Share |
You are here: Home Wilderness Copper Salmon Wilderness
Document Actions

Copper Salmon Wilderness Campaign

Oregon Wild works to safeguard wild salmon, old-growth forest, and the beautiful Elk River

 

Copper Salmon OverviewUPDATE 3.30.09 - At 12:00 pm PST, President Barack Obama signed the Omnibus Public Lands Management Act (HR 146) into law, marking the final step for expanded Wilderness protections in Oregon. The legislation protects Wilderness for Mount Hood, Copper Salmon, Soda Mountain, Spring Basin and Badlands. Map(pdf), legislation. Interactive Map.

Tucked away in the northwest corner of the Siskiyou National Forest, 11 miles east of Port Orford on the Elk River, lies a 13,700-acre treasure trove. Adjacent to the east boundary of Grassy Knob Wilderness, this natural wonder known as Copper Salmon includes the North and South Forks of Elk River and the upper Middle Fork of Sixes River.

The Copper Salmon area contains one of the nation's largest remaining stands of low-elevation old-growth forest and in the north Fork of the Elk, one of the healthiest salmon, steelhead, and cutthroat trout runs in the continental United States. Its forests feature Douglas fir trees as large as 10 feet in diameter and up to 300 feet in height, and large disease-free stands of Port-Orford cedar, North America’s mostCopper Salmon courtesy Friends of Elk River endangered forest tree. Copper Salmon is also blessed with an abundance of wildlife--from endangered marbled murrelets and northern spotted owls to Roosevelt elk, mountain lions and black bears.

Despite all this, the headwaters of the Elk's North Fork do not now enjoy any degree of permanent protection. While the area does have some administrative protections, loopholes and congressional riders already allowed clear-cutting of 200 acres of healthy old-growth forest in the North Fork drainage. Future threats could come at any time despite broad support for the area’s protection.

The Copper Salmon Wilderness proposal also includes protecting 9.2 miles of the North and South Forks of Elk River as Wild and Scenic Rivers.
 

That's why a broad coalition, including sportsmen, fishermen, businesses, outdoors people and local and state government officials have rallied around efforts to protect Copper Salmon by giving it Wilderness designation.

Voice Your Opinion

Interactive Copper Salmon Wilderness Map



Purple = Wilderness protected in 2009
Dark Green = Wilderness protected pre-2009

Act Now!
fish
Act Now to support Oregon's Wild Rivers.
Overheard...

"Till now man has been up against Nature, from now on he will be up against his own nature."
        --Dennis Gabor

 

powered by Plone | site by Groundwire