Youth Explore the Science Behind Native Plants and Water Quality

Youth Explore the Science Behind Native Plants and Water Quality

It was a beautiful, sunny July morning when ten Snohomish County high school students bounded down the well-traveled trails of Marysville’s Jennings Park and into the Allen Creek floodplain. These students are participants of Snohomish Conservation District’s brand new Youth Engaged in Sustainable Systems (YESS) program, a five-week curriculum exploring careers in natural resources while building job skills and earning summer school credit.

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Agroforestry Practice Highlight: Silvopasture

Agroforestry Practice Highlight: Silvopasture

Silvopasture is the practice of deliberately integrating trees and grazing livestock on the same land. This typically involves either taking a stand of trees (such as a forest or an orchard) and integrating livestock, or establishing trees on land where livestock are already grazing.

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NOAA funds Transformational Restoration for Chinook Recovery

NOAA funds Transformational Restoration for Chinook Recovery

In April, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries awarded $24 million in grants to Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and local partners to fund transformational restoration in Whidbey Basin.

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Track Paddock Highlight with Sarah and Jeremy Vecchi

Track Paddock Highlight with Sarah and Jeremy Vecchi

Track paddocks are an excellent way to keep your horses moving and interested when they aren’t on pasture. Track paddocks can also help protect water quality by avoiding overgrazing and compaction of your pastures that may become vulnerable to mud and runoff during the wet season.

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Save the Date: Lake Tye Science Day

Save the Date: Lake Tye Science Day

Join us for science demonstrations, hands-on activities, and games about the many wonderful ways we can protect our streams, lakes, and salmon! Light snacks will be provided so you can refuel between activities.

People of all ages are invited to attend, but the event will be most exciting to families with children in kindergarten through 5th grade. Bathrooms will be available! Park near the playground and tennis courts.

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Agroforestry Innovations Benefit Farmers and Habitats

Agroforestry Innovations Benefit Farmers and Habitats

Since our creation following the Dust Bowl, conservation districts have relied on partnerships with farmers to pioneer new ways of protecting our natural resources—and agroforestry is no exception. For the last several years, Snohomish Conservation District has led the region in agroforestry, working with farmers to integrate perennial trees and shrubs into their agricultural systems. Utilizing land in this way can help diversify income, sequester carbon, and improve productivity, water quality, and wildlife habitat.

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Increasing Food Security, One Garden Bed at a Time

Increasing Food Security, One Garden Bed at a Time

As our Lawns to Lettuce team knows, some spaces–like a sunny lawn–are brimming with potential for an edible landscape. Other areas, however, need a bit of creativity to envision the possibilities. Luckily, our team has the imagination and technical skill needed to transform any space into a multi-purpose, edible wonderland.

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The Coexistence of Farms, Fish, and Flooding

The Coexistence of Farms, Fish, and Flooding

The Sustainable Lands Strategy (SLS) coalition initially convened in 2010 to unite individuals and community organizations dedicated to improving the coexistence of farming and fishing in Snohomish County’s floodplain areas. Snohomish Conservation District has been involved in this collaboration since the start.

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Buffers & Beavers Help Salmon at Pilchuck Tree Farm

Buffers & Beavers Help Salmon at Pilchuck Tree Farm

If you were a salmon traveling upstream, your chance of making it to your spawning bed hinges on many factors including the temperature and abundance of water. As a result, continuous streamside tree canopy and resident beavers are critical players in a salmon’s success. Trees shade and cool the water temperature, while beavers’ infrastructure supports consistent streamflow and helps create cool, deep pools. 

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Shiitake, Sheep, and Seaberry at Sweetwater Farm

Shiitake, Sheep, and Seaberry at Sweetwater Farm

It can be easy to take water for granted in the Northwest, until you see it through the eyes of a farmer like Jake Stewart.

“I wouldn't call us climate refugees,” said Jake. “But we were certainly climate migrants leaving the droughts.”

Jake and his wife, Aja, were farming near Austin, Texas when their well began to run dry.

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Streamside Restoration at Polestar Farm

Streamside Restoration at Polestar Farm

In addition to its three riparian buffers, Polestar Farm is home to upwards of 20 beaver dams, creating a wetland nested within the forest. The slowed water caused by a beaver dam helps keep horse waste and other pollutants from entering the stream quickly, and also recharges groundwater. 

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Cleaner Water for a Healthier Community

Cleaner Water for a Healthier Community

Although most of us refuse to use umbrellas, the fact remains that our annual rainfall averages about 35 inches in the western part of the county and increases sharply as you approach the Cascade Mountains. Managing the stormwater runoff resulting from all of this rain remains a crucial part of Snohomish Conservation District’s work to reduce pollution in our streams, rivers, and Puget Sound.

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