Give to support the Willow Creek Salmon & Watershed Education Center this holiday Season
Our goal is to raise $15,000 in 2025! Please join our campaign and give any amount, anytime by just clicking the button!
As we celebrate our 35th year, we aspire to grow and increase our services and impact as an organization. With salmon populations needing more help than ever, we want to expand our programs in habitat restoration, education, and stewardship to connect more of our communities to salmon recovery. Our community members want to be engaged in restoring salmon populations. We receive daily requests from landowners, school teachers, scout leaders, churches, colleges, community groups, and individuals to participate with us in salmon recovery. Unfortunately, our capacity to meet these requests is currently limited to funded projects. We often have to decline their requests because they don’t fit within our current grant funded opportunities. Lack of additional funding limits our ability to connect our communities to the tangible actions they can take to contribute to salmon conservation. With your support, we can say yes to more of these requests and engage so many more community members!
WE NEED PEOPLE LIKE YOU TO JUMP UP!
AND SAY YES TO SUPPORTING SALMON RECOVERY!
In 2024, our amazing crew and volunteers restored restored 8,980 linear feet of stream habitat, which included planting 36,852 native trees and shrubs! In addition, our incredible educators also engaged over 7,000 youth in hands-on lessons where they forged connections with their watershed and were empowered to become stewards to their environment. They taught Salmon in Schools at 21 schools including outlying areas. Our tremendous hatchery manager led the effort with our volunteers to raise 80,000 coho salmon and release them into eight Lake Washington tributaries. All of this was in part thanks to our community of nearly 300 volunteers who contributed over 2,600 hours of service!
SSS serves diverse communities within the Stillaguamish, Snohomish, and South Island County Watersheds. We believe in the importance of highlighting how we are all connected to salmon. Pacific salmon are key to maintaining ecological balance in the Pacific Northwest. Even our trees rely on salmon to provide the nutrients needed to build the temperate rainforests that are home to countless species. Chinook salmon is the primary food source for our endangered southern resident orcas. Pacific salmon are especially important to our Coast Salish Peoples who have relied on and lived in harmony with salmon since time immemorial. Pacific salmon are also integral to our economy in Washington and we all rely on sustainable fisheries to see abundant returns for future generations. However, despite salmon’s huge importance, nearly all populations of pacific salmon species are listed under some level of threat.
In order for us to continue this vital work of restoring salmon populations and connecting our community to their watershed for the future of salmon, we rely on contributions from people like you. We appreciate your interest in supporting salmon recovery and look forward to sharing our future successes with you, our supporters!