RIVER OF THE MONTH
30 YEARS
Skagit River
The Skagit is one of the great river systems in America, pouring from the glacial peaks of the North Cascades, through old-growth forests, remote canyons and rural towns and farms before flowing into the Puget Sound. In 1978, the Skagit and its three main tributaries the Sauk, Suiattle and Cascade Rivers, were designated as Wild and Scenic to protect their combined free-flowing length, water quality and wild beauty.
Why It Matters
JOSH HUMBERT
JAY TAYLOR
The Skagit is the largest river flowing into the Puget Sound and historically produced a whopping 30 percent of the sound’s anadromous fish. The Sauk is the most natural river system in the Cascade Range, and the Suiattle and Cascade Rivers are equally remote and nearly as pristine. Together the system is vital for fish and wildlife and a tremendous recreation asset for the Pacific Northwest.
Fish
PETER JAMES
The Skagit, Sauk and Suiattle host a diverse anadramous fishery, with distinct runs of Chinook, pink, sockeye, coho and chum salmon, a crucial food source for bald eagles. Winter steelhead and coastal cutthroat trout populations are strong, as are dolly varden and resident trout.
Wildlife
As the spawning salmon return, hundreds of hungry bald eagles gather to feast in what is the largest wintering eagle population in the Lower 48. The system’s old-growth forests and snowy mountains harbor spotted owls, mountain goats, black bears, elk and many other birds and wildlife.