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West Seattle Blog… | It takes a village to nurture a creek – the Fauntleroy Watershed Council can t do it alone
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West Seattle Blog… | It takes a village to nurture a creek – the Fauntleroy Watershed Council can t do it alone
westseattleblog.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from westseattleblog.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Judy Pickens
Kindergarten students, parents, and staff from
Sanislo Elementary had the honor of releasing the last of this spring’s
Fauntleroy Creek.
Despite the pandemic’s many extra demands on teachers, seven West Seattle schools (half the usual number) managed to rear coho this year. In addition, two preschools released fry reared by volunteer
Jack Lawless for the
Most teachers scheduled their releases in
Fauntleroy Park by family groups. All told, 130 students, plus 190 adults and siblings, put 1,044 fish in the water.
(This Sanislo student added a bit of glamour to the last salmon release of the season on Fauntleroy Creek)
West Seattle Blog… | Sanislo caps salmon-release season as smolts leave Fauntleroy Creek
westseattleblog.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from westseattleblog.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Estela and Vivian, 4th- and 1st-graders at
Arbor Heights Elementary, are in their third month of a volunteer project in conjunction with the
Fauntleroy Watershed Council. They’re gone out every month to survey the trail – through the watershed of salmon-bearing
Fauntleroy Creek – for what visiting dogs left behind. We went along on Saturday afternoon for this month’s survey. Every place they found something, they marked with a flag.
The 10 flags they placed this time were fewer than their first two times (17 and 14). The flags are intended to both warn – one side says “Watch your step!” – and educate. They’re rain-resistant and made from paper, says creek steward