Friday, October 1, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A3 Timber fi rm enters conservation deal with land trust Agreement ensures greater access for tribes ‘NO HIGHWAY IS GOING TO BE BUILT THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF IT. NO GATED COMMUNITY IS GOING TO BE BUILT ON TOP OF IT.’ By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian A new agreement between Clatsop Coun- ty’s largest landowner and the Columbia Land Trust will conserve a produc- tive acreage between Asto- ria and Seaside for forestry work and ensure access for local tribes. Under the conserva- tion easement, Green- Wood Resources — a tim- ber investment company that manages lands previ- ously owned by Weyerhae- user and other timber com- panies — will continue to own the more than 2,500 acres of forestland off U.S. Highway 101 and harvest trees. But the agreement will prevent future fragmenta- tion of the land, no mat- ter who owns the prop- erty, said Dan Roix, the conservation director with Columbia Land Trust. A conservation ease- ment that continues to allow logging may not be an approach people typi- cally associate with land trusts and conservation, Roix acknowledged. But he believes the easement will aid other, more famil- iar conservation goals, as well as preserve a tradi- tional economical use in local forests. The easement requires increased tree buffers along streams where fish are present and establishes a 50-year minimum stand rotation, giving trees a lon- ger time to grow on the land. For local tribes, the easement ensures access to an area where their ances- tors gathered food and materials, and the right to Katie Voelke, executive director of the North Coast Land Conservancy and many older tree stands were knocked down during the 2007 windstorms that raked through the region. But the smells and the sounds Basch’s ancestors would have experienced and that he experienced as a child remain: the sweet, earthy smell of moss and ferns, the salty tang of the ocean below. You can hear the sounds of the forest and the ocean waves crash- ing, Basch said. “It provides us the opportunity to go where our families, our ances- tors, would go to harvest items,” Basch said. “To breathe the same air.” ‘Seed effort’ Clatsop Ridge Forest Conservation Area. do larger-scale collecting and harvesting activities not permitted on other land GreenWood owns. Clatsop Ridge The property, referred to as Clatsop Ridge, already sees a high amount of rec- reational use. Located across U.S. Highway 101 from Camp Rilea, its bor- ders touch Lewis and Clark National Historical Park to the north and Cul- laby Lake County Park to the southwest. Under the easement, the property must remain open to the public and hunting for deer and elk will be allowed. Native families in the Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribes have considered the area part of their traditional fishing grounds. The Clatsop-Nehalem, like the Chinook Indian Nation tribes based around the mouth of the Colum- bia River, is not feder- ally recognized. Access to traditional gathering and hunting areas is not guaranteed. The allow- ance to harvest and gather plants and native foods at Clatsop Ridge may be a small portion of the con- servation easement, but for Dick Basch, the Clat- sop-Nehalem vice chair- man, it was an important inclusion. “To have this is recogni- tion that we’re still here,” he said. The Clatsop Ridge property has been logged routinely over the years Columbia Land Trust’s purchase of the conserva- tion easement was funded through more than $2 mil- lion obtained by the North Coast Land Conservancy. The land conservancy, already involved in a major funding campaign for its Rainforest Reserve proj- ect farther south, invited Columbia Land Trust to the Clatsop Ridge project. GreenWood has collab- orated frequently with the North Coast Land Conser- vancy on other types of land conservation projects in the past and sees this new conservation ease- ment as an invitation to other landowners to con- sider similar partnerships. “I see this almost as a seed effort,” said Mark Morgans, director of North American forest oper- ations for GreenWood. “Where else can we do this, not only us at Green- Wood, on our footprint of the forest?” The easement also nods to goals finalized earlier this month by the Clatsop Plains Elk Collaborative. That group, with the support of Gov. Kate Brown and state Sen. Betsy Johnson, signed off on a unified approach to deal- ing with growing urban elk herds on the North Coast. Increased development was identified as one of the drivers for an uptick in undesirable elk and human interactions in the Clat- sop Plains area. One of the action items identified by the group was to look at establishing wildlife hab- itat buffers and transition areas and, through part- nerships, keep some land undeveloped. While it isn’t the same as conserving land for hab- itat or old growth trees, the easement at Clatsop Ridge does ensure the land will only continue to be used for forestry, not develop- ment, said Katie Voelke, the executive director of the North Coast Land Conservancy. “No highway is going to be built through the mid- dle of it,” Voelke said. “No gated community is going to be built on top of it.” The additional protec- tions that come with the easement — like increased stream buffers — are important considerations as land stewards con- sider climate change and a landscape’s resiliency in the face of major climate shifts, Voelke and Roix said.