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The Outstanding Cascade River Gains Protection

The Cascade River in Autumn. Photo credit: Steve Philbrick

Too silty, too warm, too stagnant – a lot can go wrong when it comes to salmon habitat, especially if you’re a mother salmon looking for just the right place to dig a “redd” (gravel nest) to lay her eggs. Although salmon may seem less maternal than bears or birds, these amazing fish have their own ways of protecting their offspring. Avoiding muddy or silty gravel keeps the eggs from getting smothered. Good water speed makes sure the eggs stay sufficiently cool and oxygenated. The right size and shape of gravel also matters for incubating and protecting the eggs.

Land Trust staff cross one of the side channels near the new property.
Land Trust staff cross one of the side channels near the new property.

Many of the Cascade River’s side channels and tributaries meet mother salmon’s strict criteria. This is one of many reasons that Skagit Land Trust (SLT or the Trust) has conserved 1.9 miles of Cascade River shoreline. Last month, we purchased over seven more acres of lovely, forested land in the river’s migration zone, near Marblemount.

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