******
Announcements:
New! The First Webinar in the 2026 Liz & Bob Frenkel Spring Environmental Webinar Series is this Wednesday!
The theme of the 2026 series is Listening to the Land.
This Week! Wednesday, March 18th 7 pm
A Kalapuya Legacy: Oak Savannas and Prairies on OSU Lands
By Dr. Dennis Albert, OSU researcher
7 pm
Implications found in Ancient Douglas-fir of the OSU McDonald-Dunn Forest
By Dr. Meg Krawchuck & Charles Drake, OSU Researchers
Learn how our local ancient Douglas-firs help us understand how ancestral Indigenous cultural practices, including fire, reflected and impacted the human experience and why knowledge of such cultural practices matter for current forest management. Douglas-firs represent a different ecosystem and set of human cultural practices than of those represented by the Oaks from the first webinar. Dr. Krawchuk and Charles Drake have done us all a great service by sharing their unique research.
Registration Link: cbcpl.net/Frenkel2
Info: https://corvallisbenton.librarycalendar.com/event/2026-liz-bob-frenkel-hiking-environment-series-27208
Wednesday, May 13th 7 pm
Lessons from the Land: Cultivating Abundance through Land-Based Education
By Marta Capriles, Corvallis Waldorf School Agricultural Arts teacher
Learn how a local schoolyard was developed into a dynamic farmscape in which the students tend the land and learn to work with its gifts through an Indigenized curriculum developed at the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde. The students not only tend to the land, but they learn how to efficiently and sustainably utilize and benefit from the gifts of the land they tend. You will wish you had attended this school when you were growing up.
Registration Link: cbcpl.net/Frenkel3
Info: https://corvallisbenton.librarycalendar.com/event/2026-liz-bob-frenkel-hiking-environment-series-27209
The webinars are free, but pre-registration is required. Those who pre-register will receive a link to the webinar recording within three days following the webinar. So, register today! You will receive multiple reminders in advance and the Zoom link from the Corvallis-Benton County Public Library, which is providing all of the technical support.
And don’t forget to thank our three co-sponsors:
Marys Peak Group Sierra Club
Corvallis-Benton County Public Library
Corvallis Sustainability Coalition
******
Hikes:
******
New! 2026 Earth Day Tour
Magical Willamette River Walk
Wednesday, April 22nd (the true Earth Day)
1:30-4:30 pm
The 19th Annual Corvallis Earth Day Interpretive Tour will take us along the Willamette River, from the confluence with the Marys River (Pinefu in Kalapuya) to the southern border of the City of Corvallis. We will observe and learn about the 10th largest U.S. River and its riparian edges as they are now and how they may have appeared 200 years ago when the Ampinefu Kalapuya nurtured and cultivated the area. We will walk along some river paths few people have experienced.
The hike is 4.5 miles long and there is one bathroom and one portable toilet along the way. The MPG Outing Leader is Mike Neeley-Brown. The Interpretive Guides are Gwendolyn Ellen and Dave Eckert. The hike is co-sponsored by the Marys Peak Group Sierra Club and the Corvallis Sustainability Coalition Water Action Team.
******
Announcements:
******
New! Marys Peak, Alsea Falls and Other Beautiful Old Growth Areas Are Under Threat!
(By Emily Bowes, Policy Strategist of the Oregon Chapter)
The Trump Administration has opened a 30-day public comment period on a proposal to rewrite management plans for nearly 2.5 million acres of BLM-administered public lands across western Oregon. The stated goal is to return timber production to 1980s levels, targeting some of the last remaining low-elevation old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest, shrinking stream buffers for salmon-bearing rivers, and putting dozens of Areas of Critical Environmental Concern on the chopping block.
We have been here before. The clearcut era of the 1980s left degraded watersheds, collapsed salmon runs, and communities caught in boom-and-bust cycles the timber industry walked away from. Conservation groups spent decades fighting to restore what was lost. This proposal would take us back in the wrong direction.
The comment deadline is March 23. This is a scoping period, meaning your comment helps shape what issues must be analyzed in the full environmental review. It is one of the most meaningful intervention points in the process, and the window is short.
******
Save The Date!
On
Sunday, June 28, 2026, we are having our Summer Solstice Potluck. We
are meeting at the Rotary Shelter in Willamette Park from 12-4 pm. Hike
in Willamette Park after we eat! Details to follow. If you have
questions, contact mbcd...@gmail.com. Hope to see you there!
******
The 2025 Champinefu Series is Now Available Online
This
year marks the ninth season of the Champinefu Series, which was founded
by the Marys Peak Group of the Sierra Club and the Cultural Resources
Department of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde. The purpose of
these talks is to inform the general public about local Indigenous
lands, rivers, and people. During the past nine years, there have been
27 unique programs featured through this series, some in person and
others via webinar.
The
2025 series was launched at OSU in October with an in-person program
titled “The Future of Indigenous Foods in the Kalapuya Ilihi”. Members
of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde who work directly with
developing programs related to Indigenous foods were featured. YouTube
link: The Future of Indigenous Foods in the Kalapuya Ilihi
The
November talk was a webinar entitled “Indigenous Placekeeping through
Tea.” It featured David Harrelson from the Cultural Resources Department
of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde. He is experimenting with
the processes related to Indigenous teas. YouTube link: Indigenous Placekeeping through Tea
The
December webinar was a dialogue between OSU’s Dr. Molly Carney and
David Harrelson as they focused on the cultural relevance of the tarweed
plant and the importance of regenerating tarweed ecology in the
Willamette Valley. That talk was called "Kalapuya Placekeeping through
Tarweed". YouTube link: Kalapuya Placekeeping through Tarweed
The Corvallis-Benton County Public Library's Champinefu Webinar Series YouTube playlist contains videos from this program dating back to 2021.
Co-sponsors
of the series are the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde, the
Corvallis Sustainability Coalition, the Spring Creek Project, the
Corvallis-Benton County Public Library, the OSU School of Language,
Culture & Society, and the Marys Peak Group. Champinefu Series
programs and presenters are all chosen by the Cultural Resources
Department of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde.
Save the date!
The first program of the 2026 Champinefu Series will take place at OSUs
Patricia Valian Reser Center for the Creative Arts on October 15. The
topic and presenters are yet to be chosen. Admission is free.
******
Recordings of Spring 2025 Webinars Are Now Available
String of Pearls: The Magical River Parks of Corvallis was
the theme of the 2025 Liz and Bob Frenkel Hiking and Environment Spring
Webinar Series. Closed captioned recordings of two of the talks are now
available on the Corvallis-Benton County Library YouTube channel. The
talks provided the historical background, park ecology, and current user
opportunities for the City parks along the Willamette River and the
Marys River near Corvallis.
Webinar #1: The South Corvallis Willamette River Parks with Gwendolyn Ellen includes Willamette Park and Kendall Natural Area.
Webinar #2: The
Marys River Parks with Dave Eckert includes Herbert Natural Area,
Caldwell Natural Area, Marys River Natural Area, Avery Park and Natural
Area, Pioneer Park, BMX Park and Shawala Point.
Sponsors
of the webinars are the Marys Peak Group Sierra Club, Corvallis-Benton
County Public Library & the Corvallis Sustainability Coalition Water
Action Team.
******
General Notes:
1) Newcomers to MPG outing events, please view the GENERAL OUTING POLICY on our MPG website, http://oregon2.sierraclub.org/marys-peak before pre-registering for or attending an outing.
2) Contacting Marys Peak Group: Marys Peak Group contact information is obtainable at http://oregon2.sierraclub.org/marys-peak Listed are the Executive Committee members and the Administrative and Program Coordinators.
3) Minutes of the MPG Executive Committee (ExCom) meetings for the last 5 years can be viewed by clicking on minutes. The ExCom meetings are held on Zoom and occur quarterly. All current Sierra Club members are welcome to attend. Contact MarysPe...@Oregon.Sierraclub.org to get the Zoom link.
******
OSU Forestry Recreation Updates: