Skip to content

Mountains To Sound Greenway

Sections
Personal tools
You are here: Home » News & Publications » 2009 in the Greenway

2009 in the Greenway

The year 2009 leaves a legacy in the Mountains to Sound Greenway of lands conserved, trails built, generous and hard-working volunteers giving their time and energy, fish and wildlife habitat restored, schoolchildren educated in the natural world, and tourists and locals alike amazed by the diversity and beauty of the Greenway.

The spirit of cooperation that preserves this magnificent landscape of gorgeous scenery and vibrant communities has resulted in some major accomplishments during 2009:


Raging River acquisition - 7,000 acres of forest land were preserved, to be managed by the Washington State Department of Natural Resources as the Raging River State Forest.

Raging River 300px 

The new Middle Fork Natural Resources Conservation Area was designated by Commissioner of Public Lands Peter Goldmark during the annual Mountains to Sound Greenway celebration dinner in December. This new 10,273-acre conservation area links recreation areas in Mt. Si to the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, just east of the town of North Bend.

 

Middle Fork NRCA view




32 acres were acquired on the ridgetop between Mt. Si and Mt. Teneriffe for public ownership by the state Department of Natural Resources. This inholding with its wonderful views fills in a gap in recreation lands at Mt. Si.

 

Mt. Si acquisition 300px

 

 

14 acres were acquired in the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River Valley by King County. After 20 years of work by members of the Greenway coalition, what was once a haven for illegal activity is now a recreation area that has views of peaks in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area and opportunities for hiking, biking, rock climbing and boating.

  Middle Fork 300px

 

 

80 acres were acquired at Swamp Lake, near the Cabin Creek area east of Snoqualmie Pass in the Wenatchee National Forest, by the Trust for Public Land.

 Swamp Lake

 

The Washington State Department of Transportation and Cascade Land Conservancy acquired 546 acres along Gold Creek at Snoqualmie Pass.

 Gold Creek Pond 300px

 

King County voters approved the Open Space Amendment, which grants additional protection to natural areas in the county.

 Snoqualmie Forest 300px

 

The City of Bellevue and King County are undertaking a visionary redevelopment project in the Bel-Red neighborhood, allowing developers to build more densely if they acquire development rights off of agricultural and forest lands. This smart growth initiative will protect natural areas in the Greenway and elsewhere.

 TDR

Lake Sammamish is important for salmon, birds, amphibians, insects and other wildlife. The area has been degraded over time by invasive weeds and heavy foot and boat traffic. To improve the park's ecological condition, the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission and Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust have undertaken a multi-year restoration project. Hundreds of volunteers and conservation corps crews planted 32,591 trees at this and many other restoration sites in the Greenway in 2009.

 Lake Samm 300px

The new Marymoor Connector Trail links the Burke-Gilman to the East Lake Sammamish Trail, making it possible to travel between Ballard and Issaquah on a safe, separated trail, bringing the region one step closer to a connected regional trail system

that will allow a hiker or biker to travel from the Seattle waterfront and head east across the state.

 Marymoor Trail 300px

 

The grand opening of the new Little Si Trail and Trailhead occurred on National Trails Day, with a new parking area to accommodate the thousands of hikers that visit each year, a brand new trail surface, a new trail connecting the parking lots and a new bridge over the Snoqualmie River.

 Little Si crew moving rocks 300px

 

The Greenway education program taught over 3,500 school children about the importance of keeping a healthy natural environment in balance with growing population. Some of these students had never been on a walk in the woods before.

 Ed program 300px

 

New Greenway Summer Camps brought over 100 young people to do ecological restoration and trail maintenance during week-long camps, engaging future generations in caring for special places in the Greenway.

Summer Camp 90 300px

 

This is only a sampling of the many projects and key partners that make the Mountains to Sound Greenway a reality for future generations to enjoy!

Document Actions

powered by Plone | site by Groundwire