Moose prefer freezing temperatures to balmy breezes. And their search for a cool spot often brings them into our backyards, whether its lying in a recently watered lawn, under the shade of a tree or even a backyard pool.
The John Wayne Pioneer Trail is no more. On Thursday the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission voted unanimously to rename the cross-state trail. The new name is the Palouse to Cascades State Park Trail.
With this year’s deep snowpack and swollen rivers, more pike will likely come to Washington, exacerbating an already serious problem – a growing population of northern pike in Lake Roosevelt.
Bonner County residents rejected a 13,000 acre proposed wilderness area, Tuesday. And although the vote may have sent a message to lawmakers, while also serving as a rallying cry for state rights champions, it won’t actually change how the forest is managed.
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is asking the public for feedback on a draft assessment of a policy guiding the management of salmon in the lower Columbia River.
On Tuesday, voters in Bonner County will vote on whether or not they support a wilderness designation for the roughly 13,000 acres that make up the Idaho portion of the
Owen Peterson may have just learned to walk, but that hasn’t stopped the three year old from reeling in a massive rainbow trout. In fact, as of Tuesday Peterson had caught the largest fish in the annual
On a rainy, socked-in spring day, Tim Cherry, 17, tried his luck in the placid waters of Waitts Lake. By 6:30 a.m., he’d already caught three rainbow trout and was working on adding to his haul.
Saturday’s 2018 opening day for lowland trout fishing was a success, despite rainy and foggy weather statewide, according to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
The responses to a college student’s drowning death at Palouse Falls last week highlight a fundamental tension in outdoor recreation: regulation versus freedom.