Have fun, see nature, save nature on the Olympic Peninsula
Hike Olympic National Park, volunteer, protect trees, support local farmers, travel sustainably, stop war, get inspired, save the planet.
The author planting a forest at a former dam site along the now free-flowing Elwha River
Olympic National Park winter speaker series, 2nd Tuesdays
January talk features beautiful Lake Ozette
Spring poetry walks at Olympic National Park
The woods are alive with the sounds of …poetry
Take a walk, see endangered trees, birds near Portland
See endangered oaks, wildlife on Sauvie Island
![](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/60cfb93701dad3391a95e7f8/053fef1d-91f6-47e8-b2e4-13eb946dee56/IMG_2708.jpg)
Acknowledgement of indigenous homelands
These lands continue to hold deep significance to contemporary Native communities who have lived on the Olympic Peninsula since time immemorial and whose territories were unjustly appropriated. Learn more at Native Land and the tribes’ websites: Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe, Quileute Tribe , Makah Tribe , Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, Port Gamble S’Klallam , Hoh Tribe Quinault