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Salmon and Trout in King County, Washington State

Salmon Watcher Program
Volunteer Monitoring Program

Be a Salmon WatcherSalmon Watcher is a multi-jurisdictional effort focused at protecting a Pacific Northwest treasure and educating the community in the process. The thirteen-year-old program involves volunteers watching streams for spawning salmon in King and Snohomish Counties. This effort mainly focuses on waters within the Lake Washington Watershed and on Vashon Island.

Our dedicated volunteers watch for fish on their assigned creeks two times a week from September through December. The information they collect helps us know where salmon are spawning in our streams, and sometimes where barriers exist to salmon migration. Volunteers act as our "eyes and ears" in the watersheds and give us a heads up when things go awry in our neighborhood creeks. Find out more about our program, including how to identify salmon in your neighborhood, by exploring our site.

If you would like to learn about volunteering, including when the training dates are, go to our Volunteer page.

What can you do to help salmon?

Be a Salmon Watcher!  Find out how to become a volunteer Salmon Watcher.

Participate in Natural Yard Care

Educate yourself about Stormwater -- which is not treated and flows directly to our streams, lakes, and marine waters. Begin learning about Stormwater with this information from NOAA.

Wash your car in an environmentally friendly way! Use a car wash, not your driveway. (See Stormwater info above! Your car's oil, grime, and soap suds flow from the driveway to the street to the streams, lakes, and Puget Sound -- not good for fish.) Charity car washes can be huge sources of pollution. If you want to raise money by helping people get their cars clean, read this: the most fish friendly car wash fundraiser.

Watch this fun and educational video on groundwater!

Learn more about salmon and other animals in the water

Check out our fish identification gallery.

Find out what salmon are commonly seen in your stream.

Learn about beavers in King County.

This program is conducted in cooperation with the King County Water and Land Resources Division, Bellevue Stream Team, Redmond Stream Team, and the cities of Seattle, Bothell, Kirkland, Renton, Woodinville, and the Vashon-Maury Island Land Trust, with support from the King Conservation District.