Exploring Carkeek Park: A Journey of Ecology and Community Care
I’ve always loved Carkeek Park in my city, Seattle — the sweeping views, the quiet trails, the sense of calm just minutes from the city. But this Earth Day, I saw it differently. A playful scavenger hunt pulled me deeper into the park than I’d ever gone before, and with each station — from beaver dams to blooming forest trails — I began to understand just how much purpose pulses through this place.
Carkeek Park might seem like just another patch of green tucked into Seattle’s edge. In reality, it’s a living classroom and a conservation site shaped by decades of community care.
The Earth Day challenge was deceptively simple: find marked spots around the park, learn something at each, and collect signatures along the way. But what unfolded was a crash course in local ecology, designed with intention and joy. At the Salmon Imprint Pond, volunteers explained how salmon fry are raised to return home years later. In the forest, we learned how native plants are quietly restoring balance. Even the beaver dams became case studies in climate resilience.
What makes Carkeek powerful isn’t just its biodiversity — it’s the way it turns neighbors into stewards, and nature into something deeply shared.
I think there’s something for everyone: parents, a student, a nonprofit leader, or if you’re someone simply curious about the land you walk on — this park offers more than a weekend outing or a quick nature stroll. It offers a chance to listen, learn, and give back.