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104 North Laurel,
Suite 104
Port Angeles, WA 98362
Phone (360) 417-1815
Fax: (360) 457-1089
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2009 – a record year!

North Olympic Land Trust protected 541 acres in 2009. We closed on 6 projects, conserving 541 acres, a record conservation achievement for NOLT!

As the organization enters its 20th year, all of our supporters through two decades can feel great satisfaction in protecting the special qualities of more than 2,000 acres.

Twenty years. Two thousand acres! Sounds good doesn’t it?
These are the properties added in 2009. They help make Clallam County an ideal place to live, work and visit, contributing to our economy as well as our quality of life.
Dungeness Valley Creamery
Dungeness Valley Creamery 38 acres
North Olympic Land Trust contributed to the partnership with Friends of the Fields, Clallam County, Clallam Conservation District, and the Brown Family that protected 38 acres of farmland through a conservation easement on the Dungeness Valley Creamery. Friends of the Fields provided the key leadership in protecting this farmland.

The successful dairy, wholesale and retail business of farm owners and dairy operators Jeff and Debbie Brown and Ryan and Sarah McCarthey help preserve the agricultural landscape and local food economy on the North Olympic Peninsula.

A search of the property’s history indicates a farm has been in continuous existence since the late 1800’s and used for milk production during most of that time.

The conservation easement was funded by Washington Wildlife and Recreation Program and donations from North Olympic Land Trust’s Farmland Fund, Friends of the Fields outstanding fundraising efforts, and other local sources. Clallam Conservation District contributed several critical maps for the grant application. Clallam County provided the required governmental sponsorship.

Elk Creek Trail
Elk Creek Salmon Habitat 255 acres
Wild Salmon Center, an international nonprofit organization dedicated to identifying, understanding and protecting the best wild salmon ecosystems of the Pacific Rim, transferred ownership and management of this important fish habitat to the Land Trust.

The Center had used its funds, along with contributions from Forks resident Becky Dickson and a grant from Washington State’s Salmon Recovery Funding Board, to purchase the 255-acre property, located near Forks, from Rayonier in 2004.

Though not a land conservation organization, Wild Salmon Center purchased this highly productive salmon tributary due to the imminent threat of habitat degradation and lack of buyers at the time. They stepped up to the plate during a time of need—knowing that they would need to find an appropriate long-term land owner.

NOLT was chosen as the most suitable owner. “We felt it was critical to find owners that were genuinely rooted in the local community and were attune to local values. NOLT was a perfect fit and we are intrigued with their vision to manage this land for fish and people—it holds a lot of promise.” said Devona Ensmenger of the Wild Salmon Center.

“Land trust leaders were honored to be offered the chance to take ownership and help provide stewardship for this important salmon habitat.” d’Hemecourt said.

Among species in the 11 miles of Elk Creek and tributaries that run through the property are wild coho, steelhead, coastal cutthroat trout, and occasionally, fall Chinook salmon.

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Quileute Tribe have described Elk Creek as the best intact functioning and productive salmon habitat in the Calawah River basin. According to Quileute Tribal surveys, 35% of the coho in the Calawah River depend upon Elk Creek for spawning and rearing.

The property also possesses exceptional old growth forest characteristics and critical habitat for elk, eagles, and marbled murrelet.

North Olympic Land Trust’s goals for 2010 include completing a management plan for the property. Potential uses could include education programs for area schools, continued research and carbon sequestration.

Miller Wildlife Preserve

Miller Wildlife Preserve 11 acres
This wildlife preserve is located off Hooker Road near Sequim, and is primarily forestland. Helen Miller donated the conservation easement, permanently protecting 11 acres of habitat and one of the nicest stands of alder on the Peninsula.

See Summer 2009 newsletter for more details.

Ennis Creek Wildlife Preserve

Ennis Creek Wildlife Preserve 10.5 acres
This property is densely forested, with more than 300 feet of Ennis Creek running through it.

Ennis Creek originates in Olympic National Park and is the most significant remaining fish habitat for salmon, steelhead, and trout traveling through Port Angeles. According to the Clallam County Planning Department, Ennis Creek is generally considered the healthiest of the Port Angeles urban streams, having the largest undisturbed upper watershed, the least development, the greatest diversity of
existing native fish stocks, and the highest potential for restoration and salmon recovery.

The property is located upstream of Ennis Arbor Farm, where NOLT protects another 50 acres with a conservation easement.
 
Rene Ewbank, owner of the newly protected conservation easement, said she hopes her property always will be available as a wildlife refuge and for food production. The landowner’s solar-powered home is also the location for her business, Fresh Hats: Love on Your Head, which are sold at the Sequim Open Aire Market.


Little River
Little River 133 acres
The property is located on Little River Road, in the foothills above Port Angeles, and 4 miles of Little River and tributaries run through the property.

“Little River will be an important area for salmon when the Elwha dams are removed, and this property has excellent riparian habitat and water quality,” the Conservation Director said. “It is especially important to protect the mainly mature red alder and scattered conifer trees within the stream buffer.”

That property’s owners are Robert A. Haverfield, Susan M. Davis, Susan M. Chadd, Elaine Jaques, Michael J. Tallmadge, Freda Tallmadge, Paul E. Knowles and Kristi J. Knowles. They deserve special commendation for protecting its qualities throughout their years of ownership and then ensuring its permanent protection through the agreement with the Land Trust, d’Hemecourt said.

Ruth Jenkins, Greg Good, John Warrick
Discovery Trail Easement 93.5 acres
This property protects scenic views from Olympic Discovery Trail and Olympic National Park. It also contains a portion of a historic lake bed that was drained in the late 1800s for farmland.

Conservation of the 93.5 acres helps Ruth Jenkins and John Warrick achieve their multi-faceted vision of preserving the property’s wetlands, streams and pastoral character and restoring the property’s historic lake bed and coniferous forests. The owners also are restoring a historic home.

The property is surrounded by Nancy McLaughlin’s Conservation Easement, the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and the trail, which eventually will stretch from Port Townsend to the Pacific Ocean.

Discovery Trail Easement - historic lakebed, wetlands, historic Thompson home, and Olympic Mountains

Posted February 23, 2010

News:

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okes Easement

  > T
homas Easement

  > Streamfest Weekend

  > Transform Agriculture

  > Merger with Friend of the Field

  > Salmon Conservation

  > 2009 Record Year

  >
2009 Annual Report


     
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