Shopper Recreation Report September 7, 2022

 

HEADLINES:

á      This is the last issue of the Highway Shopper. Our ad revenues no longer pay our costs so we must retire. Thank you for the wonderful opportunity to serve you for 47 years!

á      Goat Rocks Fire of 80 acres is burning in the wilderness Lava Creek area seven miles northeast of Packwood. Forest Road #4612 and Bluff Lake Trail #65 are closed.

á      Hiker Magnet Northbound completed the 2,653-mile Pacific Crest Trail!

á      Huckleberry picking is booming!

á      Burn Bans: Almost all the agencies have banned nearly all burning. To have a fire, you must learn if there are exceptions allowing fire in your specific area.

á      Whitewater rafting is happening on the Tieton River.

á      Forest Road #23 Cispus at MP 9.5 is CLOSED from August 22 through September 20 to upgrade the Camp Creek culvert.

á      Stevens Canyon Road between Stevens Creek and Box Canyon is closed weekly to traffic from Mon. 6 am to Thur. 8 pm.

á      Fishing is good! TAKE A KID FISHING!

á      Read the Bible Readings on page 6 which includes DavidÕs words: "The fool says in his heart, ÔThere is no God.Õ
They are corrupt, their deeds are vileÉÓ 
Psalms 14:1 NIV

á       

Index to the following
Recreation Report

Information for all areas:

Highway Conditions               

Lower Cowlitz Fishing           

Mt. St. Helens                        

Westside- Packwood,
          Randle & Morton
     

Fishing/Hunting Westside       

Forest Roads Westside           

Campgrounds Westside          

Trails Westside                      

Permits: Forest Products        

Randle Ranger Station            

Mt. Rainier NatÕl Park      

Eastside- Naches District

Forest Roads Eastside                

Fishing/Hunting Eastside           

Campgrounds Eastside               

Trails Eastside                          

Permits-Forest Products             

Naches Ranger Station               

Elsewhere in Washington                 

Razor Clam Digs                      

Creel Check Reports                  

View This
Recreation Report
on the web
or at
highwayshopper.com/recrpt.html

Information
for all of
Shopper Country

Goat Rocks Fire

09/05/2022 - Located 7 miles NE of Packwood in the Goat Rocks Wilderness on the Cowlitz Valley Ranger District.  The Goat Rocks Fire is estimated to be 80 acres.

The fire was first noticed around Aug. 9th. At that time a crew of six firefighters rappelled from helicopters into the fire and worked to contain the fire with the help of helicopter water drops. Firefighters were able to work 60% of the fire. The remaining 40% of the fire was located in steep, rocky areas that are unsafe to put firefighters into. Firefighters had been checking on the fire daily with little smoke visible but it has now become more active.

 

Most of the active fire spread occurred on Sat., Sept. 3 and throughout Saturday night. Three helicopters were assigned to the fire Saturday. The fire appears to have spread down slope, primarily on the eastern flank into the headwaters of Lava Creek.

Forest Road #4612 and Trail #65 are closed.

The fire is visible from Highway US 12. Do not obstruct traffic by slowing or stopping to look at the fire.

For more info call: 360 891 5014

Updates on the fire are posted regularly on GPNF Facebook page.

Burn Bans

Almost all the agencies have banned nearly all burning.

If you wish to have a fire, you must learn if there are exceptions allowing fire in the specific area where you wish to have the fire.

Such exceptions are usually stated clearly in easy to find Fire Ban Posters.

The Shopper area includes lands governed by a dozen different agencies. The fire rules are different, some are very lengthy for each of the dozen land-managing agencies and too extensive for us to print here.

One agency has requested we print its rules alone. To print the rules of one would be confusing; readers could wrongly assume they applied to the other nearby agenciesÕ lands.

Again, if you wish to have a fire, you must contact the agency governing that land and learn if there are exceptions allowing fire in the specific area where you wish to have the fire.

Huckleberries
are being picked!

8/31 Shopper reporter, Jackie, says that Randle is full of huckleberry buyers.

Remember: A permit is required to remove any berries from National Forest, and the permit is only available online:  https://gp.fs2c.usda.gov/gp/..

Blackberries

The lowland large Himalaya and Evergreen Blackberries, picked mainly for juice, are ripe in the low private land Packwood and Randle areas.

We have no report on the sought-after but smaller mountain blackberries.

Job Opportunities

The Forest Service is hosting a Partnership and Community Engagement national hiring event starting Tuesday, September 6 at www.USAJobs.gov and closing September 16 or when a maximum number of applicants is reached.

View this interactive map: https://arcg.is/1L449m0 to see available position locations.

Highway Conditions
as of Monday, Sept. 5

Stevens Canyon Road center part between Stevens Creek Bridge MP 4.8 and Box Canyon MP 8.7 is CLOSED weekdays Mon. 6am to Thur. 8pm until Labor Day weekend.

Washington 2021-22
Fishing & Hunting licenses expired on March 31.

Anglers and hunters need the new licenses for April through March 31, 2023.

Buy licenses today by calling 360-902-2464, visiting https://www.mywdfw.com, or going to a license dealer near you.

 

Every Kid Outdoors

Every Kid Outdoors is a federal program which provides up to a year of free access to National Forests, National Parks, and other public lands for fourth-grade students and their families.

Fourth graders, parents, and educators can visit the Every Kid Outdoors website at  www.everykidoutdoors.gov and learn more about how to obtain free entry to all federal lands, for fourth graders and their accompanying family members.

Students can obtain passes individually by completing a brief online activity. Educators who work with fourth graders can visit the site to download an educational activity guide, after which theyÕll be able to obtain vouchers for their students. Once printed, students and their families can also redeem the paper voucher for a durable, plastic pass at any Forest Service office where passes are sold. Passes and vouchers are valid for the entire school year, through Aug. 31, 2023.

Every Kid Outdoors is designed to get kids and their families to explore the outdoors and explore the incredible experiences that are available to them on public lands.

 

Fishing Seasons

Lower Cowlitz
Fishing

Take a kid fishing!

Rules Pamphlet:  www.eregulations.com/washington/fishing

Unless specified otherwise in the rules pamphlet:

á  Many Lakes, ponds, and reservoirs are OPEN to fishing (except Dolly Varden/bull trout) year-round.

á  Some generally Òlow-landÓ or ÒtraditionalÓ lakes are OPEN now.

á  Most larger rivers season is OPEN year-round.

¥ Many smaller rivers, streams and beaver ponds are OPEN now.

But many individual waters are different from the above, soÉ

READ YOUR PAMPHLET to find out which
waters are open!

Fish stocking details, by county and lake, are available in the annual stocking plan on WDFW's website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/plants/statewide/

 

Scanawa Lake, Shopper reporter Jackie 8/31 heard from her neighbor that fishing has been great the past few days. They caught their limit very quickly, and all nice fish.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rick at the Boat Doc in Mossyrock, reported 8/31 that the Columbia River was going to be shut down as of midnight September 1, until September 15. Too many Tulies are being caught.

  The fishermen have been catching trout on Mayfield Lake.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jeffery at Barrier Dam Camp-ground, Salkum, reported August 11, ÒThe guides are still limiting out for their customers. They are catching steelhead.Ó

Corrine at Barrier Dam Campground, Salkum, reported 8/25, ÒThey are still working on the dam. They are going to keep the water level between 3400 and 3500 until mid-November because of the work they are doing at Mayfield Dam and Barrier Dam. Fishing is still doing good. We still have campsites available for Labor Day weekend.Ó

 

Cowlitz Fish Report for Mon. Aug. 29 from Tacoma Public Utilities:

Last week, Tacoma Power employees recovered 152 summer-run steelhead adults, 34 spring Chinook adults, four spring Chinook jacks, 209 spring Chinook mini-jacks, 38 fall Chinook adults, five fall Chinook jacks, two coho adults, and 19 cutthroat trout over five days of operations at the Cowlitz Salmon Hatchery separator.

During the past week, Tacoma Power employees released 32 spring Chinook adults, four spring Chinook jacks, 10 cutthroat trout, and one coho adult at Franklin Bridge in Packwood and they released 26 fall Chinook adults, five fall Chinook jacks, six cutthroat trout, and one coho adult at Bremer Bridge on the Tilton River.

In addition, Tacoma Power recycled 96 summer-run steelhead adults to the I-5 boat launch.

River flow below Mayfield Dam is 3,560 cubic feet per second on Monday, August 29, 2022. Water visibility is 11 feet and water temperature is 55.4 degrees F. River flows could change at any time so boaters and anglers should remain alert for this possibility.

Tacoma PowerÕs River Flow and Lake Level Info is available at:

Info:  shpr.fyi/tpuwaters

 

Carlisle Lake in Onalaska –Open now. The former millpond is a favorite fishing spot for kids. Stocked frequently with thousands of trout including some big ones.

Lewis County Park Pond, near Toledo, 14 acres, open year-round. Frequently stocked with many trout.

Mayfield Lake (2,200 acres, 13 miles long, shoreline length 33.5 miles, behind Mayfield Dam). Open year-round:

¥  Mayfield offers good fishing for Tiger Musky, yellow perch, rainbows, catfish, German browns, a few largemouth and smallmouth bass, bluegill and crappie.

¥ Mayfield - Remember, all cutthroat must be released, and only adipose clipped rainbow trout may be retained in Mayfield Lake and the Tilton River.

¥ More info on tiger muskie and how to fish for them is at https://wdfw.wa.gov/species-habitats/species/esox-masquinongy-x-esox-lucius#howto.

 

Shopper Reporter Jackie shared on 8/31 Campgrounds were open and filling up fast everywhere I went by on route Thursday. Everyone was trying to get a head start before the Labor Day weekend.

 

Riffe Lake- open year-round.
On Thursday, Sept.1, Riffe Lake was at 732 ft. elev., down one foot from the week before and now 17 feet below the new permanent maximum level of the lake of 749 ft. Taidnapam North boat launch is open. Mossyrock Park boat launch and day-use area are open but the day-use area is closed to additional visitors once the parking lot reaches full capacity.

Lake Scanewa behind Cowlitz Falls Dam (610 acres) is open for fishing year-round. Read pamphlet for rules.

In the week ended Aug. 1, Tacoma Power released 134 spring Chinook adults, nine spring Chinook jacks, and one cutthroat trout into Lake Scanewa south of Glenoma.

Silver Lake near Castle Rock- (3,000 acres) Open year-round with min. size 9 inches, limit 10. Silver Lake is the best largemouth bass fishing in Washington.

South Lewis County Park Pond- Open year-round, is near Toledo. Reasonably good to excellent fishing for trout all year.

Swofford Pond (240 acres) Open year-round. Anglers have been catching crappies and trout. Great for children.

Get information about river flows and lake levels at MyTPU.org/LakeLevels.

 

Cowlitz Fish Stats:

á     Graphs of adult returns by species for each week and 10-year averages.

á     Tables of collections by species for each week, season to date and weekly 5-year averages.

 

Mt. St. Helens
Volcano

 

 

Windy Ridge
Viewpoint is OPEN

Road No. 99 to Windy Ridge Visitor Center and Viewpoint, the highest and closest viewpoint on Mt. St. Helens, is OPEN.

Spirit Lake Outlet Tunnel is being repaired in a
multi-million-dollar project with construction traffic
access from Randle via Windy Ridge!

Windy Ridge Road FR99 beyond Windy Ridge down to Spirit Lake is being rebuilt now for next yearÕs repair of Spirit Lake outlet tunnel so continues closed completely to public vehicle use and closed weekdays as a trail.

Johnston Ridge
Observatory is OPEN!

Johnston Ridge Observatory, the crowning jewel of Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, is OPEN!

The Observatory has many exhibits about Mt. St. Helens and its eruption.

Be sure to watch the excellent movie!

There are snack services and restrooms.

The Science and
Learning Center
above Coldwater Lake

The Science and Learning Center at Coldwater is open Sat-Sun 10am- 4pm with water and restrooms available.

Please bring extra food & water with you and PACK OUT all trash.

Climbing Mt. St. Helens

Permits are required to hike above the 4,800-foot elevation on the volcano year-round.

To climb Mount St Helens between April 1 & Oct. 31, climbing permits must be purchased in advance at Recreation.gov: https://www.recreation.gov/permits/4675309. Permits are released in one month increments on the first day of the preceding month. For example, May permits will be released on April 1. All releases occur at 7:00 AM Pacific Time.

 

See other information about Mt. St. Helens Institute at
facebook.com/mshinstitute/

Mount St. Helens Institute Contact:  Luke Wakefield, 360-449-7883.

Mount St. Helens Visitor
Center near Hwy. I-5 at Castle Rock operated by Washington State Parks is OPEN!!

The Mount St. Helens Visitor Center at Silver Lake, located five miles from the I-5 exit at Castle Rock, shows a powerful and moving 16-minute film detailing the events around the May 18, 1980, eruption. Exhibits provide information about volcanoes, comparing the Mount St. Helens eruption to others of historic significance. Adjacent to the center is the half-mile Silver Lake Wetlands Trail, where you can learn about the formation of Silver Lake and the plants and animals that live there.

Many Mountain Webcams

View many webcams of Mt. St.Helens and of the roads leading to it.

Mt. Adams

Permits to climb Mt. Adams are available online at recreation.gov. Good dates often sell out the first day, so go to the site to learn when permits become available.

Mt Adams Ranger District: Thur.-Mon. 509-395-3400.

 

Centralia-Chehalis
Railroad

Summer Escape Room

á       Dinner Trains.

á       Stationary events

á       On the Train

á       At the Depot.

Dates:

á Sept.10

á Oct 8

Regular Escape Room Adventures are $40 pp at 2:00 pm.

Dinner Train Escape Room Trains are $65 pp at 5:00pm.

Details and reservations at SteamTrainRide.com.

Book now, seats are limited.

Chehalis, WA – In response to popular demand, the Chehalis Centralia Railroad has adapted to the current situation by offering stationary summer events ÒOn the Train....At the Depot.Ó

Chehalis Centralia Railroad is offering five days of Escape Room activity with a track that is in repair. On January 6, 2022, 1.3 miles of track was washed out during the flood. Currently funding and repair work are in progress.

 

Book NOW the fun-filled October weekend event: WIZARD EXPRESS.

Experience magic, mystery, and managed mischief on the School of Wizardry Express, featuring award winning magician, Headmaster Jeff Evans.

Dates & Times:

Sat. Oct. 1 and Sun Oct. 2
11 am, 1 pm, 3 pm
Tickets on sale now at:.

SteamTrainRide.com

WeÕll be back running soon! Watch for announcements!

 

Northwest Trek

Come explore the park with your admission ticket.

á  Explore our animal walking paths on foot to meet grizzlies, cougar and more. MEET ANIMALS

á  KidsÕ Trek playground: open.

á  Forest CafŽ: open for indoor dining at limited capacity on weekends.

á  Cafe Window: To-go food & drinks on weekdays

á  Picnic Pavilion: Open for outside dining. Outside food is also allowed.

á  Trams- WeÕll open a new tram station to support our new electric tour vehicles.

á  Trails & Zip Wild: Closed

Visit nwtrek.org for prices.

 

Hours Sept, 6- Sept. 30

Daily         9:30am-4pm

Sat-Sun     9:30am-5pm

 

 

 

 State Discover Pass

Required to park in Washington State-owned Parking Lots at such as fishing or hunting sites.

The Washington State Discover Pass is entirely a Washington State program. The Discover Pass does not apply to anything on National Forests. U.S. Forest Service employees canÕt answer questions about it. A single, state recreation Discover land pass now can be used on either of two motor vehicles.

Questions about the Discover Pass may be answered by calling the Washington State Dept. of Fish and Wildlife in Olympia (866) 320-9933, Yakima 509-575-2740, or Ellensburg 509-925-8510.

á     The annual pass - $30. Good for one year from the date of purchase.

á     Day-use pass - $10. Good for the date marked on the pass.

Available from the WILD system:
¥ at a license dealer,
¥ online: shpr.fyi/2l1Ugdp
¥ phone 1-866-320-9933

Westside-
Packwood, Randle &
Morton

Leaving waste in the forest is NOT OK!

Take your garbage home!

ItÕs YOUR forest
so be proud of it!

 

 

 

Fishing Seasons

Take a kid fishing!

The online rules pamphlet has been revised so that now it is quite easy to find the water you wish to fish.

Rules Pamphlet:  www.eregulations.com/washington/fishing

Unless specified otherwise in the rules pamphlet:

á  Many Lakes, ponds, and reservoirs are open to fishing for game fish (except Dolly Varden/bull trout and grass carp) year-round.

á  Some generally Òlow-landÓ or ÒtraditionalÓ lakes are open now.

á  Most larger rivers season is open year-round.

¥ Many smaller rivers, streams and beaver ponds are open now. Beaver ponds located within or connected to streams listed as open to trout and other game fish follow the same rules as the stream.

But many individual waters are different from the above, soÉ

READ YOUR PAMPHLET to find out which
waters are open!

Fish stocking details, by county and lake, are available in the annual stocking plan on WDFW's website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/plants/statewide/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fishing Reports on
Specific Waters

On Thur., Sept. 1, Alder Lake was at 1,197 ft., same as the week before, now ten feet below its maximum 1207 ft. Alder Lake Park boat launch and day-use area are open. Rocky Point boat launch, day-use area and campground are open.

Cispus River

In the week ended July 18, Tacoma Power employees released 65 spring Chinook adults and eight spring Chinook jacks into the Cispus River near Yellowjacket Creek south of Randle.

Cispus River fishing seasons are too complex to report here for the lower stretch of the Cispus River from its mouth at posted markers at the Lewis County PUD kayak launch on Lake Scanewa upstream to the North Fork. Read your pamphlet.

The North Fork of the Cispus has no open season for salmon; it is CLOSED year-round, reserved for salmon breeding only.

Upper Cowlitz River- In the week ended Aug. 29, Tacoma Power employees released 32 spring Chinook adults, four spring Chinook jacks, 10 cutthroat trout, and one coho adult at the Packwood Bridge release site.

Cowlitz River in Packwood 8/31 the fish truck was dumping fish this morning as I was headed to work. Have seen a couple fishermen out fishing here and there.

Upper Cowlitz River from the posted PUD sign at Lake Scanewa on Peters Road, upstream to the confluence of the Ohanapecosh River and the Muddy Fork five miles above Packwood, salmon and steelhead fishing seasons are too complicated to print here- read your regulations!

Knuppenberg Lake near White Pass is open year-round for fishing. No min. size, limit 5.

Leech Lake at White Pass is open for fishing year-round.

Mineral Lake - fishing season is open!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dawn from Mineral Lake Resort reported 8/29, ÒAnglers are still catching Rainbows and German Browns early in the morning. With temperatures being cooler, they also are productive in the later part of day at the east end of lake. Boaters are using wedding rings, cyclopses, and worms as bait. The rainbows being caught are ranging from 14 to 18 inches, and Browns are ranging 14 to 16 inches.  

Mineral Lake closes Sept 30, 2022 and reopens the fourth Saturday in April 2023.Ó

Tilton River- One of the most beautiful fishing rivers in our area but complicated by frequent large plants of big salmon at Morton. Open for fishing for various species in certain areas at various seasons but seasons are too complicated to report here. Read your rules pamphlet. All cutthroat must be released and only adipose-clipped rainbow trout may be retained in the Tilton River.

In the week ended Aug. 29, Tacoma Power released 26 fall Chinook adults, five fall Chinook jacks, six cutthroat trout, and one coho adult at Bremer Bridge on the Tilton River!

Forest Roads
Westside

Leaving waste in the forest is NOT OK!

The National Forest
belongs to you!

Leave every place cleaner than when you found it!

 

 

 

Ten Essentials

When going into the mountains at any time, fill up your fuel tank before leaving, bring the Ten Essentials and tell your friends where youÕre going. 

 

Drone Rules in National Forests

Drones are illegal:

á over Wildernesses,

á near wildfires,

á near wildlife,

á over 400 feet high,

á for commercial use or

á out of sight of operator.

Info:   shpr.fyi/fsdrones

 

KNOW BEFORE YOU GO!

ATVs, Side-by-Sides, UTVs are not permitted anywhere on the Gifford Pinchot National Forest other than on roads designated specifically for those uses:

https://www.fs.usda.gov/activity/giffordpinchot/recreation/ohv/

 

Do not depend on GPS directions on Forest Roads. GPS has no knowledge of forest roads closed by snow, windfalls or damage.

 

Timber Sales Log Haul as of June 6, 2022. Expect log truck traffic on these roads:

Skinner– 2505 to 25 to Hwy 12
        2502 to 25 to Hwy 12

Trapper– 7708 to 77 to 76 to 28 to 23 to Hwy 12

Catt– 85.101 to 85 to 52 to Hwy 706
   8511 to 85 to 52 to Hwy 706

THANK YOU, Forest Service for your reports!

 

Reports on individual roads:

Essentially all roads are open as of 8/29!

The national forests
belong to you!

Be proud of them!

Clean them as you would your own yard!

 

#1270 JodyÕs Bridge- You folks using this area, please pick up and take your waste home! Take pride in leaving this beautiful forest place spotless and pretty when you leave!

 

#23 Cispus/ Babyshoe Pass/Randle- Trout Lake Rd. to Trout Lake- 8/10- will be CLOSED from August 22 through September 20 to upgrade the Camp Creek culvert. See details here:

https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/giffordpinchot/alerts-notices/?aid=73871

The project is funded by President TrumpÕs Great American Outdoors Act.

#2329- High Lakes- 7/1 Road open.

#2502 and #2505 are closed for logging operations for the next months.

#26 Quartz Ck- 8/26-Passable, but rough road.

#2801 Closed until major repair can be planned and contracted. Washout removed entire road about a quarter mile from its junction with Forest Road 28 near the Cispus River.

Forest Road #4612 and Trail #65 are closed temporarily due to  the Goat Rocks Fire.

#4724 & 4715 will have 2–4-week closures for culvert repair.

#52 Skate Creek Forest Highway is OPEN!

#5230 is NOT an access to Mt. Rainier regardless of what your GPS says. It is always gated.

Road #59 is closed at MP2 for at least a couple of years.

#8511– 7/8 temporarily CLOSED to the public due to logging.

FH#90 Lewis River- Lewis River Recreation Area- Reserved Parking Tickets Required

#99 Wakepish/Windy Ridge- 7/8- OPEN as far as the Mt. St. Helens Visitor Amphitheater.

 

Westside Campgrounds

Cowlitz Valley
Ranger District Campgrounds

 

 

 

All campgrounds are currently open.

Reservations may no longer be needed as is customary after Labor Day. Recreation.gov shows no campground reservations being taken after Sunday, Sept. 11.

NO CAMPFIRES ALLOWED anywhere in the forest unless in established campground on the Gifford Pinchot list. No campfires in Wilderness areas!

 

The 14-day stay limit regulation applies to all campgrounds.

Dispersed camping is allowed. Campers must pack-it-out, take your waste home. Leave no trace of your stay.

Make your reservations for campsites at recreation.gov.

Trails

The Cowlitz Valley Ranger District was given NO=ZERO funds for trail maintenance this year! No Forest Service Trail Crew this year!

BUT we are SO THANKFUL TO THE VOLUNTEERS, such groups as Back Country Horsemen, who do VERY MUCH trail maintenance!!

Be prepared in your backpack with the 10 essentials and leave word of your trek with family or friends.

To volunteer to clean trails, call 360-497-1100

 

Pacific Crest Trail

See PCT below under Eastside Trails.

 

Current info on very many trails at Washington Trails Association:
https://www.wta.org/go-outside/trip-reports

Forest Products
Permit Activity

Timber Harvest Sales

Timber Sales on the Cowlitz Valley Ranger District total typically 52 million board feet cut per year. ThatÕs enough lumber to build 3,000 homes and produces 90,000 hours of worker wages. Most, 80%, of timber industry wages are produced in lumber, plywood, chip and paper mills.

Timber Sales:

Soldier Thin Reoffer Timber Sale and Watch Thin Timber Sale bids were due on August 30. As of Sept. 5, there were no reports of the results of these sales.

 

Future Timber Resource Stewardship and Timber Sales Information may be found at:

Info:  shpr.fyi/salesfuture

Past Resource Stewardship and Timber Sales can be checked by timber job seekers to apply for work with the successful bidders:

Info: shpr.fyi/salespast

Permits:

Huckleberries

8/31 Shopper Reporter Jackie reported, that huckleberry buyers are full in the lot below DnB Espresso stand in other areas of Randle. ÒThis is the most tents and stands I have seen in a long time.Ó

 

Avid hiker, Mary Prophit of Glenoma, shared 8/16, "I counted 64 cars on a 3-mile span of a forest road on a Wednesday!" Mary surmised that most of the cars were berry pickers with mostly Oregon and Washington plates. LOTS of commercial picker camping. I mean more than IÕve ever seen on that road."

 

A permit is required to remove any berries from the National Forest.

A free-use permit for personal consumption is available to remove up to one gallon of berries per day and a total of three gallons per year. Berries obtained under a free-use permit may not be sold. There is no cost for free-use permits. To apply for a free-use berry permit, visit:  https://gp.fs2c.usda.gov/gp/. This is the only way to obtain this free-use permit. Remember to print your permit or  to your phone. 

Mushroom/Fern/Berry

Personal permits are FREE. Go online to apply using a home computer, library, or phone. A printed copy will need to be on your person when out in Forest foraging. We have limited staffing so we cannot issue these at this time.

Commercial permits still need to be purchased at the Annex building at the Cowlitz Valley Ranger District.  The Annex Building is now open for Forest Product Permits. Hours: Monday-Thursday 7:30am - 4pm & Friday 7:30am – 2pm.

Personal Firewood

Firewood cutting is open on both westside and eastside National Forests.

Firewood Permits for 2022 are orange!

National Forest Firewood Permits are required but are now FREE!

A personal use firewood permit allows removal of up to six cords per household, per year across the forest. Each Ranger District has specific areas identified where firewood may be collected. Check with the Ranger District office nearest your destination for a list of areas currently open for firewood cutting and to determine how wood is marked or designated as allowable firewood.

Those who receive free use firewood permits may use firewood for burning, cutting, manufacturing, handling, or other processing, but not for resale. Firewood pieces must be less than 24 inches long.

Find and print the application for Firewood Permit online, mail it with a copy of your ID to Cowlitz Valley Ranger Station, P.O. Box 670, 10024 Hwy. 12, Randle WA 98377. They will mail the permit back to you.

Additional firewood is marked monthly for cutting. Firewood marked by the Forest Service with yellow is also legal for cutting.

If you see down wood youÕd like for firewood, ask the ranger station below, describing it in detail with a carefully accurate mile point from a junction or prominent landmark along the road. A ranger will come and check it as soon as possible which may take a week or more, and if appropriate, mark it.

 

The Forest Service Northwest Forest Pass or NWFP is required to park at many US Forest Service sites such as trailheads and is sold at the ranger station and at Morton Quicky Mart/Shell Station, Randle FischerÕs Market, Randle One Stop 76 Station, and Packwood BlantonÕs Market. The NWFP is good for a full year and costs $30.

A one-day NWFP can be purchased online for $5.

State Discover Pass

Required to park in Washington State-owned Parking Lots.

The Washington State Discover Pass is entirely a Washington State program. The Discover Pass does not apply to anything on National Forests. U.S. Forest Service employees canÕt answer most questions about it. A single, state recreation Discover land pass now can be used on either of two motor vehicles.

Discover Pass Info: (866) 320-9933, Yakima 509-575-2740, or Ellensburg 509-925-8510.

á     The annual pass - $30. Good for one year from the date of purchase.

á     Day-use pass - $10. Good for the date marked on the pass.

Available from the WILD system:
¥ at a license dealer,
¥ online: shpr.fyi/2l1Ugdp
¥ phone 1-866-320-9933

 

Randle Cowlitz Valley Ranger Station Info

Full Window Service OPEN Mon.– Fri. 8 a.m, to 4 p.m except holidays.

No Passes or Permits issued/sold after 3:45pm.

Limited Staffing may cause early closing on some days. Please call in advance.

Annex: Monday - Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Fridays 7:30 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Phone Hours Mon.– Fri. 7:45 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.

Phone: 360-497-1100

Address: P.O. Box 670, 10024 Hwy. 12, Randle WA 98377.

Report fires 9-1-1.

Web: www.fs.fed.us/gpnf.

Mt. Rainier
National Park

 

 

 

 

 

The Park is crowded on summer weekends!

Expect long lines and crowded parking. To avoid congestion, plan to arrive early or late in the day at trailheads and busy areas such as Paradise and Sunrise. Visit on weekdays if possible.

Need ideas? Check out the "Mount Rainier: Off the Beaten Path" story map: https://www.nps.gov/mora/planyourvisit/placestogo.htm

Plan Ahead: Save time at the entrance and pay your entry fee before you come. https://www.recreation.gov/sitepass/74289

Visitors should not
enter ice caves or
melt water channels

 

Their ÒceilingsÓ are prone to spontaneous collapse due to melting, which is accelerated this time of year. Collapse, or ice and rock fall could be fatal or cause serious injuries to those who venture inside or near the entrance.

Those entering these channels/caves are in danger of hypothermia due to the combination of cold air temperatures inside and colder melt water flowing from the snowfield. Melt water volumes inside will increase throughout the day (just as stream crossing hazards are greater in the afternoon).

Mount Rainier National Park was known for a few well-developed ice caves, but with the warming climate, those have disappeared, replaced only by transitory and unstable channels/caves. The Park closed the historic ice caves around 1980 due to unsafe conditions including ice chunks and flakes, some the size of a small car, breaking loose and falling from the cave ceiling.

 

Paradise at 5,500 ft. elevation on Monday, Sept. 5, reported high of 51¡, sunny skies, with no snow on the ground outside of the parking lots and parking lot looks full on webcam.

Up on the mountain at Camp Muir at 10,100 ft. elevation, high temp. was 49¡.

Up at the summit, daily temperatures are around 31¡ with SW winds 25-50 mph, with freezing level 15,000 ft.

 

 

 

 

Paradise Inn dining is OPEN!!

Dining reservations are optional, not needed normally except sometimes during highest visitor times on big weekends.

Paradise Inn Lodging
is also OPEN.

Reservations are needed for lodging: shpr.fyi/rainierbooking or https://mtrainierguestservices.com/book-now-mt-rainier/ or 360-569-2415.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 The National Park Inn at Longmire is open for overnight guests.

National Park Inn Dining Room offers breakfast grab & go, lunch & dinner.

Longmire General Store: Daily 9:00 am - 5:00 pm

Grove of the Patriarchs Trail remains CLOSED because of flood damage to the bridge.

Stevens Canyon Road center ÒcliffÓ part between Stevens Creek Bridge MP 4.8 and Box Canyon MP 8.7 is CLOSED for repair weekdays Mon. 6am to Thur. 8pm.

These projects are being funded by President TrumpÕs Great American Outdoors Act passed in 2020 to improve facilities in National Parks and National Forests and expand recreation opportunities in all national public lands.

Sunrise Road, the Day Lodge and Visitor Center are OPEN 11:00 am - 5:00 pm daily with grab and go food. Rangers are staffing an information desk outside the visitor center.

Both the Sunrise Visitor Center and Ohanapecosh Visitor Center will close on September 18. 

Hiking on Snow Safety: https://go.nps.gov/awj4x7

 

For current conditions see their Twitter site or visit MountRainierNPS. Or visit www.nps.gov/mora for updated information about the park.

For all activities, see regulations or shpr.fyi/2JfXPnm.

 

Get Your Climbing or Wildness Camping Permit!

Paradise Climbing and Wilderness Information Center (PWIC) is open every day through the end of the climbing season in September. Paying the Climbing Fee and obtaining a Climbing Permit is required for all climbers and skiers who journey above 10,000 feet or onto a glacier - even folks doing a single-push style ascent.

A permit is required year-round for all overnight stays in the backcountry. Permits must be obtained in person at a wilderness information center or visitor center.

For current information visit the park website at https://go.usa.gov/xsaRe

For any further questions, please call 360-569-6650.

Look at their Twitter: twitter.com/MountRainierNPS

 

Trails

All highest trails may have deep snow.

Campgrounds

 

 

 

 

Recreation.gov is booking reservations through Sept. 8. After Sept 8, camping is first-come, first-served only. Campgrounds will close after Oct. 10.

á Ohanapecosh

á  White River

á Cougar Rock- The Dump Station and Water Fill Station at Cougar Rock will be closed for the 2022 camping season

 

Permits are not required for day hiking.

To plan a backcountry trip or to get a backcountry permit online, please visit:

Info:  shpr.fyi/mrnpcamp

Park Area Webcams

View current conditions around the park via many webcams:

http://www.skimountaineer.com/MtnWebCams/Rainier-MtWebCams.html?size=med

Park Information

Road and facilities opening and closing dates and hours are available: shpr.fyi/RainierDates  or

https://www.nps.gov/mora/planyourvisit/basicinfo.htm

Everything you could ever want to know about Mt. Rainier National Park is available at     . https://www.nps.gov/mora or their Twitter site or by calling 360-569-2211.

Online Park Info:

facebook.com/MountRainierNPS

twitter.com/MountRainierNPS

Park Headquarters:

39000 State Route 706 E

Ashford, WA 98304

Phone: (360) 569-2211

360-569-2177 TDD

Park Information: 360-569-6575

FAX 360-569-6519

Email: General Park Information

Naches Area

Forest Roads Eastside

Do not depend on GPS directions on Forest Roads. GPS has no knowledge of forest roads closed by snow, windfalls or damage, and visitors have been stranded in dangerous situations.

 

All roads are snowfree.

When going into the mountains at any time, take the Ten Essentials and tell someone where youÕre going. 

FR #1000 Conrad Meadows- 6/29- Residents reported that the last seven miles of roadway before Conrad Meadows is extremely rough.  The meadows are melted but the trails still have snow.

Forest Road #1901 has logging near the road. Watch for log trucks in this area.

Hunting

See regulations at https://wdfw.wa.gov .

Fishing Seasons

Most fishing is OPEN!

Take a kid fishing!

Rules Pamphlet:  www.eregulations.com/washington/fishing

Unless specified otherwise in the rules pamphlet:

á  Many Lakes, ponds, and reservoirs are open to fishing for game fish (except Dolly Varden/bull trout and grass carp) year-round.

á  Some generally Òlow-landÓ or ÒtraditionalÓ lakes are open from 4th Saturday in April, Apr. 23 this year, through October 31, so OPEN now.

á  Most larger rivers season is open year-round.

¥ Many smaller rivers, streams and beaver ponds are open from the Saturday before Memorial Day through October 31, so OPEN now. Beaver ponds located within or connected to streams listed as open to trout and other game fish follow the same rules as the stream.

But many individual waters are different from the above, soÉ

READ YOUR
PAMPHLET!

Open this link for many thousands of Catchable Trout Plants made in Yakima County Lakes in recent months:

shpr.fyi/wdfwplants19

Little Naches- Recreation closures begin in Little Naches area to help fish.

   Several temporary recreational access closures have started due to fish restoration work on the Little Naches River: traffic delays along Forest Service roads 1900 and 1904: the sno-park along 1904 will be closed. Access to the fishing pond off the road will be temporarily closed, and wood harvest units will be closed for logging and felling.

The fish-enhancement work to replace wood in the river and regrade the stream bed is expected to extend through Sept. 1.

Excerpted from the Yakima Herald-Republic June 16

Clear Lake, west of Rimrock Lake, is and open for fishing year-round, and has several boat launches. Clear Lake is planted with trout including the large triploids many times every year.

Tims Pond is open for fishing. Many people including children fish there. Parking there now requires the state Discover Pass.

Rimrock Lake- Shopper Reporter Hazelanna reported on 8/24, ÒThere were about 30 boats moored on different docks along Rimrock Lake with no boats visible on the water.Ó

On Sunday, Aug. 28, Rimrock was at 80% full at 2,909 ft. elev., five feet down from the week before, now 17 feet below full elevation of 2926 ft., with inflow 268 cfs and releases 1,324 cfs.

Boat launch access for Rimrock Lake, east of White Pass, is available at Rimrock Lake Resort, Silver Beach Resort, The Cove, Horseshoe Cove, and various private and Forest Service public sites around the lake.

ÒFlip-flopÓ raising Tieton River flows and enabling rafting begins around
Labor Day

The Bureau of Reclamation (BuRec) will begin its annual Òflip-flopÓ operation in late August to aid in fall orchard irrigation, to aid successful spawning and incubation of chinook salmon eggs and to improve winter reservoir storage in the Yakima basin.

Increased flows in the Tieton River will enable the popular white-water rafting.

Flows out of Keechelus and Cle Elum reservoirs in the upper Yakima River basin will gradually decrease, while flows from Kachess and Rimrock reservoirs will increase. This operation will affect flows in the Tieton and Naches rivers as well as the upper Yakima, Cle Elum, and Kachess rivers in the upper Yakima basin. In other words, flows from these facilities will transition, or Òflip-flop.Ó

Flows out of Rimrock will increase to the 1,000-1,800 cubic feet per second range by Labor Day weekend and to 1,700-2,400 cfs by mid-September, depending on irrigation demands and weather conditions, BuRec said.

Partly excerpted from the Yakima Herald-Republic

Info:  shpr.fyi/tietonflipflop

 

Campgrounds Eastside

 

 

 

 

 

 

All Campgrounds and Group Sites are OPEN except:

á Peninsula Day Use/Boat Launch-  7/8- closed for repair of the boat launch road.  

American River Guard Station and American Ridge Lodge are open. Make reservations at American River Guard Station through Recreation.gov

Campgrounds will begin to close after Sept. 12. Call the Ranger station with questions on individual campgrounds.

Available:

á Indian Creek

á Bumping Lake

á Lodge Pole

á Many others

 

Campers in dispersed (no-fee) campsites must pack their garbage home!

Overnight camping is also available at the private Rimrock Lake Resort and at Silver Beach Resort on the east side of White Pass.

 

The forest belongs to YOU!

Be proud of it!

Keep it clean and beautiful!

Leave every site cleaner than when you arrived!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Trails & Trailheads Eastside

All highest trails may have snow.

Boulder Cave Day Use Site, Trail & Cave is OPEN 10:00 am – 4:30pm Monday, Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.

Boulder Cave will be closed to ALL ACTIVITY, walk-ins included, after Sept. 19 and will reopen in the spring.

Green Trail Maps and informational books are available in the lobby at Naches Ranger Station.

More current info on thousands of trails at:        

https://www.wta.org/go-outside/trip-reports

 

#2000 Pacific Crest Trail (8/25) Pacific Crest Trail hikers that planned to exit the trail at HartÕs Pass near Winthrop, WA, should plan for alternate routes. The road is closed due to mudslides and continued unstable road conditions. Specific information on this closure, as well as current fire conditions, can be found at: https://www.facebook.com/OkaWenNF . The Pacific Crest Trail Association has provided suggested alternatives at: https://www.pcta.org/.../harts-pass-road-closed-mudslide/.

 

Many prospective thru-hikers have started their PCT journey on the Mexican border during the third or fourth week of April and aim for a September completion date.

How long does it take to hike? Thru-hikers typically take 5 to 7 months, but many people hike sections at a time. Many canÕt take continuous hiking for months so take rest breaks periodically off the trail.

 

The Kracker Barrel at White Pass has had multiple PCT hikers each day as many are pushing to get to the northern terminus during the wind-down of summer weather.

 

 

We have found online one Pacific Crest Trail hiker who started at the southern trailhead at Campo, CA on March 18, 2022. So far, he is uploading videos regularly. You can follow his journey on YouTube at ÒMagnet NorthboundÓ.

Hiker Magnet Northbound Completes the
Pacific Crest Trail!

Congratulations!

8/24 ÒYesterday, we completed the 2,653 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail from the Mexican to the Canadian border. Today, I am a thru-hiker. I donÕt yet fully know what that means, but I can tell you I am not the same person I was 5 months ago. These people, this community, this experience has been the most impactful thing I have ever done in my life. It was hard, so hard, to keep going sometimes, but I knew I would not stop until I got to Canada. Thank you to all the Angels that supported us! Thank you to the entire trail community for this experience!

ÒThank you to all of you who showered me with supportive comments along the way. Many of your comments stuck in my mind and gave me strength while I struggled. IÕm so appreciative. Cheers my friends!

ÒNow, back home to Oregon.Ó

Permits and Passes

For passes that require verification such as Senior, Access, and Military passes, you must come to the ranger station service window during office hours with the appropriate verification documents for eligibility.  Eligibility requirements can be found here (Region 6 - Recreation Passes & Permits (usda.gov) under each pass.  ALL passes can be purchased online at the USGS Store at USGS.GOV.  

Firewood

Naches RD is now
processing Firewood
Permits ONLINE.

Please utilize the Naches RD website (Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest - News & Events (usda.gov)) and fill out the firewood request form to have your permit initiated.

You must come to the ranger station to pick up your permit.

Naches District Firewood Permits are now active. Firewood cutting is now permitted on the Naches District.

The Forest Service Northwest Forest Pass or NWFP is required to park at many US Forest Service sites such as trailheads and is sold at the ranger station and at several area businesses. The NWFP is sold as an annual pass for $30, or a one-day pass for $5.

A one-day NWFP can be purchased online for $5.

State Discover Pass

Required to park in Washington State-owned Parking Lots.

The Washington State Discover Pass is entirely a Washington State program. The Discover Pass does not apply to anything on National Forests. U.S. Forest Service employees canÕt answer most questions about it. A single, state recreation Discover land pass now can be used on either of two motor vehicles.

Questions about the Discover Pass may be answered by calling the Washington State Dept. of Fish and Wildlife in Olympia (866) 320-9933, Yakima 509-575-2740, or Ellensburg 509-925-8510.

á     The annual pass - $30. Good for one year from the date of purchase.

á     Day-use pass - $10. Good for the date marked on the pass.

Available from the WILD system:
¥ at a license dealer,
¥ online: shpr.fyi/2l1Ugdp
¥ phone 1-866-320-9933

Naches Ranger Station

Front Office is now open for business- no window! In person!

Office Hours:  Mon-Wed & Fri, 8am-4:30pm (Closed for lunch noon-12:30) for purchasing Federal Recreation passes, permits and FS maps.

Recreation passes can also be purchased online at recreation.gov

Naches Ranger Station

10237 Highway 12

Naches, WA 98937

(509) 653-1401

For other area information visit the Naches Valley Chamber: uppervalleybb.com or call (509) 966-1529.

_________________________

Elsewhere in
Washington

View many
 northwest webcams.

See the Space Needle Rotating Cam, 360¡ Roundshot Cam atop the Space Needle in Seattle!

 

Information below is from Washington Dept. of Fish & Wildlife, 600 Capitol Way N., Olympia WA 98501-1091, phone 360-902-2256.

Read your regulations!

Report violations and dangerous wildlife at 877 933-9847. Many reports below are by or excerpted from WDFW reports.

Fishing

Lower Columbia
salmon fishing closed

With Chinook salmon catches trending well above expectation, fishery managers from Washington and Oregon announced that the lower Columbia River from Bonneville Dam to Buoy 10 (including the Camas Slough) will close to salmon fishing beginning Friday, Sept. 2.

Fishery managers with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife agreed Thursday to close salmon fishing downstream of Bonneville Dam after preliminary data showed impacts to Lower Columbia River ÒtuleÓ Chinook – which are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) – were much higher than anticipated.

 

Lower Columbia River Chinook salmon have three life history types including a spring run, a fall timed component referred to as tule Chinook, and a late-fall timed component referred to as bright Chinook. From a harvest perspective, tule Chinook are the most problematic. There are large numbers of hatchery tules that are produced to mitigate for the effects of hydropower development. These hatchery fish contribute heavily to fisheries from Alaska to the northern Oregon coast, as well as the lower Columbia River. The wild tule populations are at greatest risk because of the collective effects of hydropower development, habitat degradation, hatcheries, and harvest. Since 1999, when Lower Columbia River Chinook salmon were listed under the Endangered Species Act, the harvest impacts to tule Chinook have been reduced from 80 percent to 37 percent.

 

Fishing Reports

8/16/22

Mainstem Columbia River

Salmon/Steelhead:

Lower Columbia River Rocky Point/Tongue Point line upstream to Bonneville Dam – 352 salmonid boats and 92 Washington bank rods were tallied during SaturdayÕs (8/13) flight count.

Sec 1 (Bonneville) – 26 bank anglers kept one Chinook and released two steelhead. 4 boats/5 rods had no catch.

Sec 2 (Camas/Washougal) – 5 boats/7 rods had no catch.

Sec 3 (I-5 area) – No report.

Sec 4 (Vancouver) – 42 bank anglers kept three Chinook. 22 boats/39 rods kept five Chinook and released one Chinook jack.

Sec 5 (Woodland) – 47 bank anglers kept one Chinook. 70 boats/160 rods kept 22 Chinook, one Chinook jack and released three Chinook, two Chinook jacks and two steelhead.

Sec 6 (Kalama) – 146 bank anglers kept 15 Chinook, one Chinook jack and released one Chinook and one steelhead. 20 boats/51 rods kept five Chinook.

Sec 7 (Cowlitz) – 30 boats/71 rods kept six Chinook and released two Chinook.

Sec 8 (Longview) – 48 bank anglers released one steelhead. 38 boats/79 rods kept two Chinook. Sec 9 (Cathlamet) – 13 bank anglers released one steelhead. 9 boats/15 rods had no catch.

Sec 10 (Cathlamet) – Three bank anglers had no catch.

Sturgeon:

Sec 4 (Vancouver) – 1 boat/3 rods released two sublegal sturgeon.

Sec 5 (Woodland) – One bank angler had no catch. 1 boat/2 rods released one sublegal and four oversize sturgeon.

Sec 6 (Kalama) – 1 boat/2 rods had no catch.

Sec 7 (Cowlitz) – 1 boat/7 rods released four legal and 36 sublegal sturgeon.

Sec 8 (Longview) – 1 boat/2 rods released eight sublegal sturgeon.

Columbia River Tributaries

Salmon/Steelhead:

Cowlitz River I-5 Br downstream – 23 bank rods kept one Chinook jack, one steelhead, one cutthroat and released one Chinook jack. 1 boat/2 rods released two cutthroat.

Cowlitz River Above the I-5 Br – 18 bank rods had no catch. 9 boats/31 rods kept 39 steelhead.

Kalama River – Seven bank rods kept two steelhead and released two steelhead. 1 boat/2 rods had no catch.

Lewis River – 15 bank rods kept five steelhead. 3 boats/6 rods kept one steelhead.