News & Press

A crowd of more than 300 people were on hand to celebrate the community building that the organization accomplishes.
Share your views about open space, recreational priorities and local development in the Lake Chelan area at the first stakeholders meeting. The goal of the Lake Chelan Community Open Space Vision (LCCOSV) process is to create a win-win-win between land uses that are often competing by bringing many as many voices as possible into the conversation.
To enjoy this spooky season with your little ones, try these fun fall activities to get outside and explore the fascinating world of spiders.
The Chelan-Douglas Land Trust acquired the last puzzle piece in the Sage Hills area of the Wenatchee Foothills on Sept. 15 after trying for eight years.
Are you a resident or a visitor to the Lake Chelan area? Make your voice heard! Take a quick 10-min. survey before Sept. 28 and give your input about important land, water, and recreational resources in the Lake Chelan area!
On a warm morning this summer, more than 20 children from the City of Wenatchee’s Day Camp joined me to play Pokémon Go at Saddle Rock — except instead of looking for imaginary creatures on a screen, they searched for local wildlife in the bushes.
On Wednesday, Rebecca Frank and Omar Garcia, site stewards with the Chelan-Douglas Land Trust, walked through 20 acres damaged by fire earlier this week on Horse Lake Road. Their task was to assess damage.
The 20-acre Horse Lake Road fire is 100 percent contained. A fire engine remained on scene Tuesday as a precaution.
The area’s top land conservation group announced Tuesday it has been awarded a $5,000 Think Green Grant from Waste Management.
Living in an era of megafires will be the first topic in the Wenatchee Valley Museum & Cultural Center’s environmental film series, which begins Aug. 30.
It’s called synergy, when efforts combined produce an effect greater than the sum of their parts. We see synergy in the Entiat Valley, and it is good and more good.
If a piece of land could talk, there wouldn’t be many that could claim to have helped fire victims, salmon, a contractor, an accountant and a building inspector.