Newsroom
2025 Calendars Now Available!
Enjoy delightful images of island wildlife and natural landscapes in the Land Trust’s 2025 Calendar. It’s available now at local retail outlets.
Defending Alders
Take a moment and imagine a Puget Sound lowland forest. Likely, you see layers of gray-green firs, fading into a bank of fog. But were alder trees part of your picture?
2022 Calendars Now Available!
Enjoy delightful images of island wildlife and natural landscapes in the Land Trust’s 2021 Calendar. It’s available now at island retail outlets.
How a Community Helped Save Trillium Community Forest
A fortuitous chain of events led to the stunning achievement that is Trillium Community Forest. Its creation more than a decade ago involved a wide spectrum of people and organizations who were instrumental in bringing the project to life.
May 27 Webinar: Addressing Climate Change Through Conservation
Join a Zoom webinar hosted by the Land Trust on May 27 at 6:30 p.m. and find out how we’re mitigating the impacts of climate change through land protection, stewardship and habitat restoration.
2021 Calendars Now Available!
Enjoy delightful images of island wildlife and natural landscapes in the Land Trust’s 2021 Calendar. It’s available now at island retail outlets.
Bird Watching Just Got Better at Dugualla Bay Preserve
The Land Trust’s Dugualla Bay Preserve on northeast Whidbey Island has grown to 201 acres with purchase of 77 acres of tidelands, beach and uplands.
For Nature’s Sake! A Forested Wetland is Saved
A new nature preserve on Central Whidbey Island is a haven for wildlife with 31 acres of forest and wetlands.
Restoration Underway at Silliman Preserve
The Land Trust plans for more than 1,300 native plants to go into the ground at the Silliman Preserve. It’s all part of the organization’s goal to enhance fish and wildlife habitat and help protect a functioning wetland system in the Maxwelton watershed.
For the Love of Wildlife, Greenbank Couple Protects Wooded Property
If trees could talk, one can only imagine what those on Don and Jan Allens’ land would say. For more than a half century, the Allens have gently tended their wooded Whidbey Island property, helping a lush forest remain standing.