Hands-On Experiences Teach Importance of Preserving Watershed

DUNGENESS BAY (June 13, 2008) – Shelby Schleve scrunched up her nose at the butter clams lying open on the picnic table, their slimy innards exposed. But it didn’t take long for the Sequim Middle School eighth-grader to start poking at the clam’s digestive system for a closer look.

“We’re learning there’s some pretty nasty stuff in the watershed,” she said, after hearing about fecal coliform bacteria from animal and human waste, a tell-tale sign of water pollution.

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Upper Skagit Tribe returns to Whidbey Island for clam dig

Both the Skagit Valley Herald and the Whidbey News-Times reported on the Upper Skagit Tribe’s return to a traditional clam-digging site at NAS Whidbey Island. Security protocols since Sept. 11, 2001 have prevented the tribe from holding its annual community clam dig on the naval base.

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