Conservation Northwest

2018MonitoringReport_Final_WithAppendices

Conservation Northwest protects and connects old-growth forests and other wild areas from the Washington Coast to the British Columbia Rockies, vital to a healthy future for us, our children, and wildlife. Since 1989, Conservation Northwest has worke

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39 Figure 2. Examples of images we captured for raising awareness of North Cascades wildlife. Based on the chest blaze pattern, the wolverine pictured here is likely a female, named Stella, identified in 2015 by the North Cascades Wolverine Study. Two American marten American marten Two bobcat Wolverine Wolverine rolling in scent Snowshoe hare Objective 3: Winter Recreation Community Outreach We presented in October 2017 at the Northwest Snow and Avalanche Workshop in Seattle to an audience of 600, which was then publically posted to Facebook and watched more than 1400 times. In January at The Mountaineers in Seattle we introduced our project in conjunction with an adventure slideshow by ski guides Forest McBrian and Trevor Kostanich, who volunteered to represent our project at the Foothills branch of the Mountaineers, the annual Olympic Mountain Rescue banquet, and at Pro Guiding Service in North Bend. This May we are slated to present in Ballard, Seattle at the outdoor retailer Ascent Outdoors in collaboration with Patagonia and Conservation Northwest. The amount of support and interest among mountain recreationists has been remarkable. We opened a social media account on Instagram to share select wildlife images; currently we have over 400 followers. Four separate recreationists found either our website or Instagram page to report wolverine observations, including tracks on Mt. Baker (October 2016), upper Entiat drainage (September 2017), east of Mt. Rainier at Sourdough Gap (March 2018), and an encounter on Cascade River road (April

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