Trails along water in Everett offer views of wildlife

A weasel pokes its heads out of the rocks along the boat launch parking lot.
A weasel pokes its heads out of the rocks along the boat launch parking lot.

Mike Benbow, The Herald

You typically don’t associate wildlife and the outdoors with business and industry, but the Port of Everett wishes you would.

It’s no secret that people want access to the waterfront; they’ve told port officials that quite frequently.

So through the years, the port has partnered with the city of Everett to create a system of trails for hikers, runners and bicyclists. On both ends of the trail are postage stamp parks

But with a few notable exceptions, like the summer ferry to the beach on the port’s manmade Jetty Island, public access along the waterfront isn’t well known and is certainly under used.

“A lot of people, somewhat surprisingly, still don’t know there are all these walking trails,” said Lisa Lefeber, the port’s public affairs administrator.

She’s talking about a system of trails developed in 2009 called the Marina District Waterfront Loop. It combines walkways along the port’s north and south marinas with those along W. Marine View Drive to provide a variety of opportunities for exercise coupled with a chance to see lots of wildlife.

“You have a better quality of life when you have a walkable waterfront,” Lefeber said.

And while many people don’t know what’s available, the wildlife have.

For example, the mudflats on the north end of the port once teemed with logs waiting to be shipped to Asia. The logs are mostly gone now, but the pilings used to tether them have been taken over by osprey.

On a short walk along W. Marine View Drive where the city has established two small view parks, Southview and Northview, there are five or six active osprey nests.

Depending on the state of the tides, it’s not unusual to see osprey or eagles soaring overhead looking for a meal. Ospreys also often dive to the tideflats to snatch a stick to add to their nests.

And, of course, where else would you expect harbor seals than around the harbor? On the opening weekend of boating season earlier this month, those walking behind Anthony’s Homeport restaurant were treated to seals looking for a quick meal around a net pen used to rear salmon. They didn’t appear to find one.

On my walks, I always try to include a trip along the parking area for the 10th Street Boat Launch because that’s probably the closest view of some of the osprey nests. They’re a ways off, so you may want to bring binoculars.

On a recent visit I saw something flash in the corner of my eye and looked down on the riprap to see a weasel dashing back into the rocks. But weasels are curious critters, and it wasn’t long before he poked his head out to have another look at me.

Probably the most popular access to the waterfront begins on July 5 with the opening of the Jetty Island ferry. It’s a short trip across the boating channel to a beach popular with families and with kite boarders.

Most people like the island for its shallow, sandy beach. But the area is teeming with wildlife and well worth the visit to see it.

Even though the ferry isn’t running yet, kite boarders are going there now using a variety of their own tiny watercraft: everything from paddle boards to canoes and inflatable kayaks.

You can too, but don’t forget your life vest and whistle for safety.

If you don’t have a boat, you can still get to a beach right now at one of the port’s least known areas: Pigeon Creek Beach and Viewpoint. It’s at the south end of the trail system and skirts the area where the port unloads and stores cargo from incoming ships.

To get there, you park at the end of Bond Street near the old train depot, walk across the railroad tracks, and walk or bike less than a mile.

First timers may be a little leery of the trip because it has all the charm of a prison exercise yard. You walk on an asphalt path between two chain-link fences; one keeps you off the railroad tracks and the other, topped with barbed wire, keeps you away from the cargo.

The walk is thankfully short, however, and the payoff is worth it.

Pigeon Creek is a gem of a park with a couple tables for picnics, and some logs and rocks for sitting. When the tide is out, there’s a nice beach and the water is pretty shallow. The view is stellar.

Walking/biking map

For more Information on port waterfront access, visit bit.ly/12ML7k5bit.

Chinook Tribal Council Makes Ancestral Canoe Journey

Indian Country Today Media Network

From June 9-14 the Chinook Indian Nation Council will travel down the Lower Columbia River Water Trail in traditional canoes. The route, starting from Washougal, Washington will include stops in Kelly Pt. Park, Ridgefield Wildlife Refuge, Kalama, Mayger Dock/Clatskanie, Cathlamet, Elliott Landing/Pillar Rock, Ilwaco, and Chinook Point/Fort Columbia.

The Chinook Council consists of nine members: Chairman Ray Gardner, Vice-Chairman Sam Robinson, Secretary/Treasurer Peggy Disney and Representatives Marketa Van Patten, Charlie Funk, Jane Wekell, Lisa Elliott, Jeremy Wekell, and Kate Elliott.

(Chinook Indian Nation/Facebook)
(Chinook Indian Nation/Facebook)

In accompaniment with other Chinooks and friends, the Chinook Council will spend five days and five nights travelling down the Lower Columbia River Water Trail. This will be a celebration of the great river, Yakaitl-Wimakl, which is still home to many Chinooks today. This journey will include the chairman’s family canoe, Itsxut (“Black Bear”), the Snohomish Chairman’s family canoe Sbeqwá (“Blue Heron”), Chinook Dan Heiner’s Canoe the Beau Tanner, and will include long time Chinook friend, Lyle Deschand’s new canoe.

After spending Sunday night in the Cathlapotle plankhouse, the Chinook Council and People will meet up river at the Clark Park in Washougal to conduct a naming ceremony for Deschand’s new canoe. They will then place all the canoes in the water and begin the journey back to Ridgefield Wildlife Refuge. As the canoes travel down the river, Chinook families will host dinner and provide shelter for the travelers, much in the way of their ancestors.

This week of sharing and commemoration will culminate in paddling down to Chinook Point on Friday afternoon to participate in the private annual Chinook Nation First Salmon Ceremony.

Historical photo, Chinook canoe (Chinook Indian Nation/Facebook)
Historical photo, Chinook canoe (Chinook Indian Nation/Facebook)

The Chinook Indian Nation/Chinook Tribes consist of the Cathlamet, Clatsop, Lower Chinook, Wahkiakum, and Willapa tribes. Despite being an influential tribe in this region since time immemorial, the U.S. government does not recognize the Chinooks as a tribal nation. The U.S. Senate shelved the 1851 Tansey Point Treaty agreements with the Chinook because they did not move them east of the Cascades. The Chinook continue their fight for federal restoration today.

 

Read more at https://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/06/05/chinook-tribal-council-makes-ancestral-canoe-journey-149720

Marysville Kiwanis Beer Garden adds new alumni night

– The Marysville Globe

MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Kiwanis Club has added a special alumni night to this year’s Strawberry Festival Beer and Wine Garden, to give former classmates a chance to catch up.

Beer garden times and days include the new alumni night from 5-9 p.m. on Thursday, June 13; from 4-10 p.m. on Friday, June 14; and from noon to 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 15. The beer garden is located on Seventh Street, just north of the Market at Asbery Field, and admission is free.

“Alumni night at the beer garden is a great gathering place to bring old classmates of legal drinking age together, to share some laughs and relive memories, while helping raise funds for Kiwanis youth programs,” said Walt McKinney, president of the Marysville Kiwanis Club. “Bring your pictures and yearbooks, and proudly wear your school colors if you want.”

Proceeds from the beer garden support the Kiwanis Club in its mission to promote youth programs and scholarships in the Marysville community.

For more information, call 425-308-2716 or email dgbuell@frontier.com.

Kids’ bike helmets, child safety kits available for free June 8

– The Marysville Globe

SMOKEY POINT — The Marysville Kohl’s and Arlington Pediatric Dentistry will serve as sites to help make kids more safe on Saturday, June 8.

Arlington Pediatric Dentistry in Suite B-105 at 3710 168th St. NE will furnish parents with John Walsh-endorsed free child safety kits from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 8.

The free child safety kits in Arlington will include FBI-certified fingerprints and Next Generation PALM Prints, as well as a digital photograph and a child safety journal.

The Kohl’s at 3713 116th St. NE in Marysville will host a free kids’ bike helmet giveaway from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. that same Saturday.

The free bike helmets in Marysville will be available for children aged 1-18 years, while free multi-sport helmets will be available for children aged 5-18 years.

Due to limited quantities, a limit of one helmet per child will be enforced, and the helmets will be dispensed on a first-come, first-served basis, with no appointments necessary.

The wearers must be present and fitted to receive their helmets.

For more information, log onto www.makesurethehelmetfits.org.

Chickasaw Press Publication ‘Chickasaw Lives” wins non-fiction award

Press Release, Chickasaw Nation

Chickasaw Lives Volume Four: Tribal Mosaic, published in 2012 by Chickasaw Press, has been honored by the Independent Publishers Book Awards.

The book, a compilation of articles researched and written by tribal historian Richard Green, won the Bronze medal in the Mid-West Regional Non-Fiction category of the annual awards. The awards, sponsored by Independent Publisher magazine, were announced in late April.

“Chickasaw Press is proud to continue its unbroken tradition of earning recognition in the publishing world for the quality of our titles,” said Wiley Barnes, director of the Press. “The book business has honored our efforts with at least one significant award every year beginning with Chickasaw: Unconquered and Unconquerable, our first book.”

Mr. Green, who has served the Chickasaw Nation as historian since 1994, is familiar to readers of Chickasaw Press through his three previous titles in the popular Chickasaw Lives series—Volume One: Explorations in Tribal History, Volume Two: Profiles and Oral Histories, and Volume Three: Sketches of Past and Present—and Te Ata: Chickasaw Storyteller, American Treasure, published in 2006 by University of Oklahoma Press and now included in the Chickasaw Press catalog.

He served as founding editor of the Journal of Chickasaw History and Culture, and has written numerous articles for the Chickasaw Times and the Nation’s website, www.chickasaw.net.

Chickasaw Lives, Volume Four is the culmination of a project by Mr. Green to research and write stories about Chickasaw history and people. In it, he presents 26 essays in six categories covering a wide range of topics, ranging from 18th and 19th century sketches, to books and treasures to cultural revivals. The stories in Volume Four include a Chickasaw’s struggle with the aftermath of the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building; a study of the mystique of the Chickasaw warrior; and the tribal donation to the construction of the Washington Monument. Also included in Volume Four is the story of the detective work involved to find answers about an old flag said to have been presented to Chickasaw leader Levi Colbert for his bravery during the Battle of New Orleans.

All of Mr. Green’s books are available through Chickasaw Press, 124 E. 14th St. in Ada, telephone 580-436-7282, or by visiting the Press website at chickasawpress.com.

Volunteers Needed: Mountain Stewards Protect Mt. Baker ecosystems

Everett, Wash., May 31, 2013—Want to help keep Mt. Baker pristine? Mountain Steward volunteers are needed this summer to teach day hikers, backpackers and climbers to care for and protect this delicate alpine ecosystem.
 
Forest Service staff will train volunteers July 13 and 20 in low-impact recreational skills, natural history and back country management. Mountain Stewards commit to work three weekend days during July 13-Sept. 22 on the three busiest trail systems: Skyline Divide, Park Butte/Railroad Grade and Heather Meadows/Artist Point. An optional training is offered Aug. 3 for those who want to volunteer at Heather Meadows.
 
Apply by June 28. Find applications online and email to brichey@fs.fed.us,  fax to 360.856.1934 or mail to Mt. Baker Ranger District, Mountain Stewards, 810 State Route 20, Sedro-Woolley, WA 98284. Call 360-854-2615 or brichey@fs.fed.us for more information. Volunteers must be 18 years or older with hiking and outdoor recreation skills.