The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is seeking volunteers to participate in a cooperative arrangement that has given hunters access to approximately 250,000 acres of private timberlands near Mount St. Helens in the last three years.
For the fourth year, the Weyerhaeuser Company is prepared to give hunters holding special elk permits additional motorized access to miles of private logging roads on the St. Helens Tree Farm, provided that enough volunteers can be found to assure a safe and orderly hunt.
Key tasks for volunteers include orienting hunters, staffing access points, and maintaining safety buffers between hunters and active Weyerhaeuser operations, said Sandra Jonker, regional wildlife manager for WDFW.
“The success of this program depends on our ability to recruit a dedicated team of volunteers to help us provide this additional access,” Jonker said. “As in past years, the amount of timberland that can be opened to hunting will be directly proportionate to the number of volunteers that sign up.”
To participate in the St. Helens Land Access Program, volunteers can sign up at this website, or at WDFW Region 5 Office, 2108 S.E. Grand Boulevard, Vancouver, Wash., (360-696-6211); or at at Bob’s Sporting Goods, 1111 Hudson Street, Longview.
Participants will be required to attend one of three orientation sessions, scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. at the following times and locations:
Aug. 25 – Natural Resources Building in Olympia, Room 172, 1111 Washington St. S.E.
Sept. 23 – WDFW Regional Office in Vancouver, 2108 Grand Blvd.
Oct. 27 – Cowlitz Public Utility District Office, 961 12th Ave., Longview
.
The partnership between WDFW, Weyerhaeuser and the volunteers is designed to expand hunter access to areas of the St. Helens Tree Farm that lie within Game Management Units 520 (Winston), 524 (Margaret), 550 (Coweeman) and 556 (Toutle). Jonker said the access program – combined with the issuance of additional special hunting permits – has helped to increase harvest levels over the past three years throughout the Mount St. Helens elk herd. That is a key goal under the department’s management plan for the herd, the largest of ten elk herds in the state.
“The department’s management plan calls for reducing the herd size over five years to bring the number of animals into balance with available habitat,” Jonker said. “We want to thank Weyerhaeuser and all the volunteers participating in the St. Helens Land Access Program for their help in this joint effort.”
The Mount St. Helens Elk Herd plan, adopted in 2006, is available on WDFW’s website at this location.