WEEK 6

Creative Collabs

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Community Connections

Women Who Explore trail party at Bird Alliance of Oregon. Photo by Susan Schen.

In 2024, Trailkeepers of Oregon found new ways to collaborate with volunteers, small businesses, agencies, and community organizations across the state. This week, we’re telling stories about the new connections we made and projects we undertook to care for trails while providing fun, rewarding volunteer experiences.

Your donation today will help Trailkeepers of Oregon build partnerships, expand our impact, and empower more Trailkeepers to maintain and restore their favorite trails. We couldn’t do this service without you!

Trailkeepers in 2024

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Your Donation is Matched

An anonymous donor is sweetening the deal for those who give to Oregon’s trails this week!

Thanks to a generous supporter, when you donate to Trailkeepers of Oregon this week (December 9-15), your gift will be matched, up to $5,000! Your gift will support new, exciting trail projects in 2025, empowering volunteer Trailkeepers to care for beloved trails across the state!

Joining the Trail Party

This year, TKO’s service to hiking trails spanned fifteen counties, dozens of naturals areas, and made an impact from the front-country to more rugged wilderness. And each crew was different. Thank you to the teams, businesses, and community groups that joined us in the woods for fun service to trails.

Here are just a few of the groups that cared for Oregon’s trails at TKO events in 2024:

Our friends at LAIKA, Hilti, and Women Who Explore improved trails at Bird Alliance of Oregon’s wildlife sanctuary. The Columbia Gorge Running Club brushed out a section of Devils Rest trail. Students from Aloha maintained trails at Tryon Creek and learned about crosscut saws on the Wilson River Trail. The folks at Delve Underground built new stairs at Beaver Creek Canyon. As did our friends at REI. As did the great team at the U40 Rotary Club of Portland. These projects take a ton of cooperation, and we’re grateful that so many of you joined us this year to make an impact on local trails!

Please help us keep all these boots on the trail by making a donation to Trailkeepers of Oregon, so we can organize more events in the new year!

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Latest News

You person with a hiking pack walks along a steep mountain trail with large white flowers along the hillside and scenic views.

ACTION ALERT: Forest Service cuts to seasonal staffing will hurt trails and recreational access

This post comes with big thanks to our friends at Washington Trails Association who invited us to borrow heavily from their similar action alert! We invite you to scan the similarities and differences between Oregon and Washington in WTA’s article with a carbon copy for Oregon that we created below. 

If you hike in Oregon, odds are excellent that you’ve enjoyed trails on U.S. Forest Service land. About 39% of Oregon (yes, that’s over 14 million acres of the state) is managed by the U.S. Forest Service. National forests contain some of the most iconic landscapes, popular campgrounds and beloved hiking trails in the state. Encircle Mt. Hood on the Timberline trail, hike along a National Scenic Trail like the Deschutes River trail, visit the Oregon Dunes along the coast, or backpack in the Eagle Cap Wilderness and you are enjoying some of the over 15,000 miles of national forest trails in Oregon.

You person with a hiking pack walks along a steep mountain trail with large white flowers along the hillside and scenic views.

Millions of visitors spread out in Oregon’s 14 million acres of Forest Service lands and 15,000 miles of trails. Photo by TKO volunteer leader Neil Cadsawan

A funding crisis is putting Forest Service trails, campgrounds and other types of outdoor recreation at risk. The U.S. Forest Service is currently making major cuts to its workforce that will reduce its ability to maintain trails, clean trailhead restrooms, collect trash and provide essential services. 

BUDGET CRISIS WILL CUT JOBS AND REDUCE SERVICES

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Wildfire Resilience, Shellburg Falls Reopens in the Santiam State Forest

Among the many communities, natural landscapes, and hiking trails that were set ablaze in the historic 2020 Labor Day Wildfires, the Beachie Creek fire swept across Shellburg Falls Recreation Area in the Santiam State Forest southeast of Salem. Once the smoke cleared, TKO was called upon to help! […]

A large group of TKO Trail Ambassadors stand in front of a waterfall. The image is overlaid by the TKO logo.

2024 Trail Ambassadors Foster a Welcoming and Accessible Outdoors

Trails have amazing potential to bring people of all backgrounds and abilities into the outdoors, yet gaps in information prevent many from doing so. That’s where TKO Trail Ambassadors come in! These volunteers help to create a welcoming environment on Oregon’s trails by offering a friendly presence to answer questions, providing maps and other information, and recommending local businesses and attractions. Looking back on the 2024 season, it’s easy to see the positive impact their passion and dedication had on Oregon’s trails and trail users.

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