From Wild Salmon Center <[email protected]>
Subject Klamath dam breakthrough, going big for Bristol Bay, coho restoration on timberland, and more.
Date November 19, 2020 7:05 PM
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Plus, a whale of a time in the Shantar Islands.


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Historic Klamath Dam Removal Project Advances

This Tuesday, the governors of Oregon and California convened with Tribal leaders and the owner of four Upper Klamath River dams to announce that the dams are again on track for tear-down ([link removed]). The next step to reconnecting 400 miles of historic spring Chinook habitat—habitat blocked for more than a century—is federal approval. After decades of tireless advocacy, we could be just a few short years away from a free-flowing Klamath River. To learn why dam removal could be ground-breaking for salmon, get the full story here, in Part II of our ongoing series First Salmon, Last Chance ([link removed]).

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Bristol Bay: Let's Ask for
What We Want
As the Pebble Mine hits a critical juncture, we need to ask political leaders for what the region and its people truly deserve: permanent protection from hard rock mining ([link removed])in the headwaters of Bristol Bay's most important salmon rivers.

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On Oregon Timberland, a Coho Stream is the Thread
On West Fork Evans Creek, a Rogue River tributary, timber companies are backing stream restoration projects ([link removed]). They've found that these projects pencil out in the short-term—thanks to state and federal grants—and over the long haul, in wildlife habitat, property values, and jobs.

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Boomerang Club Trains Guides in the Shantars
For decades, Boomerang Club, an outdoor education group on Sakhalin Island, has led treks to the Shantars in the Sea of Okhotsk. Now the WSC partner is training ecotourism operators in the Shantar Islands National Park ([link removed]). To join a recent Boomerang expedition, click here ([link removed])!

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Meet WSC Ambassador
Ken Morrish
Our new Ambassadors Program is a dream team of people who bridge the gap, every day, between outdoor adventure and conservation. Get to know one: Ken Morrish ([link removed]), a nature photographer, fly pattern designer (the Morrish Mouse, anyone?), and co-founder of Fly Water Travel.

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Funder Spotlight: Natural Systems Design
From engineering log jams to designing riparian zones and instream spawning and rearing habitat for fish, NSD knows a thing or two about rivers ([link removed]). Founded in 2003, the Pacific Northwest firm specializes in the restoration of rivers, shorelines, and wetlands.

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Stronghold Guardian Challenge 

Key campaigns in Alaska, Washington, and Oregon are on the verge of reaching major conservation milestones in 2021, and your monthly gift is what will get them over the finish line.

Sign up today ([link removed]) and your gift will be MATCHED by Becker Capital. 

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The mission of the Wild Salmon Center is to promote the conservation and sustainable use of wild salmon ecosystems across the Pacific Rim.

Photo/image credits (from top): The Williamson River, a Klamath Lake tributary historically accessed by spring Chinook (Ken Morrish); Bristol Bay sockeye (Jason Ching); West Fork Evans Creek (Brian Kelley @brianfilm ([link removed])); Bowhead whale off the Shantar Islands (Boomerang Club); Fly fishing California's Red Flat system (Ken Morrish); Natural Systems Design staff hiking Washington's Big Beef Creek (NSD); Sockeye illustration (WSC).





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