THE EVANS CREEK
PRESERVE
"This is a great place to take your family, yourself, or a friend for a short hike in beautiful open space only 3 miles east of downtown Redmond." B. Yoder
Owned and developed by
the City of Sammamish, the Evans Creek Preserve is located about 3 miles east of
downtown Redmond on Redmond-Fall City Road. The 180-acre property was once the
farmstead of Newton and Kathryn Galley who passed away in the mid-1990s and
willed their property to the University of Washington, Whitman College,
Children’s Hospital, the Children’s Home Society, the Masonic Home and Redmond
United Methodist Church. These 6 organizations collectively agreed to sell the
property to the City of Sammamish in November 2000. The park/preserve was in
the planning stage until 2011 when major development of the park and its trail
system was undertaken. Old farm buildings were torn down and a new iron-works
footbridge over Evans Creek was constructed. Washington Trails Association (wta.org) designated Evans Creek Preserve
as one of its major lowland projects for 2011. Volunteer trail-building days
were organized by WTA and 250 volunteers spent more than 7000 hours clearing
brush, removing stumps, laying gravel trails and building boardwalks and bridges
to create nearly 2 miles of trail loops.
"This is a great place to take your family, yourself, or a friend for a short hike in beautiful open space only 3 miles east of downtown Redmond." B. Yoder
By Susan Wilkins
Redmond, WA.
The Evans Creek
Preserve, a new park and nature preserve east of Redmond was opened to the
public in late 2011 after nearly a decade of planning and a year of intensive
trail construction. The preserve is mostly gentle rolling hills with open
meadows and forested uplands. It is located in the bottomland of the Evans
Creek Basin, a few miles east of Redmond, in the deep southeast trending valley
that connects Redmond and Fall City. Evans Creek runs through the north edge of
the preserve in an undersized, meandering channel that routinely floods creating
swamps and wetland ponds that cover much of the site during the winter.
We visited in early July and the wetlands were mostly grassy and dry. Evans Creek was running so slowly that we weren’t sure where it was and had to check the map. In the fall, Evans Creek will have native runs of chinook as well as runs of coho and sockeye salmon that will pass through the preserve and spawn upstream.
We visited in early July and the wetlands were mostly grassy and dry. Evans Creek was running so slowly that we weren’t sure where it was and had to check the map. In the fall, Evans Creek will have native runs of chinook as well as runs of coho and sockeye salmon that will pass through the preserve and spawn upstream.
To get there: The Evans
Creek Preserve is located on the south side of Redmond-Fall City Road (SR202)
about a mile east of the SR202/Sahalee Way intersection. Heading east on SR202,
look for the sign on the right side of the road that says NE 34th Street – Private Road,
turn right and go a short distance down the road. There is a 10-car parking lot
with signs and maps.
Thank you for reporting on this, Susan! Your geology eduation and perspective adds a unique historial dimmension to your writing! I can't wait to visit this area!
ReplyDeleteOur family went our there in May for a little afternoon walk. It was beautiful.
ReplyDelete