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Rose Sandell
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Rose Sandell2025-03-04 09:20:542025-03-04 09:38:07Monitoring Spawning Salmon on Mud Creek by Sophia Schafer





Habitat Restoration
Healthy salmon begin with healthy watersheds. At Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group, habitat restoration is at the heart of everything we do — because when we protect and restore the cold, clean water salmon depend on, the entire ecosystem thrives.
What We Do
Decades of habitat loss and environmental degradation have taken a toll on the Skagit watershed. Our restoration projects directly address these challenges by:
- Restoring native riparian forests and marine shorelines to stabilize banks, filter runoff, and provide vital shade
- Improving fish passage so salmon can reach the spawning grounds their survival depends on
- Reconnecting and enhancing off-channel habitats that serve as critical rearing areas for juvenile fish
It Takes a Community
None of this work happens alone. SFEG partners with dedicated volunteers to operate our native plant nursery, support project implementation, and carry out ongoing habitat monitoring.
We also work directly with local landowners, offering practical solutions that work for both people and the land.
More Than Just Salmon
A restored watershed doesn’t just bring back salmon — it brings back the full richness of the Pacific Northwest. Eagles, otters, bears, amphibians, and songbirds all depend on the same healthy rivers and forests we’re working to protect. When the watershed wins, we all win.
PROJECT SPOTLIGHTS
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Rose Sandell
https://www.skagitfisheries.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/skagit_fisheries_logo_2022_green_edge-244x300.png
Rose Sandell2025-03-04 09:20:542025-03-04 09:38:07Monitoring Spawning Salmon on Mud Creek by Sophia Schafer
Expanding Horizons as a Skagit Fisheries Intern by Education Intern Kat Martin
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Lauren Gives the 411 (on our Education Program) by Lauren Schwartzenberger
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Saying Farewell to Our AmeriCorps, and Hello to New Beginnings
Blog, Featured, From the Field, Interviews
Project Spotlight: Ovenell Slough at Cedar Grove Riparian Habitat Improvement
Blog, Featured, Project Spotlights
Surviving Winter: A WCC Perspective by PJ Heusted
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Planting Trees & Helping Salmon by Education Intern Abbie Niskanen
Blog, Featured, From the Field
A Cycle of Learn, Teach, Repeat! by Education Intern Abbie Niskanen
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Tales from Field Trips by Education Intern Michaela Provancha
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Rolling Out the “Redd” Carpet by WCC Crewmember PJ Heusted
Blog, Featured, From the Field
Redder Western Red Cedars by Bengt Miller, Stewardship Coordinator
Blog, From the Field



Request for Bid – Carpenter and English Creeks Fish Passage Project
Request for Services