Explore Polk County 2021

Page 44

Quiet seclusion

BASKETT SLOUGH OFFERS PEACEFUL TIME AWAY It is a bird lover’s paradise, with over 230 species of birds making a home there, including songbirds, raptors, shorebirds and waterfowl. 44  Explore Polk County 2021

W

hen you first arrive at Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge and step out of your car, the first thing you notice is how quiet it is. A quiet and sense of calm stretching along the three-mile trail system which winds through the 2,492 acres of the refuge. Possibly this is because the refuge does not allow dogs, or activities like running, biking, hunting or fishing. Or it could be the fact that this place, established originally in 1965 to provide winter habitat for dusky Canada geese, stretches along Highway 22 with expansive, breathtaking views of the Willamette Valley. On the crest of one of the rolling hills, you can turn and look down at it all. The view is particularly striking

when the leaves are turning and collecting in heaps on the ground, and the horizon is covered in vivid purples and ambers and browns. But Baskett Slough offers much more than scenery and a fun afternoon hike. It is a bird lover’s paradise, with over 230 species of birds making a home there, including songbirds, raptors, shorebirds and waterfowl. Animal lovers can also seek out 30 species of mammals, eight species of amphibians and 10 species of reptiles. Included are over 10 different species of federally listed threatened and endangered species of plants and wildlife — one of which being the Fender’s Blue Butterfly, a species thought to be extinct until the 1980s. See PAGE 46

A Special Publication of the Polk County Itemizer-Observer


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