Landowner Support Secures Sauk River Habitat
“I have always assumed this land belongs to the river,” says local landowner Michael Knapp (pictured above, right), who is partnering with Skagit Land Trust to permanently protect 18.6 acres of rich salmon and forest habitat along the Sauk River. This pending Conservation Easement (CE) lies in a valley originally carved by eruptions from the Glacier Peak volcano. Today, the Sauk — one of the longest undammed rivers in the Pacific Northwest — continues that work. The river flows through the CE in two active side channels, one of which floods almost every year, refreshing the soil and nurturing a lush web of life for Chinook salmon and other species.
Located just a mile south of Skagit County, this will be the Trust’s first CE in Snohomish County. The property lies at the heart of a biologically rich corridor between two sections of the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. The Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe, Skagit Land Trust, Washington Department of Natural Resources, the Nature Conservancy, and the City of Seattle protect adjacent and nearby lands. The new CE adds to and connects other conserved land in this area, helping to secure a wildlife corridor for animals moving through the upper Skagit watershed.

