A Fall Season Full of Salmon (and Eagles!)

By Aidan Hersh
AmeriCorps Environmental Stewardship Coordinator

As Summer turns to Fall and our short Washington window of sunshine comes to an end, the time comes for us to get cozy and bundle up for a long winter season (or if you’re me, to keep wearing socks and sandals every day). For our local salmon population, however, it’s the beginning of the most crucial and physically exhausting part of their life cycle: spawning. Many of the streams that these salmon return to run right through our residential neighborhoods, providing excellent opportunities for the public to view and learn about salmon.

Every Fall, NSEA hosts Salmon Sighting events at a selection of these salmon-bearing streams to engage and educate the community about the value of wild salmon and why protecting them is so important. This year, from the end of October to late November, NSEA held nine Salmon Sightings throughout Whatcom County, engaging over 500 people. We were able to see fish at all but one of the events, with a few sites being particular highlights. One such highlight was Oyster Creek, which runs close to Taylor Shellfish Farms and is the natal stream of a large population of chum salmon. On November 5th, we had 130 people attend our event and observe dozens of spawning salmon, many of which were no more than several feet away from the viewing area. Participating in the organization of these events is always valuable, not least due to the excitement they bring to community members, especially children who may be seeing wild salmon for the first time. Salmon Sightings are integral to our mission of inspiring the community to care about and understand salmon, and they will continue to be a cornerstone of NSEA’s stewardship programs.

Salmon play the crucial role of being a food source for a variety of organisms, and this Fall we decided to host an event that would highlight one of these relationships. On December 17th, we held an Eagle Sighting and Photography Workshop with two local photographers, Rich Bowers and Alan Sanders, and a former Audubon Society board member, Chris Brewer. Together with the 10 attendees, we drove out to the Nooksack River and observed about 70 bald eagles over two and a half hours. It was a unique experience that emphasized the vital relationship between these two iconic species of the Pacific Northwest. Be sure to check in next summer for more opportunities to see native salmon and learn about their ecological significance.

Volunteers make it happen

NSEA’s Stream Stewards Program provides opportunities for our communities to get outside and improve salmon habitat. This fall, 581 volunteers spent over 1,700 hours doing just that! Between October and December, we hosted 15 events along 8 different creeks in Whatcom County that are home to salmon, including coho, chum, and endangered Steelhead and Chinook. By removing over 63 cubic yards of invasive vegetation and planting 1,093 native trees and shrubs, these volunteers improved 1.65 miles of streamside habitat. 

Notable events this season included Orca Recovery Day where volunteers supported regional efforts to protect our Southern Resident Killer Whales which are critically endangered due to a lack of their main food source, salmon, by improving habitat along California Creek in Drayton Harbor. This event was only possible with the fantastic partnership between us, the Whatcom Conservation District, and the Whatcom Land Trust. We also joined the City of Bellingham for Make a Difference Day again this year in Whatcom Falls Park to support improved water quality in Whatcom Creek. Lastly, with leadership from the City of Bellingham, we hosted a work party in honor of Dave Taylor, a dedicated steward of Squalicum Creek and friend to NSEA, who passed away last year. We continued work along Squalicum Creek with the help of friends, family, and neighbors, and we even got to see the fruits of our labors as a female chum salmon hovered around for most of the event.  

Every event we get to host is special thanks to the amazing community that continues to support our work. Our Stewardship Appreciation Program (SAP) says thank you to anyone that joins us for 3 or more work parties in a calendar year. With so many different opportunities throughout this year, we ended with fall season with 61 SAPs! We are continually impressed and inspired by the people that join us throughout the year and are looking forward to a full, rewarding 2023. Join us for the first event of the new year in honor of Martin Luther King Junior on Saturday, January 14. We will be joining the City of Bellingham at the Little Squalicum Estuary Project. This will be a wonderful way to give back and have a hand in building up this beautiful park and estuary habitat. Space is very limited, so check out www.cob.org/mlk2023 for more information.