Partners:
Skokomish Indian Tribe and Reservation
The Evergreen State College

Project History:
History
Participants
Support
Academic Programs at The Evergreen State College

Gardens:
Demonstration Garden
Community Garden

Harvest Restoration Sites:
Dike Site
Hill Site
Bog Site

Related Projects Located at Evergreen:
Longhouse Ethnobotanical Garden
Red Square Native Plant Demonstration Garden

Student Work:
Current Work
Past Work

Year-Round Planning Calendar

News and Updates

Galleries
Note:
The information contained on this site is offered for educational purposes only. It is not meant to be used for diagnostic or treatment purposes and should not be used in lieu of consulting a qualified health care provider. The Gifts of the First People* Plant Project and anyone associated with it (including students and other affiliates of The Evergreen State College) assume no liability for the reader's experimentation with the educational information offered here.

All material contained on this site is ©2003 Gifts of the First People.

Contact via Evergreen: Marja Eloheimo

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The Dike Site

The dike is a man-made microclimate. Some saltwater still gets in to this area, but most of it is barricaded out by a series of old dikes. The tribe hopes to soon breach these dikes to allow the sea back in. This would eventually reestablish some of the native species here. The baseline studies are particularly important here. They are also very difficult, as much of the site is muddy and the rest is thick, tall bushes.

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