Spring 2011 Newsletter - Bainbridge Island Land Trust
Transcription
Spring 2011 Newsletter - Bainbridge Island Land Trust
Bainbridge Island Land Trust Trustworthy News Volume 22, #1 Spring 2011 Maypole fun for all ages at our May Day Hilltop event. Photo © Asha Rehnberg May Day at Hilltop by Asha Rehnberg The weather was glorious for BILT’s May Day at Hilltop public event. Approximately 400 people, many grinning and blinking in the bright sunshine, came out to see what the Land Trust has on the horizon. BILT threw a party on this still-private 31-acre property, located between the Grand Forest East and West, to introduce Hilltop to the community and to formally kick off our fund raising campaign to acquire it. May Day could not have been nicer. Groups gathered at remote trailheads and walked in to the property from many directions with Land Trust guides, or followed the signs temporarily erected to show the way. Others took free shuttle buses from parking at Woodward and Ordway Schools to the Mandus Olson trailhead, where a short stroll up the private, forestVolunteer Hilltop Event Coordinaflanked driveway tors, left to right, Kathy Haskin, brought them to Leslie Whalen, Barb Robert. Not pictured, Babe Kehres, and Liz the party, sunMurray. Photo © Asha Rehnberg Continued on page 4 Notes from the Center by Executive Director Asha Rehnberg Let me tell you about a few of the coolest things we have been up to that are not written about elsewhere in this newsletter. a private party can take the lead, becoming a “conservation buyer.” This was the case recently when First, a “conservation buyer” triumph: BILT has Steve Romein and Ty participated in many land acquisition projects. But Cramer purchased the 19-acre Winney farm property for every one that on McDonald comes to fruition and Old Mill there are many Roads. This was worthy properone of B.I.’s most ties that we can’t important and atbuy and which risk agricultural cannot, in their properties. So in current owner2010, I persuadship, be protected ed Joe Winney with a donated to work with the conservation Land Trust as we easement. Somesought to assemtimes the best ble partners and outcome results devise a workfrom our bringable plan that ing together the would ensure Looking east at open fields and farmstead (upper left) of Winney Farm, land, people and this property rerecently purchased by conservation buyers Steve Romein and Ty Craresources so that mer. Photo © Asha Rehnberg mains open and Board of Directors President - Tom Backer Vice-president - Barry Fetterman Treasurer - Emily Kehrberg Secretary - Tom Goodlin Bill Eckel, Thomas Fenwick David Harrison, Kathy Haskin Maryann Kirkby, Douglas Picha Carol Sperling, Jim Thrash Val Tollefson, John van den Meerendonk Executive Director - Asha Rehnberg Stewardship Director - Brenda Padgham Membership & Development Director - Laura O’Mara Administrative Assistant - Susanne Schneider AmeriCorps Intern Stewardship Coordinator - Jacob Dyste THANK YOU to the NEWSLETTER PRODUCTION CREW: Jane Lindley, Paula Elliot, Asha Rehnberg, Jacob Dyste, Laura O’Mara and the authors and photographers credited throughout this publication. Bainbridge Island Land Trust P.O. Box 10144 221 Winslow Way West, #103 Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Tel: 206-842-1216 - Fax: 206-855-9241 Web: www.bi-landtrust.org www.hilltopnow.org Credits BILT logo art: Nate Thomas Hilltop logo art: Farrah Ferguson (Butter Design) Bainbridge Island Land Trust is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) corporation and a member of One Call for All B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 2 available for agriculture. We are grateful to Joe, to the Friends of the Farms, and most of all to Steve Romein and Ty Cramer, for their respective parts in making the recent conservation buyer purchase happen. Ty and Steve are now working with BILT on an agricultural conservation easement that will permanently protect the Winney Farm’s tillable fields and pasture land. They are also working with Friends of the Farms and others to get the farm back into operation, to house From the President by Tom Backer While spring has been ever so slow to arrive this year, your Land Trust Board and staff have gotten off to a quick start in 2011. The Hilltop fundraising campaign is in full swing, after the successful public kick-off event on May 1. We look forward to involving you in this excellent project. Joe Winney and Projects Committee member Sallie Maron stride N/NE across fields of Winney Farm (neighboring Countryman stable in upper left). Photo © Asha Rehnberg farming interns, and to link this working farm with the educational programming at the Blakely Elementary School. And as if that weren’t enough, Steve and Ty are also working with the Land Trust on a second farm conservation easement, this one to protect the 6-acre Pederson Farm, also on Old Mill. And finally, the Land Trust is partnering with the Bainbridge Island Metro Park & Recreation District and Keep Gazzam Wild (Grow Gazzam and Save Gazzam Lake) to help the District acquire undeveloped lands adjacent to the west boundary of Gazzam Lake Preserve. These parcels are very close to the lake itself. Adding these lands to the Preserve will buffer the lake, eliminate the possibility of a road cutting through the Preserve, and protect the surrounding wildlife habitat from disturbance and degradation. B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - We continue to move toward becoming a nationally accredited Land Trust. We are updating our policies and procedures to ensure that we comply with the latest Land Trust Alliance standards and practices, and we are on track to apply for accreditation later this year. We are working on more than a half-dozen new conservation easements, and we hope to have several of them in place before the end of the year. We continue to steward and protect conserved lands on the island. Recently, we successfully resolved an action in Superior Court to enforce the terms of one of our conservation easements. While legal action is never our preferred approach, we are pleased that the court upheld the terms of our conservation easement, including the right to restoration and recovery of costs. We anticipate restoring this property sometime this fall. Overall, it looks like 2011 will be a very busy year for your Land Trust. Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 3 Annual Meeting Highlights by Paula Elliot Fondly billed as “the best potluck on Bainbridge,” the BILT 2011 Annual Meeting was held on Friday, February 4th, at St. Cecelia Parish’s Conger Hall. During the social portion, the local string band Agate Pass played, and the silent auction raised $2,625 dollars. Executive Director Asha Rehnberg welcomed those in attendance, and introduced this year’s speaker, Mike Ryherd. He was one of the founding directors of the Land Trust, and the guy who once upon a time proudly ran a cider press at Willowbrook Farm. At his “day job,” Mike was an extremely effective state lobbyist for numerous environmental agencies, and last fall was presented the “Joan Thomas Life Time Achievement Award” for environmental and preservation advocacy by the Washington Wildlife and Recreation Coalition. Now retired in Olympia, Mike is remembered as a president of the Land Trust, and as a donor of one of the first conservation easements granted to BILT. He also helped to secure funding to establish Pritchard Park, the Grand Forest, and IslandWood, among other much-loved places. Mike’s remarks kept alive the legends of Bainbridge land preservation. “Twenty years ago this fall,” he said, “the people of this little Island community . . . voted by 82% to tax themselves” to save what is now the Grand Forest. Mike went on to tell listeners that those 1991 bonds will be paid off this year. He also recalled that the Grand Forest was named by a 4th grader, Ben Bellieu (now 29), who won a naming contest sponsored by the Parks Department. Mike urged Ben’s generation to continue the founders’ efforts to protect the natural lands of our Island home. On this Grand Forest anniversary, we echo his call and hope that all Island households will help support the Land Trust’s current parkland acquisition project, Hilltop, which will bind the separate segments of the Grand Forest into one even grander whole. May Day at Hilltop - Continued from page 1. Forest Fairy, Anneli Freeman, and her mother, Minna, on a Hilltop tour. Photo © Brenda Padgham shine and Olympic mountain views in Hilltop’s 5+ acre meadow. After arriving, many folks took guided tours of Hilltop itself, including a loop through the property’s shady bottomlands and pond-side trails. Down there, amidst the mature cedar and fir, the trunks of big leaf maples sport a fringe of licorice ferns and there were broad sweeps of trillium and bleeding hearts in bloom. If you missed this opportunity or would like to show Hilltop to some friends, just call the Land Trust office to schedule a tour. But please, for the moment the property is still privately owned, so don’t visit it without permission. Those gathered in the meadow on May Day, both May Day at Hilltop - Continued on next page. B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 4 May Day at Hilltop - Continued from previous page. Photo © Larry Pluimer young and old, soaked up the sun while enjoying the eclectic tunes of Agate Pass and trying out a variety of activities. Many danced the maypole (with sometimes hilarious results), had their faces painted, played games, or made May day hats or other crafts. Some rode a horse or pony courtesy of Dawn ComstockAckerman of Whispering Sunrise Farm. Some gathered to hear stories about the history of the Hilltop Tree Farm from David Hedderly-Smith, son of 50+ year Hilltop resident Prudence Trudgian. Many gathered to see the raptors and corvids brought by reps of the West Sound Wildlife Shelter. Most sooner or later enjoyed lunch provided by J’aime Les Crepes and Emmy’s Vege House, or simply sat back, sipping a Grand Forest Mocha from Treehouse Espresso or nibbling a “BILT” frosted sugar cookie from My Kids’ Cookies. And, thankfully, many stopped by the Land Trust booth to hear more about our effort to acquire this spectacular property for parkland and to find out how they could help. B a i n br i d g e The BILT Board and staff would like to thank the amazing volunteers who planned and organized this event: Barb Robert, Kathy Haskin, Babe Kehres, Liz Murray and Leslie Whalen; the crew who worked for weeks to I sl a n d Land Trus t - prepare the site for the party, including Kip Bankart, Kent Scott, Zach Anderson, Don Mayer, Tom Cunningham and Jacob Dyste; Peterson Landscaping for their donation of wood chips for our new loop trail; Jim Thrash, who trained several dozen tour leaders; Sustainable Bainbridge and their Zero Waste Initiative for their help; and the much larger group of volunteers who led tours, helped set up, run and clean up after this event. And most of all we’d like to thank you, our members and community, for coming Top photo: Board Member Val out on May Day, Tollefson. Bottom photo: Board or on another day Members Bill Eckel and Jim Thrash - all at the May Day Hillyet to come, to see top event. what the Land Trust Photos © Asha Rehnberg has on the horizon. Please read more about how you can help make this proposed parkland acquisition a reality by visiting www.hilltopnow.org. Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 5 I n terv i e w w i th by Paul Brians B r u c e H e dde r ly -S m i th When Arthur and Prudence HedderleySmith bought 80 acres of land off Mandus Olson Road in 1952, it was covered with gigantic stumps and a stand of young Christmas trees. Their son Bruce—who still lives on part of the original property with his wife Carole—said they had to dynamite old firstgrowth tree stumps as much as eight feet in diameter to clear the area for the small prefabricated cedar log house they erected in 1954 as a summer vacation home. From the hilltop vantage point of their house they could see across to the Olympic Mountain Range, but eventually the firs in the former Christmas tree farm grew up to enclose them in the woods. In 1958 they moved permanently from Seattle to the island, intending to farm. Their son Bruce remembers his father saying “In ten years this will be a working farm,” thinking he would retire from building boats at that point. The family was fond of riding, and had several horses which were kept in a barn they built by hand with logs felled on the property. In those days, you could ride horseback on trails paralleling Highway 305 all the way from Winslow to Agate Pass. M a r c h 14 , 2 011 it so much he majored in livestock production at Washington State University in Pullman on an Air Force ROTC scholarship. During vacations he would return to Bainbridge, working for a while at a strawberry-canning plant located where the Pavilion is now. He especially remembers packing 55-gallon drums with sugared strawberries for Kraft Foods. Not all farm work was fun. Bruce particularly disliked pulling the tusks of young pigs and castrating cattle and sheep. In 1966 his father died, and upon graduation Bruce was sent to Vietnam. Half of the property had to be sold off to pay off various debts and taxes, and the cattle were sold to Ivar Haglund. This turn of events meant that Bruce could not fulfill his dream of becoming a farmer, and when he left the Air Force in 1974 he began instead a successful career selling tools and machines, including robots for factory assembly lines.. But his mother was strongly attached to the remaining property, and allowed it to grow up undisturbed into the forested area surrounding a 5-acre meadow (used as horse pasture) that it is today. Prudence was passionate about preserving the natural life on the land. Bruce remembers being scolded for disturbing a compost heap by playing in it, and being cautioned not to pick wild trilliums. She made grape jelly out of Oregon grapes; but the kids didn’t have the patience to gather enough huckleberries to make jam, instead eating them straight off the bush. “The Hilltop property, BILT’s latest parkland acquisition project, is a wonder at first sight. But the land also has a rich history not so apparent to the eye, including as a beloved family farm. We wanted to capture some of that history and share the story with you.” The family also kept sheep and pigs, and eventually went into the business of raising beef cattle as breeding stock. Their farming activities were confined to growing vegetables and fruit for their own consumption and raising forage for the animals on land they leased from the Nakata family and others. Because they had an abundant supply of manure, they were organic farmers from the beginning. They systematically restored soil exhausted by many years of strawberry farming by planting clover and other crops. In a swampy area near the property boundary they dug a pond to be used for irrigation. Bruce remembers one particularly bitterly cold winter day when he had to wheel a huge tank down to the frozen pond, chop a hole in it, pump the tank full of water for the animals, and haul it back up the hill, only to have the whole load spilled by an over-eager cow. On warmer days, the kids would enjoy swimming in the chilly water of the pond. Prudence, who eventually remarried to become Pru Trudgian, was an outspoken foe of a plan to build an antiballistic missile site in the area. Many people urged her to sell the property to developers, but she always resisted the idea. After her death, her children (Bruce and David Hedderly-Smith and Arlayne Peterson) agreed to honor her memory by working with the Land Trust to preserve undeveloped the remaining 31 acres. Bruce cares deeply about the rural character of Bainbridge and deplores the rampant development that has transformed much of the Island. Trails created by his family now wind through much of the Grand Forest, and he looks forward to the Land Trust being able to at last unite the two forest parcels with the family property which he has enjoyed for so many years. “I’ve forgotten a lot of things,” he says, “but not seeing the sunsets from our front yard, and riding out in the pastures.” There was plenty of hard work on the farm, but Bruce enjoyed B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 6 Photo © Thomas Fenwick p N ow! o t l l i H How high is Hilltop? The $3.6 million cost of this ambitious parkland acquisition project is one measure of the height. To get to the top is going to require a strong team effort. Every Bainbridge Island family should want to be on this team, and share in its success. Why Hilltop? Acquisition of this critically located 31-acre property, a missing link in our previously conserved lands, will bind together nearly 540 acres of public parks, trails and other already permanently protected conservation lands across the center of Bainbridge Island, and make possible a contiguous 290-acre Grand Forest. Why you? The opportunity to preserve Hilltop comes at a time when the burden of funding such acquisitions falls largely on private donors. Our project partner, the Bainbridge Island Metro Park & Recreation District, is doing everything it can to contribute public funds, but the majority of the acquisition cost will have to be provided by us. Why now? To save Hilltop for the public, your Land Trust must exercise its purchase option by early September. Your generous donation or annual pledge over the next five years is needed now. With your support ensured, we will exercise that option with confidence. How to Visit? Don’t miss the opportunity to tour this MUST SEE, still-private property. Please call 842-1216 to sign up for a tour. Donate or download a pledge form on-line at www.hilltopnow.org or www.bilandtrust.org, mail your donation or pledge to Bainbridge Island Land Trust, PO Box 10144, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110, or drop your check or pledge at the Marge Williams Center, 221 Winslow Way West, #103, and say hi! Thanks. Hilltop Campaign co-chairs, Val Tollefson and Carol Sperling B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 7 J a c o b D y s te – S te w a r ds h i p C o o r di n a to r / A m e r i C o r ps I n te r n by Cindy Vandersluis and the Bainbridge Island Parks Foundation. Under the leadership of former BILT board member Barb Trafton, this program engages high school students in three components of Land Trust work: spring volunteer work parties to remove invasive weeds from conserved parklands; two paid 2-week long summer invasiveremoval sessions at Blakely Harbor Park, which include lunchtime educational presentations; and a fall restoration planting party. There is space for about 40 students in the Corps. “Last year, about 2,000 trees were freed of ivy through this program,” Jacob says. “It’s great to be able to provide summer jobs and build an ongoing program that will keep serving the community.” AmeriCorps intern Jacob Dyste tackles invasive Scotch broom, along with BILT volunteers and Weed Warriors, at Trust-protected Willowbrook Farm. Photo © Brenda Padgham Jacob Dyste has been a valuable addition to the Land Trust staff since coming on board in October, 2010, and has been responsible for heading up the training of volunteer land stewards, with seven new stewards recruited this year. These volunteers visit and monitor Trust-conserved properties annually and build relationships with landowners. “They’re trained to watch for changes that occur, and how to write reports following their annual visits to the properties,” says Jacob. This year‘s training included a talk by local mushroom and fungus expert John Young. Jacob has also been instrumental in recruiting and outreach for the second program year of the Bainbridge Island Student Conservation Corps, a partnership between BILT, the Park District and Sustainable Bainbridge, with additional support provided by Bainbridge Community Foundation B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Jacob was born, raised, and educated in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. He majored in Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, focusing on water resources. Most recently, he worked for the Bureau of Land Management in Wyoming, monitoring soil and water quality. “My parents were into backpacking and skiing, so I always enjoyed the outdoors,” Jacob says. “When I began working at the BLM, I realized there were ways to work outside, help preserve those places that I enjoy recreationally, and make a difference.” Trus t wor t h y News - Photos top to bottom (photos © Jacob Dyste): Students from the 2011 Student Conservation Corps removing ivy from trees at Blakely Harbor Park during a spring volunteer weed pull. Board member and volunteer Lead Steward Barry Fetterman does battle with broom at Willowbrook Farm easement. In honor of our past board members, this spring the Land Trust staff and volunteers worked with the Bainbridge Island Park District to plant 141 western red cedar trees (donated by BILT). They were planted along the new trail at the Trust-protected 5-acre Kallgren Addition to the Ted Olson Nature Preserve. Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 8 S h o r e li n e R es to r a ti o n D esi g n P r o j ec t U pda te by Brenda Padgham The Land Trust’s Powel Shoreline Restoration Design Project is nearing completion after 15 months of site visits, assessment of property conditions, examining different designs for restoration alternatives and in-depth discussions among stakeholders. A final design to restore the nearshore and marine riparian area of this Trust-protected property has been agreed to by the stakeholders, which will result in slightly over 1,500 linear feet of shoreline restoration. The removal of bulkhead and armoring, as well as riparian plantings with native plants, are the focal areas of the design. This project is funded by the state Salmon Recovery Funding Board, with BILT as the project sponsor. The engineered design was done by Coastal Geologic Services of Bellingham. The Powel family sought advice from BILT several years ago about shoreline protection alternatives other than reconstructing their failing bulkheads. Subsequent discussions ultimately led to this design project. The family has been very engaged throughout the entire process to ensure that the restoration goals of the project are achieved in a manner that maintains their ability to use and enjoy their property. “Sometimes when you start on a well-intentioned project, a can of worms may open. In our case it was a can of permits, potential culturally sensitive sites, rules and regulations, old infrastructure, and some family dynamics. However, with Brenda gently guiding us, Jim and all his resources educating us, my family feels this is a worthwhile undertaking. My hope is that this project to remove the bulkheads where we can, and restore native shoreline and habitat to our waterfront, B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - will be an asset to local wildlife, and an encouragement to other waterfront property owners to reclaim, where possible and feasible, the natural state of affairs their waterfront once was,” shares Babe Kehres, Powel family member and resident on the shoreline where the proposed restoration project is slated to occur. Implementation will take place after additional funding is secured. Ann Powel, who was actively involved Besides in the project taking place on her propenhancing erty, discusses elements of the restoranearshore tion design with Doris Small, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. habitat, as Photo © Brenda Padgham restored native vegetation matures along the shoreline buffer, there will no longer be a need to maintain or repair infrastructure. Many thanks to the Powel family for their foresight in seeking to restore the shoreline of their BILT conservation easement property. Thanks also to project manager Jim Brennan of Washington Sea Grant, and our stakeholders from the Suquamish Tribe, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and City of Bainbridge Island. Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 9 van den Meerendonk’s Talents Enhance BILT Events by Cindy Vandersluis B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - ns His expertise was crucial this year to the resounding success of BILT’s annual Native Plant Sale on May 16. Working with NPS co-chairs Maryann Kirkby and Jane Wentworth, John helped put together a terrific list of plants that included many new species, particularly many varieties of ferns, never before offered. He was also instrumental in providing dazzling botanical decorations for BILT’s 2010 Preservation Partners Party. “John designed an indoor landscape and delivered and arranged an amazing array of large trees, shrubs, and ferns,” says Deb Fenwick, who planned and hosted the event. “He transformed the Island School gym into a lush landscape designed to convey how special these places are that the Land Trust helps to preserve.” Bri a In 1990, John founded Botanica, Inc., a landscape consulting, design, and installation company. Happy customers at the Native Plant Sale. Photo © Paul Brians Pau l From 1985 through 1990, John was the Horticultural and Grounds Superintendent at the Bloedel Reserve, and still volunteers there for plant identification walks. “It was really a fun and exciting time, working with world-renowned landscape artists,” says John, who grew up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin, attended school in Madison, and went on to join the Peace Corps. “When I started there, the Bloedels were still living on the property, and the first three years were focused on getting the garden ready for the public– –connecting the six components of the gardens and bringing them together. Mr. Bloedel was interested in the psychology of the relationship between man and nature, and wanted to give people the opportunity to be alone in nature when they visited.” Pho to © John van den Meerendonk A resident of Bainbridge Island since 1984, John van den Meerendonk brings his horticultural expertise to his role on the Land Trust Board. Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 10 THANK YOU to our 2011 Volunteers (so far)* Jay Abbott • Jamie Acker • Marc Adam • Demi Allen • Bruce Anderson • Vencie Anderson • Zach Anderson • Susan Andersson • Tom Backer • Robbie Baker • Ed Bancroft • Kip Bankart • Perry Barrett • Donna Bartelink • Jackson Beall • Heather Beckman • Len Beil • Sid and Andrea Bell • Ken Bennett • Maia Bentley • Ian Bentryn • Bart Berg • Peter Namvedt Best • Alison Bettles • Chris Blair • Ali Blake • Mike Bonoff • Jim Brennan • Paul Brians • Katya Bridwell • Rich Brooks • Marci Burkle • Tom Campbell • Dave Caudill • Frank Childers • Pam Childress • Laura Cloghessy • Matthew Coates • Dana Coggon • Rob Crichton • Tom Croker • Lee Cross • Suellen Cunningham • Tom Cunningham • Jim Cutler • Greg Davidson • Natalie Davidson • Stephen Deines • Mike Derzon • Diggs Docter • Christina Doherty • Paul Dorn • Lyla Doyle • Brooke Drury • Helen Dunbar • Bill Eckel • Mary Ann Eckel • George Economy • William Economy • Mary Eliasen • Paula Elliott • Arlan Elms • Theo Fehsenfeld • Deborah Fenwick • Melissa Fenwick • Thomas Fenwick • Farrah Ferguson • Barry Fetterman • Jo Ann Fetterman • Lea Fetterman • Brian Fish • Colleen Fisher • Don Fisher • Ellen Fisher • Mike Fisher • Mark Follet • Maradel Gale • Taylor Gawlik • Billee Gearheard • Greg Geehan • Jeff Geehan • George Gerdts • Harry Gibbons • Elliot Gitten • Jim Goldsworthy • Corinne Gooden • Thomas Goodlin • Matthew Greenwood • LT Gurdjian-Clay • Dan Hamlin • Amy Jo Hanavan • Becca Hanson • Cynthia Harrison • David Harrison • Edie Hartmann • Svend Hartmann • John Haskin • Kathy and John Haskin • Bob Haslanger • Edward Hawley • David Hedderly-Smith • Craig Hobbs • Mark Hoffman • Sue Hylen • Glenda Inman • Kathleen Jennings • Stephen Jennings • John Jewel • Jim Johannessen • Karl Johansen • Hannah, Jones • Jess Jordan • Nancy Karle • Craig Kehrberg • Emily Kehrberg • Babe Kehres • Larry Kehres • Kaitlyn Kelly • Sean Kelly • Carol King • Maryann Kirkby • Rick Kirkby • Karen Klein • Darlene Kordonowy • Marcia Lagerloef • Roberta Lang • Mark Larson • Dennis Lewarch • Aaron Lewis • Luca Lezzi • Jane Lindley • Betsy Lyons • Andrea MacLenna • Sallie Maron • Jerry Matthews • Julie Matthews • Steve Matthews • Don Mayer • Linnea Mayer • Mikhale McCarrel • Mike McCloud • Kim McCormick • Cestjon McFarland • James McMurray • Sabrina McNulty • Cyndi Merritt • David Moen • Martha Monkman • Steve Morse • Jan Mulder • Marylou Murphy • Elizabeth Murray • Jane Myers • Jane Leslie Newberry • Erin O’Hara • Bryn Olason • Tim O’Mara • Elissa Ostergaard • Sam Pappas • Stefan Paskell • Betsy Peabody • Steve Peltin • Austin Perilstein • Kathy Peters • Cassie Picha • Doug Picha • Larry Pluimer • Ann Powel • Jake Powel • Jeff Powel • Mike Powel • Joe Prater • Karena Prater • Robin Purcell • Robert Purser • Garnie Quitslund • Frances Ran • Marilyn Rehnberg • Olaf Ribeiro • Barb Robert • Joseph Rochelle • Richard Rocksmith • Don Rooks • Roxann Vistocci • Deb Rudnick • Alan Rudolph • Joyce Rudolph • Stan Rullman • Jo Schaffer • Charles Schmid • Emily Schneider • Mark Schneider • Sandy Schubach • Tom Schworer • Kent Scott • Julie Skotheim • Max Skotheim • Doris Small • Cameron Snow • Carol Sperling • Dale Sperling • Darsi St. Louis • Brian Stahl • Cameron Stahl • Tom Steckel • Evie Stege • George Stege • Roger Stewart • Marilyn Stoknes • Haley Story • Frank Stowell • Jennifer Sutton • Hallie Swan • Lynn Swan • Jens Swenson • Mary Terry • John Thomas • Dave Thorne • Kathleen Thorne • Ginger Thrash • Jim Thrash • Peg Tillery • Mary Ann Tollefson • Val Tollefson • Barbara Trafton • Craig Trueblood • Wendy Tynder • John van den Meerendonk • Cindy Vandersluis • Roxann Vistocci • Connie Waddington • Joshua Webb • Jane Wentworth • Robert Weschler • Alan Westphal • Leslie, Whalen • Beth Wheeler • Eve Wiggins • Wilcynski • Walker Willingham • Don Willott • Judi Wood-Swenson • Dallas Young • John Young • Barb Zimmer * We’ve done our best to include all our 2011 volunteers through April. However, if you have inadvertently been omitted, please give us a call so that we can be sure to thank you in our Fall newsletter. More May Day fun at Hilltop. Photo © Jacob Dyste B a i n br i d g e I sl a n d Land Trus t - Trus t wor t h y News - Vol u m e 22 , #1 - Pag e 11 Thank You to the following Fall/Winter 2010 Donors through One Call for A ll (...whose names were not available to us in time to be included in our 2010 Annual Report.) Marc and Nancy Adam • Jaye Albright • Dan and Harriet Alexander • Borgan and Kathy Anderson • Brian Anderson • Farris Anderson • Rebecca Anderson • Bruce and Carolyn Appleton • Stephen and Laurie Arnold • Dana Ashton • Tom Backer and Jane Leslie Newberry • Ed and Lori Bancroft • Peter and Jill Bang-Knudsen • Bay Hay & Feed • Jonathan and Martha Bayley • Bruce Beall and Barbara Trafton • Rick and Amy Beckett • Lydia Beckman • Greg Bedinger and Jan Mulder • Charles and Susan Beek • Tom and Karen Beierle • Len Beil and Stella Ley • Susan Berdan • Bart and Dana Berg • Ed Berschinski and Deb DeVlieger • Karl Beuschlein and Barbara Deppe • Alan and Sarah Black • Grant and Inga Blackington • Jeff and Sue Braff • Bruce and Kirsten Branson-Meyer • Paul Brians and Paula Elliot • Eric and Molly Brown • George Brown • Mary Buffington • Tom and Sarah Bullock • Deborah Bunn • Carolyn Burger • Robert and Sherry Burke • George and Delores Bussell • Ed and Claire Butler • Robert Butler • Craig and Jean Campbell • Ruth Caron • Alexander Carroll • Jason Carroll • Eric Cederwall and Johanna Vander Stoep • Ann Cheng • Dick and Patty Christensen • Jeff and Bonny Clark • Edward and Judith Cole-Martin • Neil Conaty • Sue Cooley • Bob Crissman • Tom and Luanne Croker • Richard and Phyllis Crooks • Leonora Cross • King and Lois Curtis • Wayne and Marcy Daley • Robert Bevan Dalton • Larry and Anna Daniels • Jeremy and Lissa Dashe • Carol Ann Davidson and John Bonow • Christine S. Davis • David and Virginia Davison • Wendy del Valle • Barbara Denk • Mike Derzon and Robin Supplee • Ken and Barb DeWitt • Robert and Sharon Dieterich • Diggs Docter • Margaret Donaldson • Thomas and Nancy Downs • Constance Ducar • Doug and Kathy Dudgeon • Helen Dunbar • Kevin and Mary Beth Dwyer • Bill Eckel • Anna Edmonds • Dr. Sherri Egashira • Ed and Joanne Ellis • Charles and Julie Everett • Simon and Rebecca Ffitch • Margaret Fish • Don and Ellen Fisher • Elizabeth Fisher • Douglas Fleming and Cloantha Copass • Cameron and Donna Foster • Kent and Kathrina Fredrickson • Robert Freimark and Elizabeth Hudson • Maradel Gale • Daniel Gallivan • Bruce and Susan Galloway • Denise Garcia • Tom and Joan Gardiner • Gregory and Kathy Geehan • Elliot Gitten and Laura Cloghessy • Jim Gleckler • Scott Glendinning and Beverly Gimlin • Kathy and Kirk Godtfredsen • Thomas Goodlin and Cestjon McFarland • Fred and Willie Grimm • Carl Haefling and Pamela Johnson • Roth Hafer • Bernard Hallet and Amy Jo Heyneman • Jewell Hanna • Steve and Janet Hannuksela • John Harding • William and Carolyn Harper • David and Cynthia Harrison • John and Kathy Haskin • Chris Heinlein and Cindy Howard-Gibbon • Kristin Henshaw • Don Heppenstall and Emily Mansfield • Craig and Mary Hobson • Robert and Debbie Hollyer • David Hunting • Daniel and Kathleen Huxley • Pamela Irvine-Johnson • Randy Jahren and Valerie Loebs • George Jarecke and Nancy Plant • Cheryl Jaszewski • Robert Jenness • Mary Jensen • Neil Johannsen and Hilary Hilscher • Doug and Jan Jonas • Jeff Julius and Beverly Green • Robert and Judy Karr • Shelley Kaurin • Larry and Babe Kehres • Peter Kepler and Sheila Hughes • Bob and Karen King • Maryann and Rick Kirkby • Dale and Susan Knell • Walter and Lisa Kniginyzky • John Knox • David and Frances Korten • Monte and Dawna Kramer • Paul and Anne Kundtz • Janet Kutina • John and Lynn Lampe • Steve and Diane Landry • John and Jenny Lange • Vincent and Karin Larson • Lee and Judi Leader • Janet A. Leo • Michael Leonard • Fritz Levy and Nancy Taylor • Risa M. Lewellyn • Tad and Joyce Lhamon • Joanne Little • Dave and Ellie Low • Kyle and Susan Lukins • James and Sue MacFarlane • John Malterner • John and Laurie Maltman • Richard and Betty Mancuso • Andy and Sallie Maron • John D. Marshall • Leslie Marshall and Herb Hethcote • Joel and Kathy Matulys • Bill and Anna McClain • Mr. and Mrs. Michael McCloud • Dexter McCulloch and Karen James • George and Donna McKinney • Franci and Malcolm McKinnon • Lynda McMaken and James Lagdon • Nina Meierding • William Merz • Laurel Michael • Alan Miller and Carolyn Mitchell • Dan and Robin Miller • Robert Miller • Michael Milligan and Jeanne E • Barbara Mills • John and Patty Minola • David Mitchell and Lisa Giles • David and Fran Moen • Carl and Doreen Morgan • Clarence Moriwaki • Pegeen Mulhern • Charles and Florence Munat • Bill Nakao and Pamela Harrison • Larry Nazareth and Abigail Reeder • Druse and Eva Neumann • Bruce Nitsche and Jo Wallace • Mel and Chris Noble • Kirk O’Donnell and Jennifer Watkins • Bill and Carole O’Neill • Debra O’Sullivan • Patricia “Bitsy” Ostenson • William and Janet Pauli • Mauri Pelto and Marjorie Anderson • Winifred Perkins • Michael Peterson and Lucinda Jacobs Peterson • Gary Phillips and Mary Tate-Phillips • Dr. Jeffrey W. Phillips • Michael and Carin Piraino • Stephen Prentice and Martha Makosky • Reed Price and Jen Merrill • Joanna Pyle • David and Frances Ran • Carmine Rau • Wenda Reid • Brian and Leslie Rice • Richard and Patricia Richards • Anthony and Julie Riely-Gibbons Re-Solve • Duane and Phyllis Rimel • Julie A. Roake • Barbara Robbins • Jeff and Debra Robert • Joseph Rochelle and Mona Lydon-Rochelle • Jessica Rockers • David and Sarah Roe • Mike and Ana Rosen • Sada Ross • Mary Anne Rossing • Dean and Pat Sampson • Chris and Keri Schmit • Steven and Anne Schwager • Cynthia Sears and Frank Buxton • Morgan and Anne Seeley • Howard and Elizabeth Sewell • Mark and Susan Shaffer • Dwight Shappell • Sam Sharar and Lynn Oliver • John and Marjorie Sharp • David Sheldon • James and Jennie Sheldon • William and Sandra Shopes • Dave and Alice Shorett • Robin Simons • Michael and Julie Smith • Christopher and Cameron Snow • John D. Stahl and Darsi St. Louis • George and Evelyn Stege • Jill and Dean Sterrett • Annette Stollman • Frank and Mary Stowell • Stephen Streufert and Lisa Foisy • Gary Sundem • Bruce and Karen Taft • Liz Taylor • Rick and Lisa Thomas • Brooke Thompson • Janet Thompson • David and Kathleen Thorne • Carol Tice • Val and Mary Ann Tollefson • David Toren and Marilynne Gardner • Carolyn Tull • Tim Tully • Michael and Alicia Uhlig • Jan van der Veen • Brad and Martha Vaughan • Garret Veley and Angela Mansfield • Peter and Shelly Vosshall • Bill and Connie Waddington • Stuart and Brenda Wakeham • Trey Walker and Mary Anderson • Lee and Daryce Walton • Heidi Watson • Tyler Weaver • Kate Webster • Scott and Ann Weigle • Bruce and Judith Weiland • Robert Weschler • Jeff and Wendy Westerlund • Tim and Kathleen Weyand • Shirley and John Whitaker • Linda Whitehead • Robert Whitley • Cole and Lois Williams • BJ Winship • Rich and Jackie Wood • Mary Woodward • Rodney and Joanne Wright • Nancy Yeilding • James and Janet Young See our website calendar at www.bi-landtrust.org for upcoming events.