Conservation heroes honored at Better Ground Showcase
/The Snohomish Conservation District held its Better Ground Showcase honoring local individuals, businesses and nonprofits for their work to conserve natural resources.
Read MoreThe Snohomish Conservation District held its Better Ground Showcase honoring local individuals, businesses and nonprofits for their work to conserve natural resources.
Read MoreWashington food and wine producers are used to natural weather variations, but things are growing less predictable.
Photo credit: Julie Allen
Read MoreMcMahon won the Conservation Leader of the Year Award for her use of SCD cost-share program to install a rain garden in her front yard in 2013. In 2017, district officials were happy to hear that she had also expressed interest in being the recipient of free rain barrels for its partnership project with the City of Lynnwood.
Read MoreEmily McLaughlin Sta. Maria, president of the Students Saving Salmon Club at Edmonds Woodway High School, will be honored April 12 at Snohomish Conservation District's Better Ground Showcase in Mukilteo.
Photo courtesy of club advisor, Joe Scordino.
Read MoreMatt Cash (left) and Taylor Pesce work to install a rain barrel at Experience Momentum in Lynnwood on Oct. 11. Cash and Pesce work along with other veterans in a group that completes projects around the county for the Snohomish Conservation District. (Ian Terry / The Herald)
Read MoreAway with those nasty blackberries, deadly nightshade, poison hemlock, invasive morning glory, ivy and thistles.
Residents of the Livingston Bay community on Camano Island received assistance from Snohomish Conservation District to plant much nicer, beach-friendly native plants in a project that has been in the works since 2013.
Read MoreSeven small farms in Snohomish County are participating in an art project to showcase what it's like to grow local food amid today's challenges.
Photo courtesy of KING.
Read MoreThis Snohomish Conservation District project is the first of its kind at Jackson High School. It’s designed to open the door for future classes to carry further down the path of storm water pollution solutions, and environmental improvement for our community.
Photo courtesy of Everett Public Schools.
Read MoreIt took 16 volunteers, 2,430 cubic feet of donated dirt and a busy Saturday afternoon to get the garden beds ready for the season.
There’s much more work to do, but 15 plots at Eagle Ridge Community Garden — the first in Lake Stevens — are prepped for seeds and sprouts.
Photo courtesy of the Everett Herald / Kevin Clark.
Read MoreThe city of Mill Creek hopes a simple device called a “beaver deceiver” can help keep 35th Avenue Southeast above water after heavy rains.
Photo courtesy of the Everett Herald / Andy Bronson.
Read MoreAlderwood Early Childhood Center students and their parents from came out April 27 to plant about 75 trees and shrubs on the Lynnwood campus. Volunteers earlier cleared the area of invasive plants, including holly and blackberry. The project also had help from the Snohomish Conservation District, Champion Tree Care and Edmonds Co-Op Preschool.
Contributed photo.
Read More"Jeremy Visser shows his daughter, Leia, 4, some one-day-old dehydrated manure in his manurecompost barn. Having the liquid removed, the manure is soft and feathery. They use it for the cows to sleep on instead of wood chips." (Dan Bates / The Herald)
Read MoreBefore starting his volunteer work with the conservation district, Jim Weisenbach said he found animals more interesting than plants. Now, he loves identifying, growing and learning about local flora.
“The native wildlife needs the native plants,” he said. “You can’t have one without the other.”
Photo courtesy of the Everett Herald / Dan Bates.
Read MoreThe Washington State Conservation Commission toured the fast-growing north Puget Sound area last week, and farmer Dan Bartelheimer had something to tell it.
“This agricultural land needs to be protected and kept intact,” said Bartelheimer, president of the Snohomish County Farm Bureau.
The simple message won’t be easy to carry out. The county’s agricultural sector has been losing ground to private development and government projects. The first stop on the commission’s tour was a former dairy that will become a city park.
Read MoreSnohomish Conservation Districtwas recently awarded the state Auditor’s Stewardship Award for “outstanding accomplishment in the stewardship of public resources.”
Photo courtesy of the Snohomish Conservation District.
Read MoreThe women and girls are among a dozen volunteers being recognized [at the Better Ground Awards] by the Snohomish Conservation District for their efforts to protect the environment.
Photo courtesy of the Everett Herald / Ian Terry.
Read MoreIn placing Nordal’s name in nomination, Conservation District Education and Outreach Coordinator Laura Goff praised her “dependability, exceptional organization and foresight.”
Photo courtesy of Joe Scordino.
Read MoreSnohomish Conservation District Red-flowering currant. The Annual Plant Sale leads off the gardening season.
Read More“When I drive around the county,” (Lois) Ruskell said, “I pass places where I can say, ‘Oh, yes, they bought those trees from us.’ Think of all the beauty and oxygen these plants have provided.”
Read MoreSnohomish Conservation District | 528 91st Ave NE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258 | 425-335-5634