A chef, a creek, and a salmon revival
Environmental challenges can seem overwhelming. But singular efforts can have a big impact 鈥 as this chef discovered when she revived her tiny portion of a creek.
Environmental challenges can seem overwhelming. But singular efforts can have a big impact 鈥 as this chef discovered when she revived her tiny portion of a creek.
In 22 years of looking for them, Holly Smith had seen only one salmon attempting the upstream journey to spawn in Juanita Creek.
鈥淎ctually, my son saw one and I saw one,鈥 she says. 鈥淭wo fish in 22 years. I am not lying.鈥
Not seeing salmon spawning here was hardly a shock. Like the rest of this region, the city of Kirkland, a bedroom community across Lake Washington from Seattle, has seen more than its share of housing developments, condominium towers, office parks, and strip malls, generally to the incremental degradation of streams like Juanita Creek.
Environmentalists, the fishing industry, and Pacific Northwest tribes have warned of dwindling salmon fisheries for years. But Ms. Smith was about to discover that the quiet insistence of nature would conspire with values her parents had instilled in her and improve life for at least a few endangered fish.聽
Swimming upstream
Ms. Smith is a nationally acclaimed chef, and her legendary restaurant, appropriately named Cafe Juanita, sits on the creek鈥檚 bank. After a windstorm toppled a giant maple that had stood between the creek and the restaurant, she watched the water erode more and more land.
She knew what she needed to do: shore up the bank. But environmental regulations 鈥 intended to protect salmon 鈥 led to bureaucratic gridlock. Meanwhile, the ravenous Juanita Creek kept eating its way closer to the restaurant.
鈥淭he erosion was pretty dramatic,鈥 she says. That鈥檚 when she turned to the King Conservation District, a public, nonregulatory agency that partners with private landowners on conservation projects.聽
Beginning in early 2021, Ms. Smith worked with Ashley Allan, King Conservation District鈥檚 riparian stewardship coordinator, to put together a plan. That included permits, a planting schedule 鈥 and a budget. It quickly added up to $75,000.聽
Spawning season meant the creek work could only occur between July 15 and Sept. 15. And permitting took so long they missed the 2021 window entirely.聽
By now the erosion had become so menacing that the state gave permission to plant some native dogwood and willow in the streambed. Ms. Smith enlisted her son, and 鈥渨e put on waders and we went in and tamped them in.鈥
A spot for renewal
The bigger plan called for multiple stages. First came removal of ivy, blackberry, and invasive knotweed, a noxious plant with roots so shallow they encourage fast-moving waters to sweep them 鈥 and the bank 鈥 downstream. Next came improvements to the riparian zone, the land between the creek and the restaurant, by adding hundreds more plantings of native species. And finally it was time to bolster the bank with boulders and massive stumps with roots intact, which not only stop the erosion but also create deeper pools where fish can stay cool and rebuild strength for their spawning ordeal.
By that point, Ms. Smith was looking at a price tag of about $100,000, which represents a lot of prix fixe dinners in her restaurant.聽
But to her, it was a simple matter of stewardship. 鈥淚 grew up on about 50 acres,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd my parents were both keenly aware of the natural world. They didn鈥檛 litter. We planted trees.鈥 And they imbued in her 鈥渢he ideal that we鈥檙e responsible for our actions in the natural world.
鈥淪o,鈥 she decided, 鈥渋n having this piece of the creek, this is all I can really do.鈥
Before she needed to sign any big checks, she had some good news: Ms. Allan of the King Conservation District called. The state conservation commission had funding available for salmon recovery projects. Ms. Smith鈥檚 met all the criteria, and Ms. Allan helped her get a $63,000 grant.
Now the race was on to line up a team that could install the stumps and boulders within that small window permitted by spawning season. Ms. Smith emailed Adopt-a-Stream Alliance, a local nonprofit that has worked on hundreds of similar projects. Tom Murdoch, the executive director, said yes.
鈥淚f [others] would follow Holly鈥檚 example to protect and enhance Juanita Creek,鈥 Mr. Murdoch says, 鈥渢he result of those collective actions would significantly enhance the salmon run in that creek, and also improve the quality of the water, which also makes it safe for kids to play in the creek.鈥
In two weeks last September, Mr. Murdoch鈥檚 team installed those huge tree roots chained to massive boulders so water would stop eroding the creek鈥檚 banks, which not only stopped the erosion but also turned the stream into an ideal refuge for salmon and trout. The team鈥檚 bioengineering also keeps sediment from flowing downstream, where it could cover shallow gravel bars in which salmon lay their eggs, potentially suffocating salmon fry.
鈥淭his is amazing鈥
In concert with the bioengineering, Ms. Allan helped re-imagine the riparian elements of the stream bank: planting some 500 willow and dogwood saplings and, wherever possible, replacing lawn with other native plants.
鈥淗olly doesn鈥檛 just cling to that vision of grass,鈥 Ms. Allan says. 鈥淪he just really wants to create a more natural habitat along her stream,鈥 explaining that diverse, native plantings alongside creeks encourage more bees, birds, edible berries, and flowers.
The morning Adopt-a-Stream completed its work, Ms. Smith met with a local reporter who had heard about the reclamation project.聽
鈥淲e walked to the stream, and I looked down 鈥 and I鈥檓 like, 鈥極h, my!鈥
鈥淎nd the reporter鈥檚 like, 鈥榃hat?鈥欌
Ms. Smith pointed to the creek鈥檚 clear water.
鈥淭his is amazing,鈥 she told the reporter, who didn鈥檛 seem to believe all these salmon swimming past were not everyday visitors. They counted 12 salmon in those 45 minutes. There had been none in the two weeks leading up to this, when Ms. Smith and the Adopt-a-Stream crew worked on the project every day.聽
Their good work was right there in the current.聽
鈥淵ou鈥檇 watch [the fish] rest, because they鈥檇 bust their butt and try again, and then they鈥檇 go back down and you could tell 鈥 they were exhausted,鈥 Ms. Smith says. 鈥淎nd they鈥檇 just sit there for 20 minutes and then come back and do it again. I saw that happen four or five times.鈥
Perhaps as a reward for her responsible citizenship, Ms. Smith saw her costs drop even further when the King Conservation District came through with more funding. In total, she figures she spent about $34,000 out of pocket. Her money, time, and effort add up to much more.聽
鈥淭hese streams, even in the city, are important,鈥 says Jesse Dykstra, habitat biologist for the state鈥檚 Department of Fish and Wildlife, who issued the project鈥檚 permits. 鈥淗olly did just what we want to see in these smaller urban streams: pockets of habitat.鈥
Ms. Smith is no stranger to accolades. She鈥檚 a five-time semifinalist for the James Beard Foundation鈥檚 outstanding chef award, and winner of the foundation鈥檚 best chef in the Northwest. Her restaurant, too, has a long list of national and regional honors. But she says it would be even better to be remembered as a conservationist.
鈥淚鈥檇 be happy to be an example of what is possible. ... If I could be a little nagging reminder to people and say, 鈥榊ou could do it. You should. Why don鈥檛 you try?鈥
鈥淭hat would make me happy.鈥澛