers.” Precipitation patterns are expected “to be primarily driven by year-to-year variations rather than long-term trends, but heavy rainfall events are projected to become more severe.”
Unfortunately, heavy rain events caused by climate change are not going to offset the effects of drought conditions on trees. As explained by DNR scientist Glenn Kohler: “Increases in rainfall are coming in spring and fall, not during the hot, dry summer months when trees are experiencing the most moisture stress during these severe droughts.”
Washington’s iconic native trees aren’t the only things that climate change is threatening. If emissions continue to increase, temperatures will continue to rise, which will have a negative impact on Washington’s economy, agriculture, habitats, and water resources.
In 2018, the Climate Impact Group updated its report on how climate change will affect the state, and the far-reaching consequences of inaction.
Learn more about what DNR is doing to combat climate change in this video:
Celebrate National Trails Day on the new Oxbow Loop
We’re celebrating National Trails Day with even more opportunities to get out and discover recreation opportunities with the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR).
Venture out to the Mount Si Natural Resources Conservation Area on June 1st for the opening of the brand new Oxbow Loop Trail. The 1.9-mile length loop trail project includes a parking lot and offers increased recreation access east of North Bend, just 40 minutes from Seattle.
The majority of the project funding came from the Natural Areas capital budget and is part of an ongoing project to enhance day-use access at sites along the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River.
Discover Oxbow Loop Trail
Oxbow Loop Trail is a relatively flat 1.9-mile hike that provides a much-needed lower intensity hiking addition to the very popular and often overcrowded recreation areas within the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River Valley.
The trail begins by winding through older forest stands, providing intermittent views of the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River, Oxbow Lake, and the surrounding mountain peaks of the Middle Fork Valley. The trail predominantly uses renovated segments of a former forest road before transitioning across an 80’ length trail bridge and onto a narrower trail located on a slope break above the lake on the south end.
To download or print a trail map, click here.
The public planning process
The new day-use site is a result of the local input and community support that went into that planning effort. DNR designed, permitted, and managed the development of the new trail and trailhead through a collaborative project between its Natural Areas and Recreation programs.
The agency also partnered with Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust (MTSG), who performed the heavy lifting on the development of trailhead parking, restroom installation, and trail development. A local DNR trail crew, with support from a Washington Conservation Corps crew, assembled an 80’ length trail bridge, assisted with trail surfacing, and installed signage and kiosks. RTI Fabrication provided the trail bridge materials, while Columbia Helicopters provided aerial bridge transport and placement.
DNR released the Snoqualmie Corridor Recreation Plan, a guide including high-priority plans to identify, evaluate, design, and develop river access and day use trail opportunities at four locations along the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River, in March 2015. DNR continues to work with partners to further enhance the site by exploring opportunities to provide interpretive and environmental education.
Visitors will continue to see improvements identified in the plan on the ground for the next decade.
Getting there
Traveling on Interstate 90, take Exit 34 and follow 468th Ave SE to the north, turn right onto SE Middle Fork Road and follow for several miles as it transitions to NF Road 5600 and until you reach the Oxbow Loop Trailhead. Directions
To download or print a trail map, click here.
A Discover Pass is required to park at the trailhead, get yours here.
Summer’s here! Have fun, be safe.
Washington has some of the best landscapes and outdoor activities in the world, and this weekend is an incredibly popular time to go out and enjoy them. But enjoying our great outdoors consciously is everyone’s responsibility.
A few simple considerations can ensure your weekend is fun and safe.
Memorial Day weekend represents the spiritual beginning of the summer for many of us and Washington state has no shortage of amazing outdoor opportunities. From off-roading in Sadie Creek, to mountain biking in BBQ Flats, to camping at Dragon Creek, Washington’s outdoors are a great place to spend the long weekend.
However, some outdoor activities can pose a risk to our public lands. Higher temperatures and drought conditions have increased the fire risk in Washington and nearly half the state is in a drought emergency. This year, DNR has already responded to more than 300 wildfire calls and about half of these fires have occurred in Western Washington. Most fires are human-caused and can be prevented by following these tips:
- Don’t park on dry grassy areas. Residual heat from exhaust systems can ignite the dry grass.
- Be sure recreation vehicles have operating spark arrestors or a catalytic converter.
- Put out your campfire completely. Remember, if it’s too hot to touch, it’s too hot to leave.
- Be aware of burn restrictions. Only build campfires when and where authorized.
- Don’t discharge fireworks, incendiary ammunition, or exploding targets. These activities are illegal on public lands, and you WILL be responsible for the cost of fighting the fire.
- Dispose of your cigarettes responsibly. Partially lit cigarettes can spark fires.
When we all do our part, we can prevent unfortunate fire related incidents and preserve our public lands. For more fire safety tips, visit dnr.wa.gov/WildfirePrevention.
Staying in for the Weekend? Take Some Time and Prepare Your Home
Now is a good time to prepare for wildfire. Help reduce hazards around your home and property by clearing excess debris and eliminating dense or overgrown vegetation around your home. For more tips on how to prevent wildfire damage to your home, go to http://www.firewise.org.
Capitol Forest Didn’t Always Look So Green
The occasional dead tree stands alone, the snag casting sparse shadows against an otherwise-denuded landscape. Vast stretches of former forest sit so devoid of trees that they can no longer reseed themselves. Fallen timber and debris choke off stream drainages as the Black Hills stand left behind after being logged and abandoned.
Freshly digitized aerial photos show those conditions across Capitol State Forest southwest of Olympia when the Washington State Department of Natural Resources became an agency in 1957.
Modern-day aerial photos show a completely different Capitol Forest.
Where once a barren patch encompassed Capitol Peak and much of its surrounding areas, now the entire landscape is a healthy, productive working forest. The 110,000-acre forest is now managed to provide sustainable revenue to support schools, state universities, and local services throughout Thurston and Grays Harbor counties.
Capitol Forest provides so much more than revenue, too – wildlife habitat, carbon storage, and cleaner air, for starters, not to mention the seemingly infinite amount of recreation opportunities. From hiking and mountain biking to riding horses or motorcycles, or even just setting up camp for the night, there are many different ways to explore and enjoy being in the forest.
Story continues below.
Starting in the 1930s, the state came to manage the lands that comprise Capitol Forest after a pair of logging companies – Mud Bay Logging Co. on one side and Mason County Logging Co. on the other – clear-cut the timber and met in the middle before selling the land off for practically nothing or dodging property taxes and letting them enter foreclosure. The area was essentially void of trees, and was so fire-prone that the “Black Hills” moniker stuck because of its oft-charred landscape.
The Washington Division of Forestry, one of the predecessor agencies to DNR, began work at the Capitol Forest Nursery in 1934, growing seedlings with which workers could regenerate the forest from the ground up. By the 1970s, at least 11.1 million seedlings were replanted in the area, turning about 10,000 acres of land back into forest. A further 13,000 acres of the forest naturally reseeded itself.
Story continues below.
Nursery operations moved out of the Capitol Forest to the Webster Forest Nursery south of Tumwater in 1957. Since then, the Webster Nursery has grown nearly 900 million seedlings to be planted around the state, the majority of which have been used to replant state forests across Washington after timber harvests. The 14 different species of trees grown at the nursery are sold based on which zone the seeds were collected to make sure the seedlings are best equipped to thrive in the area in which they are planted.
In 1975, DNR chronicled the recovery work to that point in a 75-page book titled “Capitol Forest … the Forest that Came Back” – even then, there were still more than 6,000 acres of the then-70,000-acre forest that still needed to be replanted.
Today, Capitol Forest has grown to 110,000 acres, providing more than 150 miles of recreation trails while also providing $15 million or more each year in timber revenue to sustainably support schools and county services.
Preserving Washington’s biggest and best tidal surge plain
Tucked between Montesano and Cosmopolis near the mouth of the Chehalis River rests Washington’s largest and highest-quality coastal surge plain wetland.
The Chehalis River Surge Plain Natural Area Preserve is a 4,493-acre site that protects rare plant communities and species that thrive in the estuary environment where fresh and salt water systems meet. It is one of the 94 Natural Areas conserved by the Washington Department of Natural Resources for their high-quality native ecosystems and rare species or communities of species. Visitors to this minimally impacted, rural surge plain can learn about wetland function, use of the area by a variety of species, and the cultural significance of the site.
DNR wants to continue to enhance these opportunities for visitors. That’s why the agency has submitted a $1.5 million Environmental Resilience budget request for the 2019-2021 Biennium to the State Legislature.
A portion of that request for management of DNR Natural Areas will cover invasive weed control and facilities maintenance at the Chehalis River Surge Plain. DNR is also requesting a $55,000 investment from the state capital budget for future trail improvements and bridge and sign installation in the area.
“The Chehalis River Surge Plain gives families and children an incredible opportunity to get outside and enjoy our state’s Natural Areas together,” Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz said. “In a time when we are so often looking at screens, it’s critical for our kids to have opportunities to learn, explore, and play in nature.”
People of all ages and abilities can experience the Chehalis River Surge Plain from the trail and boardwalk that follows an old railroad bed alongside portions Preachers Slough and Blue Slough, two significant side channels along the Chehalis River. They can also launch hand-carry watercraft at one of the small parking areas on the main stem of the Chehalis River and at the smaller Blue Slough parking area.
DNR has poured significant effort into the Chehalis River Surge Plain to make it a fun, safe, and engaging place for visitors, as envisioned during the community planning process that shaped the development of access features. The agency has recently completed several projects to increase accessibility, including the installation of new ADA handrails on Preachers Trailhead Bridge, new signage, new bollards at the Preachers Slough boat launch, and re-grading of Preachers Slough Road with new vehicle pullouts.
“The Chehalis River Surge Plain has come a long way in terms of providing a place for the public to come to enjoy the outdoors and learn about the ecological and historical features of the preserve,” Renee Mitchell, DNR Natural Areas Manager, said. “Although the site has been available for public access for 30 years, it was in definite need of some significant site improvements. In all of its transformation, however, the greatest success I feel is seeing people bring their kids out there.”
This summer, visitors can expect to see fresh gravel on the ADA Shoreline Access Trail and new fiberglass bridges this summer. The agency is also working on new interpretive signs for the three-and-a-half mile interpretive hiking loop.
DNR designated the Chehalis River Surge Plain as a Natural Area Preserve in 1989 to protect rare and high-quality native ecosystems and native species. The area is home to a remarkable variety of wildlife, including the rare Olympia mudminnow, pileated woodpeckers, bald eagles, reticulate sculpins, wood ducks, osprey, and mink. Now is an especially great time of year to visit the surge plains because several species are more visible during the spring mating season.
Throughout the year, families visit the area to walk along the interpretive trail, paddlers launch canoes and kayaks from the Blue Slough Access and Preachers Slough Road, and birders watch for wildlife.
About DNR’s Natural Areas Program
Under the oversight of Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz, DNR conserves nearly 164,000 acres of lands and ecological features in designated natural area preserves and natural resources conservation areas, protecting the highest-quality examples of natural Washington and providing opportunities for research, environmental education, and low-impact recreation. In addition, the Commissioner manages 2.5 million acres of trust lands for public benefit to ensure forested watersheds for clean water, wildlife habitat, recreation access, and wildfire protections. Commissioner Franz also oversees the state’s 3 million acres of aquatic lands, as well as industrial activities within forested areas, statewide geologic information, and forest health efforts.
New maps help you walk away from tsunami
Knowing where to walk and how long it might take to get there can be one of the most important pieces of information for anyone in Washington’s coastal communities when a tsunami strikes.
People that live work and play near the coast in Washington State are at risk for tsunamis. Our main causes of tsunamis in Washington are from earthquakes and landslides. If you feel an earthquake, that’s your warning and you should evacuate and get to high ground immediately.
That’s why the geologists at the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) have just published evacuation walk time maps for Port Angeles, Bellingham, Anacortes, Aberdeen, Hoquiam and Cosmopolis.
These maps, produced by the Washington Geological Survey within DNR, show the time it would take to evacuate on foot from the tsunami inundations zones of a Cascadia subduction zone earthquake. The walking pace is modeled at a slow walk pace, using the timing of crosswalks, adjusted for different terrain.
Using models of a Cascadia earthquake, the maps use colors to indicate how many minutes it would take to walk to safety at a moderate pace within these communities. Waves from a Cascadia earthquake-induced tsunami could reach Aberdeen in as soon as 15 to 20 minutes.
319 years since Cascadia last quaked
The geologic record shows the Cascadia subduction zone – the offshore area where the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate pushes under the larger North American plate – produces megathrust quakes every 300 to 600 years.
These maps are modeled on a magnitude 9 Cascadia earthquake. The geologic record shows earthquakes of this size occur approximately every 2,500 years, with the last striking in 1700.
Models, maps available online
The new pedestrian maps and maps for other communities are available through the interactive map on our web site: https://www.dnr.wa.gov/programs-and-services/geology/geologic-hazards/tsunamis/evacuation
The interactive map also provides access to tsunami evacuation brochures for areas that do not have walk time maps yet.
Other information about impacts from earthquakes to Washington communities is available on our Geologic Information Portal at: https://geologyportal.dnr.wa.gov
Geologists to discuss tsunami hazards at coastal Road Show next week
Washington Geological Survey geologists will present evacuation information and more with tsunami and earthquake experts from the Washington Emergency Management Division, the National Weather Service, Washington Sea Grant and local officials at next week’s Tsunami Road Show.
These experts will give 90-minute public presentations and answer questions at:
- 10 a.m., Tuesday, April 9 at
Pacific County PUD Auditorium,
405 Duryea Street, in Raymond, WA
- 7 p.m., Tuesday, April 9 at
Chautauqua Lodge,
304 14th St NW, in Long Beach, WA
- Noon, Wednesday, April 10 at
Ocean Shores Convention Center,
120 W. Chance a La Mer, Ocean Shores, WA
- 6:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 10 at
Aberdeen (J.M. Weatherwax) High School,
410 N. G. St., Aberdeen, WA
- 10 a.m., Thursday, April 11 with the Makah Tribe at
Makah Tribal Community Hall,
81 3rd Ave. Neah Bay, WA
- 6:00 p.m., April 11 at
Peninsula College in The Little Theater,
1502 E. Lauridsen Boulevard, Port Angeles, WA
- 10 a.m., Friday, April 12 with the Lower Elwah Klallam Tribe at
Tribal Center,
2851 Lower Elwha Road, Port Angeles, WA
Wildfires Already? We’re Working Hard, and Need Your Help, Too
Winter hadn’t even ended, but helicopters dumped buckets of water over wildfires. Engines with 10-person hand crews rushed to the front lines, and our dispatch centers quickly allocated resources to the threatened Western Washington communities.
You read that right: Western Washington.
Since Monday, firefighters responded to 50 wildfires in Washington state, with 49 of those were on the west side.
During a few of those fires, law enforcement ordered evacuations and road closures for Kelso and Longview residents in Cowlitz County on Wednesday. (Find the latest info on that fire here.)
Washington State Department of Natural Resources Meteorologist Josh Clark, who forecasts fire weather and danger, calls this dry spell on the western side of the state an anomaly.
A firefighter at work during late winter/early spring wildfires.“Offshore, easterly winds are a known, somewhat common, critical fire weather pattern for Western Washington where high pressure sets up east of the Cascades and low pressure on the west side. These winds usually come with warm and very dry conditions that promote considerable west side fire activity,” Clark said.
“This event stands out not because of the phenomenon but the timing. Generally, this pattern occurs during our peak fire season in late August through early October. To have east winds in excess of 35-50 mph, relative humidities between 11 and25 percent, and temperatures reaching near 80 degrees Fahrenheit in March is extremely rare. These conditions, combined with abundant dead or dormant grasses and shrubs, allowed for a ‘perfect storm’ of weather and fuels conditions to bring about considerable fire activity over the past few days.”
Although more moisture is expected in the coming days, and this dry spell is an anomaly for this time of year, DNR is still expecting warm and dry conditions over the summer.
This week should be a reminder to Western Washingtonians that we need to practice wildfire prevention all year long. Last year, wildfire investigations found most wildfires in Washington state are human-caused.
So with the western side of the state becoming more populated, and our summers becoming hotter and drier, everyone needs to be intentional about their actions.
Prevention is simple. Don’t have anything dragging on your car. Put out your campfire (drown it, stir it, make sure all embers are out). Know the wildfire risk in your community. Check conditions before lighting a burn pile.
By taking these simple steps, you can help protect our communities and landscapes.
“Wildfire is a Washington state problem,” said Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz, who oversee DNR wildfire operations and the largest firefighting team in the state. “While my team and I get ready for the season, we need the public to help us out by being wildfire aware and practicing prevention.”
File photo: Commissioner Franz visited Western Washington Interagency Fire Training Academy last year as firefighters worked a fire suppression exercise.At the peak of wildfire season last year, 3,000 firefighters were out on the landscapes. All helicopters were in the skies. Every engine on the fireline. Despite prepositioning our resources — a strategy that places firefighters in at-risk areas — our team was stretched thin.
Franz is working every day with the Legislature to get a $55 million wildfire and forest health package approved. It would get more full-time firefighters, air support, and invest in treatments that would restore the health of our forests.
“I’m proud of my wildfire team’s hard work this week. They were prepared, and we were able to keep most of these wildfires small,” said Franz. “However, going into late spring and summer, in order to better protect communities, we need more resources as conditions get hotter and drier. We need funding that will staff full-time firefighters, support more air assets, and carry out treatments that restore the health of our forests.”
It’s International Day of Forests – Do You Know What A Healthy Forest Looks Like?
As Washington state and much of the West struggles with more damaging wildfire seasons, you might hear policy experts and elected officials use terms like “forest health” or “forest resiliency” when talking about ways to reduce wildfire risk – but what exactly does that mean? And what does a healthy forest look like here in The Evergreen State?
The answer might surprise you. This International Day of Forests, we break it down:
What is a healthy forest?Simply put, a forest is healthy if the trees can access the nutrients, water and sunlight they needs to thrive and reproduce, and the forest is resilient to disturbances such as insects, disease, and fire. A healthy forest will also have a better chance of withstanding the effects of climate change.
It’s a common misconception, however, that for a forest to be healthy, it must be lush – filled with a dense under story and an abundance of trees – and that a landscape is healthier if it has more trees in it. Depending on the region, a healthy forest can look much different.
The upper photo, taken in 1934 in the Kittitas County area before excluding fire from the ecosystem, shows a more resilient forest (Photo by Reino R. Sarlin/USDA Forest Service). The lower photo of the same area, taken in 2010 after constant fire suppression, shows an over-crowded forest (Photo by John F. Marshall).Historic photos of Washington’s forests, like the one above, show that prior to European settlement our landscapes didn’t have as many trees. That’s because wildfires were a frequent part of the ecosystem, coming through regularly and keeping the amount of trees and other vegetation in balance. More than a century of wildfire suppression has allowed these forests to fill in, creating fuel for uncharacteristically severe fires.
That’s one reason why forest health has become a hot topic among state leaders. According to the Washington State Department of Natural Resources’ 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan, 2.7 million acres of forest in Central and Eastern Washington alone need active management to increase the forest’s resiliency to insects, diseases, climate change, and wildfire.
In 2015, Washington had a recording-breaking fire season: more than 1 million acres and 230 houses burned, and wildfire-related spending cost taxpayers $89 million. Projections indicate that if we don’t take action, the Pacific Northwest will experience four times more acres burned annually by 2080.
“Restoring forest health and reducing wildfire risk go hand in hand,” said Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz, who leads DNR. “Through bold action taken with our national, state, and local partners, our forests can become more resilient, reducing wildfires and keeping The Evergreen State true to its name.”
Supporting forest health initiatives benefits us all. Healthy and resilient forest ecosystems trap and store carbon from our atmosphere, provide timber and recreation jobs, wildlife habitat, wood products, and clean drinking water.
What are the different types of forests in Washington?Washington State is home to four general forest regions, each with their own characteristics. There are forests east of the Cascade Mountains, mountain forests, coastal forests along the Pacific Ocean, and Western lowland forests primarily along the Interstate 5 corridor.
Historical photographs often show open, park-like stands of ponderosa pine, such as this one from the Blue Mountains. (Photo courtesy of Baker County Library, Baker City, Oregon)- Low-elevation eastside forests. Shown above, these are often forests predominantly composed of ponderosa pine, Douglas-fir, and grand fir. Common in the hills and lowlands of Central and Eastern Washington, these forests historically experienced low and mixed severity fires every 5 to 25 years, and they often thrive when they have open spaces between trees.
- High elevation forests. Predominantly subalpine fir, Engelmann spruce, lodgepole pine, and other conifers. Shown above, these types of forests historically experienced mixed to high severity fires every 80 to 300 years.
- Western lowland forests. Forests in the Olympic Mountains’ rain shadow (around Sequim and Port Townsend), and southern Puget Sound lowlands, historically had mixed severity fires every 80 to 200 years.
- Coastal forests. Moist forests in Washington are dominated by Douglas-fir, western hemlock, Sitka spruce or western red cedar and historically have high severity fires every 200 to 500+ years.
A healthy forest may be affected by one of more of the following threats:
- Climate change. Climate change is affecting the temperature and precipitation patterns in Washington, which can contribute to tree stress. Tree stress makes trees more susceptible to insects and diseases, which can lead to increased tree mortality.
- Wildfires. Fire is a natural renewal process that promotes biological diversity and healthy ecosystems in our forests. However, projections suggest that fire frequency, intensity and extent will increase due to increased temperatures, earlier spring snow melt, longer fire seasons, and overcrowded forests.
- Insects. Insects such as bark beetles can present a serious threat to forests when trees are stressed. Even though they are a native species, on an already weakened tree bark beetles can contribute to tree mortality. Defoliating insects can cause foliage loss in trees, contributing to tree stress and possibly bark beetle attacks.
- Disease. Trees are susceptible to bacteria, viruses, and fungi. These diseases can affect tree health in a variety of ways, such as wood decay, tree growth, and tree mortality.
- Invasive species. Invasive species are plants, animals, and organisms that are not native to Washington. These species can grow and spread quickly, harming the local plants and wildlife.
Want to take a deep dive into the most recent threats seen in Washington’ forests? Read our state’s 2018 Forest Health Highlights report.
How can we make our forests healthier?There are several ways to make an unhealthy forest healthy again, depending on the type of forest and its purpose.
- Mechanical treatments. This refers to the physical removal of small and densely packed trees that have accumulated due to fire suppression, through the use of chain saws, chippers and mastication. These mechanical treatments improve forest health by opening up the understory in Eastside forests, diversifying wildlife habitat, and reducing the possibility of a fire spreading quickly from the forest floor into the upper crowns of large trees.
- Prescribed fire. Because fire frequently occurred in eastside forests, engaging in controlled burning there can improve forest health. Controlled burns – also called prescribed fire – allow professionals to apply fire to the right landscapes, in the right intensity, and at the right time to boost forest health. Prescribed fire reduces wildfire fuels, increases the effectiveness of mechanical treatments, improves forage conditions for grazing animals, and can reduce the risk of insect spread.
- Active management practices. In moist Western Washington forests, an abundance of vegetation can be healthy, and these forests don’t experience wildfires as often. But because of our changing climate and historic logging practices, these forests will still require some active management to ensure a healthy ecosystem.
- Regeneration harvests. Sometimes, all of the trees on a plot of land need to be harvested so the area can be replanted with trees that are better suited for the region and environment.
- Teamwork. Collaboration is the key to improving forest health in Washington. Landowners –state agencies, federal agencies, tribes, the timber industry and homeowners – all need to work together to coordinate landscape-scale and cross-boundary projects in priority forests. Collaboration among landowners will help speed our progress on creating more resilient and sustainable forests. Read Washington state’s forest health strategy at www.dnr.wa.gov/foresthealthplan.
Want to learn even more? (It is International Day of Forests, after all.) Watch longtime forest researcher Paul Hessburg’s TED Talk about the history of forests in the Pacific Northwest and their relationship to fire:
‘Be A Part Of Something Bigger’: Women in Wildfire
She started fighting fires right out of high school. Digging line, packing a 40-pound bag of water over rough terrain, sometimes working all day and night — for Jennifer Bammert, it was about giving the fight all you got.
“All the women here can do the job,” Bammert told the Ellensburg Daily Record in 1994. “I think if you do your best and try hard … you’ll be recognized.”
Jennifer Bammert out in the field, talking to reporters. Image: Ellensburg Daily NewsDNR promoted Bammert to crew supervisor, where she acted as incident commander, instructing firefighters and making decisions on suppression.
In her 14th season, during a large fire response, she directed 30 firefighters and was the only woman. All while keeping a baby-sitter on call for her son.
For her then fellow part-time firefighters at DNR — like Laurie Cox and Vicki Christiansen — it’s a similar story. They quickly gained respect for their grit on the fireline and love of protecting our forests.
“After my first year of firefighting and being with 19 other guys, I was hooked,” Cox said. “There wasn’t a lot of women in the agency at the time. I paved the way myself.”
Firefighter Laurie Cox getting ready to work on the fire line.Cox went on to be a forester, who now oversees the Family Forest Fish Passage Program, and she’s an organizer of the largest wildland fire training program in the state. This is now Bammert’s 39th fire season. She is still with DNR working hard, trying her best and newly promoted to Fire Suppression Program Manager. Christiansen served as Washington State Forester for years before becoming the U.S. Forest Service Chief.
These are just a few of the amazing women literally blazing trails for the last 40 years to make a clearer path for the next generation of firefighters.
‘Women are absolutely critical on the fire line’As the second woman elected Commissioner of Public Lands, Hilary Franz strongly believes in further expanding the diversity of DNR’s wildfire team, the largest firefighting team in the state.
“Women are absolutely critical on the fire line for lots of reasons,” Franz said.
“Not only for their leadership skills, but for their fearlessness, their courage, and their context of compassion and empathy, which are all critical qualities that we need in our firefighters. We need these women not only out on the fire line and in the community, but also back in our communication centers running logistics.”
In the last year, more women applied to be a DNR wildland firefighter than in 2018, but women still only make up 14 percent of DNR’s wildland fire team. Franz recently talked with women currently serving on the fire line to hear how we can make our firefighting space more welcoming and inclusive.
‘It’s really empowering’DNR firefighter Celeste Winther and Franz discussed the multitude of jobs that come with wildland fire, and that people should know that you don’t have to hold an actual tool to be a firefighter.
“My first summer on fire, I was six months pregnant,” Winther said. “I was working on an incident management team (doing logistics work), and you’re still putting in the effort. My mom was worried, but I told her, ‘ I’m never going to be surrounded by more first aid personnel.’”
Celeste Winther stands next to an engine, talking with DNR about her fire experience.Hannah Blackstock shared that she was a little intimidated to apply for a firefighter position, but last year she found herself out on the fireline in White Pass — riding in an ATV up a ski slope to set up a radio repeater for emergency communications. The views at the top were unreal, an experience you only get when working in wildfire.
“It’s an opportunity to be a part of something bigger. When you see all the disasters on the news and you just want to help, this is a way you can help,” Blackstock said. “You learn so many life skills. It’s really empowering.”
Apply for our wildfire team here.‘A win-win-win’: DNR enters first lease for solar power generation on state lands
For the first time, large-scale solar power generation is coming to Washington’s public lands.
Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz announced Wednesday that the Washington State Department of Natural Resources is entering into an agreement with a utility company to lease 480 acres of state trust lands in Klickitat County as part of a 150-megawatt solar power project.
Portland-based Avangrid Renewables agreed to a 40-year lease for the property, near the town of Bickleton, and expects to start transmitting power late next year. But the site will be generating more than electricity – it will also bring in $120,000 each year for schools across the state.
“Solar power is a win-win-win for the people of Washington,” said Commissioner Franz, the elected official who oversees DNR. “It generates significant revenue for our schools while creating jobs and providing clean, affordable energy to our homes and businesses.”
Solar power may be new to DNR, but the department already has an expansive clean energy program anchored by wind energy. Each year, turbines on state trust land generate 200 megawatts of power and raise $1.2 million for school construction and other public services.
The Bickleton lease is not a one-off project – DNR has two other parcels in Eastern Washington that are currently up for lease for solar power generation, and more than a dozen companies have expressed interest in using upwards of 30 tracts of state land to create solar power.
“Our goal is to produce 500 megawatts of solar power on public lands by 2025,” Franz said. “The clean energy we generate reduces pollution and builds energy independence in our communities. And it also creates family-wage jobs in parts of our state that need them the most.”
The Klickitat County parcel is currently being used as grazing land for livestock, generating $2 per acre per year. But Avangrid will instead be leasing the land it uses for power generation for $300 a year.
A map of the parcel in Klickitat County that DNR is leasing for the generation of solar power.If the land were leased solely for grazing rights at the $2 price for the next 40 years, it would generate $38,400 for the Common School Trust, which is used to help fund school construction across the state. Once Avangrid begins generating power at the site, DNR will make that same figure over four months. In the 40-year span of the lease, the property will instead generate about $4.8 million for the trust.
“Executing the first solar power lease on state lands for a project like this is an exciting development for us as we work to expand solar energy in the Northwest,” said Avangrid Renewables’ Vice President for Business Development Jesse Gronner. “We still have a lot of work to do to push this project forward, but we think it’s a great site for a solar project, and we thank Commissioner Franz and her staff for working with us.”
Check your burn pile! Is it completely out?
Keep in mind that the major human cause of wildfires in Washington is outdoor burning. These escaped wildfires are investigated and, if you are found guilty, you can be fined. If burning is allowed in your area, the only material that can be burned is natural vegetation grown on the property where the burning occurs. Also, remember to be careful that smoke is not a nuisance to your neighbors.
Please know the rules before starting any outdoor burning. It also is illegal to use burn barrels in Washington.
DNR wants to encourage a variety of ways to rid your yard of waste instead of burning it. Since you run the risk of an escaped fire when burning (not to mention smoke pollution), why not consider different ways to do away with that yard waste.
- Compost it – It’s a practical and convenient approach for disposing of yard waste. Any vegetable matter can be composted. Organic material, such as fallen leaves, grass clippings, weeds, and the remains of garden plants, make excellent compost.
- Chip it – Turn large branches and debris into mulch. If you don’t already own a chipper, check with your local equipment rental agency. Invite your neighbors to join in to make it more cost efficient for everyone.
- Use curbside pickup.
- Take it to the landfill.
We talk about fire prevention every day at DNR, so when it’s time for you to clean up your property from yard waste, please consider an alternative to burning. If you need to burn, please follow the rules!
Wildfire Contractors Needed
Want to help fight fires and protect communities across Washington?
In advance of fire season, DNR is reaching out to local communities to help people understand how to provide fire suppression resources to wildland firefighting efforts.
If you are interested in joining the qualified, trained, and available equipment operators who help DNR during wildfire season, check out our webpage for information on how to become a “Call When Needed” vendor.
Are you new to providing wildfire suppression equipment?
DNR is offering two Operator Safety Trainings for non-VIPR resources. All non-VIPR resources can sign up to be in a source list for Emergency Equipment Rental Agreements (EERA). This provides a statewide database of preseason vendor information to be used in combination with VIPR resources on DNR incidents. RSVP for the class through the contact below.
Ellensburg
March 19 and 22 at 9 a.m.
Southeast Region Office
713 Bowers Road
Ellensburg, WA
Contact: Spencer Slyfield at spencer.slyfield@dnr.wa.gov
Wenatchee
March 22 and 27 at 9 a.m.
Wenatchee Work Center
5552 Industry Lane
East Wenatchee, WA
Contact: Bobby LaPoint at robert.lapoint@dnr.wa.gov
Fire Suppression Resource Availability Agreements, commonly referred to as ”Call When Needed” Agreements, are preseason agreements used to support or engage in wildland firefighting. These agreements serve as an organized way to show DNR what private resources are available for hire within a specific geographic area or for their service specialty.
DNR uses these preseason agreements to establish a pool of qualified, trained, and available vendors who can provide equipment and services in a timely fashion, upon request.
For people who want to learn how to provide resources for wildland fire suppression and what all it entails, go to the Provide Equipment and Services for Fire Suppression page on DNR’s website.
Homeowners take proactive steps to reduce wildfire risk on their forestland
Brent Steinhart understands fire danger – he’s a volunteer with Spokane County Fire District 4. So when he looked at the dense forest surrounding his home, he knew he had to act quickly to reduce his vulnerability to a wildfire.
Steinhart and his wife, Corey, worked with a Washington State Department of Natural Resources forester in the spring of 2017 to identify 1.5 acres of high-risk forest on their land. The Steinharts own 20 acres in the wildland urban interface – areas in our state where human development, such as homes and businesses, meet natural areas, including forests and grasslands.
Private residents own a significant amount of forestland in Washington, and problems like bark beetles, drought, and overly dense forests all contribute to a forest health crisis that’s making it easier for severe wildfires to spread. That’s why DNR works with small forest landowners to reduce wildfire risk on their property, including through forest health treatments like thinning and wood chipping.
Before and after photos of the Steinharts’ property.The Steinharts, both in their 50s, decided on a do-it-yourself forest thinning project. The area they tackled had tall ponderosa and lodgepole pine, crowded with smaller pine and Douglas fir. To dispose of the excess vegetation and smaller trees, they used some for firewood and chipped the rest. Through this work, they significantly reduced their ladder fuels – the vegetation tall enough to spread flames into the upper crowns of large trees. In all, the project cost DNR $1,260 in incentives.
DNR forester Randy Burke said homeowners can save time by hiring a private contractor to do the work, “but many homeowners enjoy their sweat-equity investment on their property.” The project makes the forest healthier, too, because many Eastern Washington forests thrive when they’re less dense.
The couple’s work was so successful that they treated 2 more acres, finishing in the fall of 2018, and were planning a third project.
“By thinning and allowing those trees to not compete, your forest can be healthier, and it looks really nice when you’re done,” Brent said.
Supporting small forest landowners in improving forest health on their property, and in turn reducing the risk of wildfires, is a key part of DNR’s 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan, as well as the agency’s Wildland Fire Protection 10-Year Strategic Plan.
“Solving our forest health crisis will take an all-lands, all-hands approach, including work by federal and state governments, tribes, timber companies and homeowners who live on forestland,” said Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz, who oversees DNR. “I am optimistic that we are up for the challenge. Across our state, we are already seeing a willingness by so many people to work together and get this done.”
‘You can’t neglect it’
Brenda and Ryan Nash’s Hidden Valley home sits on 20 acres in Kittitas County. (Washington State Department of Natural Resources photo)Brenda and Ryan Nash are taking a similar approach to their wooded property in the Hidden Valley area outside of Cle Elem. The couple moved there in July 2016 from Western Washington, and their 20 acres needed a lot of work to reduce wildfire risk – most of their forest was overgrown.
“That first year, we had a crew come in … and work for four weeks to help (fire-prepare) the entire property,” Brenda Nash said. “It was a great starting point. There was still a lot left to do. There’s still a lot of thinning of the trees we need to do. There’s still debris on the ground that needs to be burned or chipped.”
Complicating matters, much of the couple’s property is on a steep slope – so steep that they couldn’t use mechanical thinning or chipping equipment, she said.
“It really is all manual work that had to happen – very grueling manual labor up and down this pitch,” she said, adding that a controlled burn might be done later because it would be the most efficient way to reduce dense brush, while allowing the larger trees on her property to thrive.
Nash and her husband want to do more than reduce fire risk. They want to restore habitat for elk, and a controlled burn (also called prescribed fire), would open up their forest, increasing elk habitat and regenerating plants that elk eat on the forest floor.
“To retain healthy trees and wildlife, it’s a give and take. It’s a balance,” she said. “You can’t just let nature take over, or else other things happen that affect the wildlife and certainly wildfire if it ever came through.”
The Nashes plan to live in their Central Washington home for the rest of their lives and pass it on to their children.
“It’s our way of life,” Nash said. “It’s not for everyone – living in an area like this, it comes with a lot of responsibility. You can’t just neglect it. But it’s worth it.”
If you live in a wooded area and want to learn more about wildfire preparedness on your property, visit DNR’s Prepare for Wildfire webpage.
Brenda Nash, from left, speaks last fall with Rose Shriner of the Kittitas County Conservation District, Kara Karboski of the Washington Prescribed Fire Council, and Roslyn property owner Chris Martin about her land during a prescribed fire Training Exchange (TREX) event. Nash allowed the trainees to assess her property as part of a learning exercise. (Washington State Department of Natural Resources photo)Volunteer Fire Assistance Phase 1 grant opens March 8, 2019
Several factors affect the impact of wildfire in Washington, including the capacity of rural fire districts to respond to wildfires.
That’s where DNR’s Fire District Assistance Program can help. We administer grants to help local fire districts and departments obtain more resources.
Eligible fire districts and departments can order personal protective equipment (PPE) and other fire equipment at 50 percent cost through the DNR Fire Cache beginning March 8, 2019. USDA Forest Service Volunteer Fire Assistance grant funding pays the other 50 percent.
Districts and departments can place orders for reduced cost PPE through an online shopping cart until April 30, 2019 or until grant funding is expended, whichever occurs first.
Interested? Learn more at the DNR Fire District Assistance webpage for eligibility requirements and ordering process.
Forest restoration work helped firefighters stop Boyds Fire
Tom Merritt’s Eastern Washington home is about 15 miles away from where Boyds Fire broke out on the evening of Aug. 11. Perched high up on a hill, he saw smoke and watched as the fire rapidly grew.
“I was watching it from the deck of my house in Colville and I was like, ‘Oh, that thing is getting after it,’” Merritt recalled.
And it did spread fast.
The fire began in the Sherman Creek Wildlife Area, west of the Columbia River in Northeast Washington. It was windy that evening, and embers blew ahead of the fire, igniting more forest and growing the fire further. The fire threatened a cedar mill vital to the local economy, businesses, private homes, and Bonneville Power Administration lines that serve Ferry County. When those power lines go down, the whole county loses power.
“It was very eye-opening,” said Daro Palmer, assistant manager of the wildlife area. “Fire is a very impressive thing. With that fire, the way it was with high winds and the rate it was moving at, I was awestruck.”
With so much at stake and the fire quickly growing in intensity, firefighters needed to act fast to contain the blaze. However, steep terrain meant firefighters would have to dig firelines mostly by hand, and in a forest thick with vegetation, this was easier said than done. The fire grew to more than 3,000 acres within a few days, prompting evacuation notices for nearby residents.
Then firefighters learned of a respite: the fire was headed toward forests that had received forest treatments, such as tree thinning and controlled burning, carried out by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and the U.S. Forest Service. Because of this work, these forests were much less dense, making them easier to navigate with minimal fuels (dry brush and woody debris). The fire would not spread as quickly through those woods and hopefully would stay on the ground.
“Without the previous treatments we would not have had the time to construct firelines and remove the fuel to be able to burn out the fire. So we would have had to let the fire grow larger in order to buy us enough time to safely construct firelines,” said Cindi Tonasket-Ebel, landowner assistance forester for the Washington State Department of Natural Resources, who assisted with fighting the fire.
In the end, those firelines were what contained and stopped Boyds Fire.
The yellow line in the map above indicates Boyds Fire’s footprint, it burned 4,712 acres in total. The pink areas show where the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife previously treated the forest with prescribed burns. The blue line is the wildlife area boundary. (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife image)The story of forest health treatments aiding wildland firefighters is becoming more noticed as the state and its partners work to increase the scale of forest health work in Central and Eastern Washington under DNR’s 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan. Treatment areas provided a tactical advantage during the Stormy Creek and Cougar Creek fires near Entiat in July, and prescribed burning and forest thinning done previously in the Colville National Forest helped crews battle the Horns Mountain Fire in August.
Forest health treatments
Different landowners may have different reasons for treating their forests, but forest health treatments are generally aimed at returning many Central and Eastern Washington forests to a more natural state – one that is resilient to wildfires and less likely to spread flames.
Common treatments consist of thinning small trees from an overly dense forest, and removing the low-hanging branches, woody debris, and brush that could help fire spread from the ground up into the crowns of trees – also called ladder fuels. Forest thinning is often followed with prescribed – or controlled – burning to further reduce fuels and help encourage plant regeneration in ecosystems that rely on occasional, low-intensity fires.
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has actively thinned 4,100 acres in the Sherman Creek Wildlife Area for more than 10 years in order to provide high-quality habitat for species of all sizes – from deer and moose to birds and butterflies. They have also conducted prescribed burning on 890 acres within that stand to eliminate the slash produced by thinning, reducing the wildfire hazard even more while rejuvenating the forest floor, said Matt Eberlein, prescribed fire program manager for Fish and Wildlife.
Firelines dug in areas treated by the U.S. Forest Service and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife cut Boyds Fire off from reaching more forest, ultimately containing the fire. (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife photo)For many pine forests in Central and Eastern Washington, fire is part of the ecosystem’s natural process. It cleans the forest floor, makes room for sunlight to reach the floor, and nourishes the soil. It also reduces competition for nutrients, allowing trees to grow healthier.
The U.S. Forest Service has also applied forest health treatments to about 1,500 acres in the Sherman Creek area since 2012. These treatments include cutting small trees to reduce ladder fuels, mechanical thinning, and pile burning.
“In a combination of forest activities and prescribed fires, we were actually able to bring that stand of timber a little closer to what its natural state would have been,” Eberlein said.
Outside of those treated areas, Boyds Fire burned hot and ferociously.
“It carried through the untreated landscapes fairly easily through continuation of the fuels and spots where embers go up in the air and land up ahead of the fire and start new fires,” said Gary Jennings, a deputy incident commander on the fire.
In areas that were thinned, the fire still burned hot, but because there were no ladder fuels to spread the flames upward, it remained largely on the forest floor, said Richard Tveten, forest manager for Fish and Wildlife.
“It was a very hot, windy day, so the fire still carried through the areas that had been thinned and burned, but the damage to the forest was minor,” Tveten said.
5 homes lost, 23 protected
During parts of Boyds Fire, in the Colville area, low-hanging branches and an overabundance of tree saplings provided ladder fuels for fire to spread into the forest’s canopy, growing the fire more rapidly. (Photo by Gary Jennings)The effort to fight Boyds Fire was multilateral. Under the management of Northwest Incident Management Team 11, DNR, the U.S. Forest Service, Joint Fire Districts Stevens County 8/Ferry County 3, Colville Bureau of Indian of Affairs, and other agencies worked together to suppress the fire using firefighters from 16 different states. About 1,100 people were engaged in fighting the fire. Teams worked around the clock until the fire was suppressed, Jennings said.
The fire burned for 21 days over 4,712 acres. It burned through land managed by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, the U.S. Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, DNR, and Washington State Parks. Within the perimeter, five homes and four outbuildings were lost, but 23 homes and many more outbuildings survived.
This year marked Jennings’ 44th fire season. Though he is retired from his position as a fire management officer with the Forest Service, he still works during the wildfire season with Northwest Incident Team 11.
“Everyone is working under the same rules of engagement,” Jennings said. “It goes from training to coordination. And we are pretty fortunate to have such a strong inter-agency working group in wildland fire. In my job, I worked around the country and you don’t always find that. And every year we seem to make better strides.”
Jennings said Washington’s approach to wildfires can be a good example for the rest of the country. From inter-agency collaboration, to the methods used to fight wildfires, to forest health treatments that reduce wildfire risk, Washington will continue to make progress.
The inter-agency approach makes sense when treating forests too. This fire burned across the boundary lines of seven public agencies, plus private property. DNR’s forest health plan includes a vision of these landowners all working together to implement large-scale, cost-effective treatments to significantly improve the chances of avoiding the kind of intense wildfires that so significantly impact Washingtonians.
“As we face a warming climate and longer fire seasons, we need to continue to collaborate across property lines to safeguard our forests and communities,” said Hilary Franz, Commissioner of Public Lands in Washington state. “Washington is known for its evergreen forests, and the thinning and prescribed burning that agencies are doing to maintain the health of those forests is critical to preserving our natural resources for generations to come.”
To ensure forest work continues across Washington at the pace and scale needed to achieve this, Franz is seeking $55 million from Washington’s state legislature. Earlier this month, Franz also unveiled her Wildland Fire Protection 10-Year Strategic Plan to help the state prepare for and manage increasing wildfire challenges.
As head of the state’s largest wildfire fighting force – the Department of Natural Resources – Commissioner Franz knows that increased investments in wildfire preparedness and forest health restoration are key to reducing wildfire risk in Washington.
New grants help forest collaboratives restore health, wildfire resiliency to Washington’s forests
The Washington State Department of Natural Resources is empowering communities to tackle important forest health issues with two new grant programs. These programs, which support DNR’s 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan, aim to create forests that are resilient to wildfires, insects and disease by supporting large-scale forest restoration efforts led by groups called forest collaboratives.
Forest collaboratives bring together those who know the forests best – conservationists, tribes, timber workers, scientists, recreationists, local government, and other community members. Despite this diversity, they all have one thing in common – an inclusive, science-based approach to forest management. And by designing restoration projects in an integrated way, forest collaboratives work toward healthy forests that provide meaningful ecological, economic, and cultural value for Washingtonians.
Of the two new grant programs, DNR’s All Lands Forest Restoration Grant Program supports forest treatments, such as the thinning of small-diameter trees and controlled burning to reduce underbrush and fire risk. The second grant program, the Building Forest Partnerships Grant Program, funds facilitator time, meeting spaces, forest field trips and other opportunities to forge relationships and reach consensus on forest management.
Nine forest collaboratives from around the state received a combined $1.8 million through these two grant programs, and they are leveraging the funds in innovative ways to increase the pace and scale of forest health treatments in Washington.
This map shows the forest collaboratives in Washington state that received grant money from the Washington State Department of Natural Resources. (The Nature Conservancy image)Darrington Collaborative
The Darrington Collaborative was established in 2015 in the rural timber town of Darrington in Northwest Washington. It has a 10-member board made up of diverse perspectives, including representatives from Washington Wild, Hampton Lumber, American Whitewater, and the Glacier Peak Institute. The shared goal is to increase sustainable timber harvests while improving the ecological function of forests and watersheds in the Darrington Ranger District of the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.
“The Darrington Collaborative has been a unique and rewarding experience for the community of Darrington to build trust with industry, environmentalists and local leaders to provide economic benefits to our community through sustainable logging, forest restoration, and education,” Darrington Mayor Dan Rankin said.
Prior to the creation DNR’s grant programs, the Darrington Collaborative was focusing on small projects to help build shared understanding about different management approaches. Now, with nearly $125,000 from the DNR grants, and a $25,000 match from Hampton Lumber, it is moving on to a project covering 30,000 acres around the Darrington Ranger District.
This project will gather the technical information necessary for forest health treatments that enhance old growth characteristics, thin overstocked second-growth stands, and improve roads and aquatic conditions. This investment will expand the U.S. Forest Service’s ability to get work done in the forest, accelerating the timeline for treatments in this area by more than a year.
Glacier Peak Institute will lead a team of Darrington High School students to collect and analyze data so the collaborative can monitor the ecological impact of the project.
Local companies will benefit from contracting restoration work and from timber harvests in the thinned second-growth stands. The surrounding community will benefit from additional recreational opportunities, and wildlife dependent on old growth forests will benefit from improved habitat conditions.
Chumstick Wildfire Stewardship Coalition
Located in the Wenatchee River watershed near Leavenworth, the Chumstick Wildfire Stewardship Coalition is primarily focused on the problem of severe wildfires. Identified by multiple analyses as one of the highest-risk wildfire areas in the state, the forested landscape around Leavenworth is scattered with private homes.
Like many areas east of the Cascades, historically frequent, low-intensity fires were an essential part of healthy forests. A century of fire suppression, however, has created dangerous buildup of low-value woody debris. Prescribed, or controlled, burning and other tools can reduce those combustible materials and get the forest back to a healthy balance, but prescribed fire can also be challenging to implement, especially across different landownerships.
In Leavenworth, this problem is compounded by the fact that the burn season is short at such a high altitude. Long winters and long fire seasons allow only about six weeks in the fall and six weeks in the spring to conduct prescribed burns.
“There is just no way to get rid of enough fuels right now, with the lack of nearby timber mills and restrictions such as the local apple maggot quarantine area” said Corrine Hoffman, director of the coalition. “Removing fuels is a huge challenge in the Leavenworth area.”
Tree farmer Ross Frank, former chair of the Chumstick Wildfire Stewardship Coalition, talks to members of The Nature Conservancy in June at the Red-Tail Canyon Farm in Leavenworth. The Chumstick coalition facilitated the meeting, allowing members of The Nature Conservancy to meet potential forest health partners in Washington state. (The Nature Conservancy photo)Like many large problems, the solution requires an all-hands-on-deck approach for treating forested landscapes. Joining with federal and private forest landowners, Chelan County Fire District 3, Chelan County, The Nature Conservancy, and others, the Chumstick coalition has a two-pronged approach: public outreach and direct landowner assistance.
About $125,000 in DNR grant funding is empowering the coalition to not only expand these activities, but plan and carry out a larger project that coordinates treatment across private and public land. The coalition will work with landowners to assess their properties and apply necessary forest health treatments while working with the Forest Service, which will do its own treatment on land adjacent to these properties.
Strategically investing in a large, cross-boundary project, rather than one-off projects that exclude the surrounding property, creates a continuous landscape of resilient forests.
Chumstick Wildfire Stewardship Coalition Director Corrine Hoffman, far left, and Mike Smith, a volunteer coordinator and firefighter with Chelan County Fire District 3, talk to elementary school students about wildfire and its effects on forest ecosystems during the Wenatchee River Salmon Festival last summer in Leavenworth. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service photo)Northeast Washington Forest Coalition
The Northeast Washington Forest Coalition has raised the bar for forest collaboratives everywhere since it started working on forest restoration on Forest Service land in 2002. Despite having forests that produce less board-feet per acre than forests in other parts of the state, Colville National Forest in Northeast Washington has become the largest timber-producing forest in the region, largely thanks to the work of this coalition. The coalition also restores and protects important wildlife habitat, thins forests to reduce the risk of uncharacteristically large wildfires, and produces stands of trees that are larger, healthier, and more in line with historical conditions.
Formed in 2002, the coalition includes diverse interests such as Vaagan Brothers Lumber, Sustainable Obtainable Solutions, Resolute Forest Products, the Kalispel Tribe, Kettle Range Conservation Group, Avista Corporation, Conservation Northwest, and The Lands Council, as well as consultants working in private forests, wildlands safety, and forest biomass. Technical advisers provide important insights and connections with even more diverse groups and interests.
Previously, the coalition’s projects have focused on the Colville National Forest. Now it is starting a new project, called Sxwuytn (s-who-ee-tin), the Kalispel Salish word for connections or trail, in a 90,000-acre planning area that includes a checkerboard of land controlled by the Forest Service, the Kalispel Tribe, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, DNR, and private landowners.
“We at NEWFC are thrilled that our Washington state legislators and the Department of Natural Resources have tackled the issues of forest health, restoration and resilience head-on,” said Gloria Flora, Executive Director of Sustainable Obtainable Solutions. “They’re using science, planning and supporting our on-the-ground action to increase the pace and scale of restoration across all lands. That shows real leadership and allows us to help our forests and communities even more effectively.”
This project is uniquely suited for the collaborative to take on – with a combined $425,000 from DNR’s two grant programs, the Northeast Washington Forest Coalition is engaging in and coordinating public outreach, connecting with a wide range of landowners, and building broader community support for forest management and restoration through involvement and education.
Grant funding also supports surveying forest roads, analyzing aquatic conditions, and accelerating the planning process. The Sxwuytn Project takes the planning process to a new level by inviting the public to help plan and prioritize a menu of treatments that all landowners and managers can select from to create a mosaic of forest restoration treatments across all landscapes.
Forest collaboratives: a Pacific Northwest institution
Forest collaboratives are not new to the Pacific Northwest. In the early 1990s, forest collaboratives started to form as an alternative to the litigation-heavy timber wars that pitted environmental advocates and endangered species against timber companies and rural jobs.
However, growing challenges with catastrophic wildfire, drought, and disease have made the need for collaborating on and implementing forest restoration more urgent.
Forest collaboratives don’t just address conflict, they leverage additional knowledge and resources into forest management while respecting the different values that forests provide. They also create a forum for addressing forest issues on a larger, connected landscape rather than focusing on individual tracts of property.
Want to learn more or get involved? Visit washingtonforestcollaboratives.org.
The inclusion gap: Building barriers to break them with the Women in the Woods
After hiking in the rain on a cold Saturday morning, 12 women came to what looked like a fork in the Douglas Fir Trail of DNR’s Mount Si Natural Resources Conservation Area. So they dropped their packs, but they weren’t there to rest — they were there to work.
“We’re going to be really defining the trail,” said Mountains To Sound Greenway Trust Volunteer Program Coordinator Caroline Villanova. “To make sure people know where they’re going, they’re not getting lost, not going down a decommissioned road, and they know clearly the trail they are on.”
Villanova explains hugelkultur mounds. It’s an agricultural technique where mounds are constructed from woody debris, organic materials like leaves, and rich soil.The sight of yellow hardhats and swinging pickaxes isn’t unusual along the trail. Thousands of volunteers graciously dedicate their time to maintaining and fixing up trails like ones in the Mount Si NRCA.
What’s different about this one? It’s a step in the right direction to bridging the inclusion gap in outdoor recreation.
Nearly 10 years ago, a Mountains To Sound Greenway Trust staff member saw the need for spaces for women who wanted to do trail work. So they created Women in the Woods, supportive, year-round events for anyone who identifies as a woman and wants to use a power tool out in the woods.
Maria Sheldon, Greenway Trust Education Associate, uses a pickax to dig a trench.Zan McPherson, Greenway Trust Volunteer Program Associate, and Maria Sheldon, Greenway Trust Education Associate, were both out on the Douglas Trail as part of the all-female leadership.
“I love the all-women space,” said McPherson. “It’s important, and personally feel so much more empowered as a leader in a group of all women.”
Sheldon continued, “Zan and I, being leaders, we get the opportunity to share what we know but also learn, and not only does this empower women but people who are trying to get more experience, and so we get a variety of trail maintenance experience [from people during events], and we get to learn from people as well.”
Volunteers complete the hugelkultur mounds by transplanting ferns.Along with Villanova, McPherson and Sheldon coached volunteers on the task at hand: building hugelkultur mounds. It’s an agricultural technique where mounds are constructed from woody debris, organic materials like leaves, and rich soil. Together, it creates an egg yolk of nutrients that will help the forest floor to form and allow more native plants to grow. Also, the mounds and the plants clearly divert hikers away from the wrong path.
It took six hours of digging around for good soil, moving rocks, and sawing fallen logs to complete. Stepping back to see what they accomplished, the volunteers took away more than just the satisfaction of a hard day’s work.
The group celebrates completing their work at the Little Si trailhead.“We have people who come together who don’t even know each other while working on the trail together and problem solving,” Villanova said. “I can see people getting to know each other more, making jokes, laughing, and all of sudden we end the event and everyone is friends. We’re closer, like physically, we can hang out. Clearly a community has formed around Women in the Woods.”