Tag: Theler Wetlands

  • A Mason County Family’s Guide to Theler Wetlands: What Kids Will See This Spring (and Why the Boardwalk Coming This Summer Matters)

    A Mason County Family’s Guide to Theler Wetlands: What Kids Will See This Spring (and Why the Boardwalk Coming This Summer Matters)


    Theler Wetlands is the closest thing Mason County has to a free outdoor classroom. The Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve in Belfair is open every day during daylight hours, costs nothing, and is engineered — quite literally — to teach. For a family with kids, especially kids interested in animals, water, or how the natural world actually works, a spring afternoon at Theler holds up against any paid attraction in the region.

    And the trip is going to get better. This summer, a 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk is going in through a freshly restored salt marsh — the final phase of a multi-year project that has been quietly remaking the south end of Hood Canal. Here is what a family should know about going now and going later.

    What Kids Will See at Theler Right Now

    Even mid-restoration, the preserve is full of activity in spring. The mudflats and tidal channels are nursery habitat for juvenile salmon. The grasses and shallow pools attract great blue herons, kingfishers, ospreys, bald eagles, and dozens of smaller songbirds passing through on migration. The Union River, which feeds the wetlands, is one of the few healthy spawning runs left for Hood Canal summer chum salmon — a federally threatened species.

    Kids who like to spot things will have plenty to count: bird species, salmon if you visit at the right time, otter and beaver sign in the channels, and seasonal flowers across the wet meadows.

    What the Construction Means for a Family Visit Now

    Honest version: parts of the trail loop are currently fragmented because of the restoration work. The earthwork phase finished in fall 2025 — that included removing a failing levee, replacing a small culvert with a much larger 15-foot-wide concrete one, and digging a new winding tidal channel. You can still walk most of the preserve, but you cannot complete the full loop yet.

    What that means in practice: short walks with younger kids work well right now. Bring binoculars. Plan to spend 30 to 60 minutes rather than building the day around a long hike. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG) posts current trail access at pnwsalmoncenter.org.

    Why the Summer 2026 Boardwalk Changes the Trip

    The big change is the boardwalk. WDFW and HCSEG plan to install a 1,200-foot piling-supported elevated walkway through the restored estuary this summer, built on the footprint of the levee that was removed. When it is finished, the entire Theler loop reconnects — and it does so by walking visitors directly through restored salt marsh.

    For a family, that means three things. First, the loop becomes friendly for kids who get tired on out-and-back trails. Second, the boardwalk gives small children eye-level views of marsh life — channels, fish, herons hunting — without anyone having to walk through mud. Third, it turns Theler into a year-round destination that holds up in every season.

    How to Make It a Real Outdoor Lesson

    A few angles that work especially well with kids:

    • Salmon and the Endangered Species Act. Hood Canal summer chum are federally listed as threatened. The Theler restoration exists because juvenile chum need shallow, low-salinity, food-rich estuary water to grow before they head out into the canal. Kids respond to the idea that an entire engineering project — culvert replacements, levee removal, a road raised — is being done on behalf of fish.
    • How a wetland actually works. Tidal channels fill and empty twice a day. The salt marsh filters water, slows storm waves, and stores carbon. A wetland is a machine, and Theler is a working one.
    • Birding 101. A pocket bird guide and a pair of binoculars turns Theler into a guided experience. Spring is migration season — there are species at Theler in May that aren’t there in July.

    The Practical Details

    The preserve is at 22871 NE SR-3 in Belfair, on the east side of Highway 3 before the town center. Parking is free. Open during daylight hours. Restrooms are typically available at the nature center; bring your own water for the trail. There is no entry fee. Dogs are subject to posted rules, so check the trailhead sign before bringing one.

    The drive from Shelton is about 25 minutes. From Belfair town center, two minutes.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Theler Wetlands open to families this spring?

    Yes. The preserve is open during daylight hours every day. Parts of the trail loop are fragmented because of restoration work, so plan a 30 to 60 minute visit rather than a long hike. Current trail status is posted at pnwsalmoncenter.org.

    How much does it cost to visit Theler Wetlands?

    Free. There is no entry fee, and parking is free. The preserve is supported by WDFW and the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group.

    What will kids actually see at Theler in spring?

    Migrating songbirds, great blue herons, ospreys, bald eagles, kingfishers, otter and beaver sign in the tidal channels, juvenile salmon (depending on the run timing), and seasonal wildflowers across the wet meadow.

    When will the new Theler boardwalk be finished?

    Construction is planned for summer 2026. The 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk runs through the restored salt marsh on the footprint of the removed levee, and once completed it reconnects the full Theler trail loop.

    Is Theler Wetlands stroller- or wheelchair-accessible?

    Currently, accessibility varies by trail section because of construction. Once the elevated boardwalk is completed in summer 2026, the loop will be substantially more accessible — the boardwalk is piling-supported, flat, and built for visitor traffic.

    Where is Theler Wetlands located?

    22871 NE SR-3 in Belfair, on Highway 3 just before the town center. About 25 minutes from Shelton, two minutes from Belfair town center.

    Related family coverage on tygartmedia.com: Things to Do in Mason County: The Definitive Guide, Tahuya River Preserve Reaches 190 Acres: What North Mason Needs to Know.

  • What the Theler Wetlands Restoration Tells Hood Canal Property Owners About Their Own Shoreline

    What the Theler Wetlands Restoration Tells Hood Canal Property Owners About Their Own Shoreline


    If you own waterfront property along Hood Canal, the project happening at Theler Wetlands in Belfair is worth understanding closely. It is one of the most carefully engineered shoreline restorations in the south Puget Sound, and the principles behind it — tidal reconnection, undersized-culvert replacement, set-back levee design — are the same principles increasingly showing up in shoreline permits, county code updates, and property-value assessments across Mason County.

    This is what Hood Canal property owners should know about the science, the timeline, and the policy direction Theler signals.

    What WDFW and HCSEG Actually Did at Theler

    The earthwork phase, completed in fall 2025, was substantial. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG) and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife removed a failing levee that had cut off roughly seven acres of estuary from Hood Canal’s tidal flow for decades. They replaced a 12-inch metal culvert — far too small to handle natural tidal exchange — with a 15-foot-wide concrete box culvert. They dug a new sinuous tidal channel through the rehabilitated wetland. And they raised a section of Northeast Roessel Road to serve as a set-back levee, moving the line of flood protection landward instead of armoring the original shoreline.

    The summer 2026 phase is the visible one: a 1,200-foot piling-supported elevated boardwalk through the restored marsh.

    Why It Matters for Your Shoreline

    The mechanics of what Theler does — restoring tidal connectivity, replacing undersized infrastructure, and using set-back rather than armored levees — match what Mason County and Washington state regulators are looking for when shoreline owners apply for permits today. If you have a bulkhead, an undersized culvert under a private driveway, or a failing seawall, the next round of permit conversations is increasingly going to look like the conversations that produced Theler.

    Three takeaways for property owners:

    • Undersized culverts are the single most common shoreline restoration target. A 12-inch culvert blocking tidal flow is the kind of feature that gets flagged on more than half of Hood Canal property assessments. Replacement, not repair, is the direction of policy.
    • Set-back levees protect property value better than armored shorelines. A bulkhead that fails in 20 years drops shoreline value sharply. A set-back design, like the raised section of Roessel Road, holds up because it works with tidal processes rather than against them.
    • Restored estuaries support adjacent property values, not just salmon. Healthy salt marshes filter water, dissipate wave energy, and stabilize the shoreline upstream and down. Properties next to functioning estuaries tend to require less ongoing maintenance.

    The Endangered Species Act Layer

    Hood Canal summer chum salmon are listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act. That listing has direct consequences for shoreline permitting along the Union River, the canal’s south end, and any waterway with chum-bearing tributaries. Projects that improve summer chum habitat — like Theler — generally clear permits faster. Projects that may impair it face longer review timelines and more conditions.

    For property owners, the practical implication is that the closer your shoreline is to a chum-bearing estuary, the more aligned your project plans need to be with restoration-friendly design. Working with WDFW or HCSEG early in the process tends to be faster than fighting through a denied permit later.

    Public Access and Property Value

    The Theler boardwalk also matters for the broader north-Mason real-estate environment. Public-access amenities — restored trails, completed loop walks, accessible nature preserves — drive durable property values across waterfront and near-waterfront parcels. The Belfair area benefits when Theler is a complete, walkable destination rather than a half-closed construction site.

    Where to Watch the Project

    The preserve is at 22871 NE SR-3 in Belfair, off Highway 3 before the town center. HCSEG posts construction and trail-access updates at pnwsalmoncenter.org. WDFW’s Union River Estuary Restoration project page is the source for engineering and habitat detail.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a set-back levee and why does it matter for property owners?

    A set-back levee is a flood-protection structure built landward of the original shoreline, allowing the natural tidal zone to function. At Theler, a section of Northeast Roessel Road was raised to serve as the set-back levee. For property owners, set-back designs typically permit faster than armored shorelines and hold up longer.

    Why are undersized culverts a target for restoration?

    Culverts that are too small — like the original 12-inch metal culvert at Theler — block tidal exchange, prevent fish passage, and tend to fail in storm events. Washington state policy has shifted heavily toward replacing undersized culverts with appropriately sized box culverts that allow full tidal flow.

    How big is the Theler restoration?

    Approximately seven acres of estuarine wetland habitat at the southeast end of Hood Canal. The earthwork phase finished in fall 2025; the summer 2026 phase will install a 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk through the restored marsh.

    Does proximity to a restored estuary affect property value?

    Healthy estuaries filter water, dissipate wave energy, and stabilize shorelines upstream and down. Properties adjacent to functioning estuaries typically require less ongoing maintenance, and public-access amenities like the Theler boardwalk support area-wide real-estate value.

    What does the Endangered Species Act mean for Hood Canal shoreline projects?

    Hood Canal summer chum are federally listed as threatened. Properties along chum-bearing waterways face additional review when permitting shoreline work. Projects designed to improve habitat tend to clear permits faster than projects that may impair it.

    Related coverage on tygartmedia.com: Hood Canal Property Owner’s Guide to Shellfish Access at Potlatch, Hood Canal Property Owners: What the Tahuya River Preserve Means for Water Quality.

  • Hood Canal in May 2026: How a Spot Shrimp Opener and a Belfair Boardwalk Tell the Same Story

    Hood Canal in May 2026: How a Spot Shrimp Opener and a Belfair Boardwalk Tell the Same Story



    Hood Canal’s shoreline is doing two things at once this May. On Saturday, May 10, Marine Area 12 will open for spot shrimp at 9 a.m. — the only piece of Puget Sound with an opener two weeks before the rest of the region. A few miles up the highway in Belfair, the Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve is heading into the most visible phase of a multi-year salmon restoration: a 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk through a salt marsh that, until recently, sat behind a failing levee.

    The two stories are not separate. The shrimp fishery exists because the canal still has functioning estuaries. The estuary at Theler is being rebuilt because Hood Canal’s summer chum — federally listed as threatened — need it to survive. For Mason County families, this May is a window into both halves of the same coastline.

    Marine Area 12 Opens May 10 — Two Weeks Ahead of the Rest of Puget Sound

    The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has set Hood Canal’s 2026 spot shrimp schedule with five confirmed openings in Marine Area 12: May 10, May 24, May 26, June 7, and June 21. Each window runs from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. only. WDFW has flagged that additional dates may be added later in the season depending on stock assessments — the agency’s Medium account and the Marine Area 12 regulations page are the definitive sources for any mid-season changes.

    The daily limit across Puget Sound is 80 spot shrimp per licensed fisher, and the combined daily weight limit for all shrimp species is 10 pounds (whole shrimp). If a shrimper retains only spot shrimp, they may remove and discard the heads on the water; if they retain any other shrimp species, heads must stay attached until they are back on shore so officers can verify the weight limit on the dock.

    The May 10 opener carries unusual weight on Hood Canal because it is the only early opportunity in the region. Most of Puget Sound waits until May 24. That two-week head start is why launch ramps from Hoodsport up through Union toward Belfair are likely to be at capacity before the 9 a.m. window opens. Experienced shrimpers tend to be on the water before sunrise, traps rigged, ready to drop the moment the season starts.

    Theler Wetlands: The Levee Is Gone, the Boardwalk Is Coming

    While shrimpers fish the deeper waters of the canal, the south end of Hood Canal is in the middle of a quieter transformation. The Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve sits at the mouth of the Union River in Belfair — 22871 NE SR-3, just before the town center on Highway 3. For decades, a levee separated roughly seven acres of wetland from the tidal processes that built the marsh in the first place. As of fall 2025, that levee is gone.

    The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG) and WDFW completed the major earthwork phase last year: a failing 12-inch metal culvert was replaced with a 15-foot-wide concrete box culvert; a sinuous tidal channel was excavated through the new estuary; and a section of Northeast Roessel Road was raised to function as a set-back levee. Summer 2026 brings the most visible piece of the project — construction of a 1,200-foot elevated, piling-supported boardwalk through the restored marsh, built on the footprint where the old levee used to be.

    For Mason County visitors, the practical effect is that the Theler trail loop, currently fragmented by construction, will reconnect. The preserve already draws birders, school groups, and weekend walkers; the new boardwalk turns the wetlands into a fully accessible loop through restored salt marsh — the kind of walk that, in much of Puget Sound, no longer exists.

    Why the Two Stories Belong Together

    Hood Canal summer chum salmon are listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act. The Union River, which empties into the canal at Theler, is one of the last spawning runs left for the species. Juvenile summer chum need shallow, low-salinity, food-rich estuarine water to grow before they head out into the canal. That is exactly what the Theler restoration is rebuilding.

    And juvenile salmon are not the only species that depend on a healthy canal. Spot shrimp, the prize of every May opener, live in deeper waters but rely on the broader ecological function of Hood Canal — water quality, dissolved oxygen, nutrient flow — that estuaries help maintain. When residents pull a trap full of spot shrimp on May 10 and walk a restored boardwalk in August, they are seeing two different parts of the same system.

    What Mason County Residents Should Do This May

    For shrimpers: confirm your Washington recreational fishing license before May 10, check the WDFW Marine Area 12 regulations page for any last-minute rule changes, and arrive early. The 9 a.m. start is hard — traps cannot be set in the water before then.

    For everyone else: the Theler preserve is open during daylight hours, and HCSEG posts trail-access status at pnwsalmoncenter.org. The current spring window is a chance to see the wetlands mid-restoration, before the boardwalk goes in. By late summer 2026, the loop should be walkable end to end for the first time in years.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When does Hood Canal spot shrimp season open in 2026?

    Marine Area 12 opens for spot shrimp on May 10, 2026, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., with additional confirmed openings on May 24, May 26, June 7, and June 21. WDFW may announce more dates later in the season. Hood Canal is the only Puget Sound area with an opening before May 24.

    What are the daily limits for spot shrimp in Hood Canal?

    Each licensed shrimp fisher may keep up to 80 spot shrimp per day, with a combined daily weight limit of 10 pounds (whole shrimp) for all shrimp species. Spot-shrimp-only retainers may remove the heads on the water; mixed-species retainers must keep heads attached until back on shore.

    Where is the Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve?

    The preserve is located at 22871 NE SR-3 in Belfair, just off Highway 3 before the town center. It is open during daylight hours. Trail access is partially affected by ongoing restoration work; current status is posted at pnwsalmoncenter.org.

    When will the Theler Wetlands boardwalk be finished?

    WDFW and the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group plan to construct the 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk in summer 2026. The structure runs through the newly restored estuary on the footprint of the removed levee and will reconnect the preserve’s currently fragmented trail loop.

    Why does the Theler restoration matter for Hood Canal salmon?

    Hood Canal summer chum are federally listed as threatened. Juvenile chum from the Union River need shallow, low-salinity estuarine habitat to grow before entering the canal. The Theler project removed a levee, replaced an undersized culvert, and dug a new tidal channel to restore that nursery habitat across roughly seven acres.

    Do I need a license to harvest spot shrimp in Washington?

    Yes. A valid Washington recreational fishing license is required for spot shrimp harvest. Licenses can be purchased online from WDFW or at license vendors statewide. Children 15 and under do not need a license but are still subject to daily limits.

    Is the Theler Wetlands trail accessible during construction?

    Sections of the trail loop are currently fragmented because of restoration work. Walking access is available during daylight hours, but the full loop is not yet reconnected. The 2026 boardwalk construction is the final phase that will restore continuous loop access.

    Related Mason County coverage on tygartmedia.com: Hood Canal Property Owner’s Guide to Shellfish Access at Potlatch, First Time Shellfish Harvesting at Potlatch? A Beginner’s Guide, Tahuya River Preserve Reaches 190 Acres.

  • Hood Canal Spot Shrimp Season Opens May 10 — and a Wetlands Restoration Is Reshaping Belfair’s Shoreline

    Hood Canal Spot Shrimp Season Opens May 10 — and a Wetlands Restoration Is Reshaping Belfair’s Shoreline

    Hood Canal Spot Shrimp Season Opens May 10 — and a Wetlands Restoration Is Reshaping Belfair’s Shoreline

    Mason County’s outdoor calendar heats up this May with two significant developments along Hood Canal: the first spot shrimp opening of the year arrives Saturday, May 10, giving local shrimpers one of the most anticipated mornings on the water, while just north in Belfair, a long-running restoration project at the Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve is entering its most visible phase yet — the construction of a 1,200-foot elevated boardwalk through a newly rehabilitated salt marsh.

    Both stories speak to what makes Hood Canal worth protecting and celebrating: the fishery that feeds families across the county, and the habitat that makes those fisheries possible in the first place.

    Spot Shrimp Season: Hood Canal Gets the First Opener

    For recreational shrimpers, Marine Area 12 — Hood Canal — is the place to be on the morning of May 10. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has confirmed that Hood Canal will receive an early opportunity this year, opening a full two weeks before most of the rest of Puget Sound, where the broader season begins May 24.

    The 2026 Marine Area 12 schedule runs on specific dates: May 10, May 24, May 26, June 7, and June 21. Each opening is tightly windowed — anglers may fish from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. only. WDFW has noted that additional dates may be announced later in the season depending on stock assessments.

    The daily limit remains 80 spot shrimp per licensed fisher, with a combined total weight limit of 10 pounds (whole shrimp) for all shrimp species. Shrimpers who retain only spot shrimp may remove and discard the heads while still on the water; those retaining any other shrimp species must keep the heads until they are back on shore to allow compliance verification with the weight limit.

    For Mason County families, the May 10 opener is more than a fishing trip — it is an early-summer tradition along the entire Hood Canal corridor, from Hoodsport down through Union and north toward Belfair. Spot shrimp, known for their rich, sweet flavor, are among the most prized recreational catches in the state. Demand for the limited openings is high, and experienced shrimpers typically arrive early to launch before the 9 a.m. window.

    Before heading out, anglers should confirm current rules at wdfw.wa.gov, as emergency closures and rule changes can occur on short notice based on stock conditions. A valid Washington recreational fishing license is required. The WDFW hotline and website are the definitive sources for any last-minute schedule adjustments.

    Theler Wetlands: A 1,200-Foot Boardwalk Is Coming to Belfair This Summer

    A few miles north of Highway 3 in Belfair, a quieter but equally significant outdoor story is unfolding at the Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve. This summer, WDFW and the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG) will begin construction of a 1,200-foot elevated, piling-supported boardwalk through the heart of a newly restored estuary — the capstone of a multi-year effort to bring Hood Canal summer chum salmon back to the Union River system.

    The Theler Wetlands restoration project has been restoring approximately 7 acres of estuarine wetland habitat at the southeast end of Hood Canal. Work that concluded in fall 2025 included removing a failing levee, replacing a 12-inch metal culvert with a 15-foot-wide concrete box culvert, digging a new sinuous tidal channel, and raising a section of Northeast Roessel Road to serve as a set-back levee. The goal: reconnect the tidal processes that were disrupted when the wetlands were diked decades ago.

    Hood Canal summer chum salmon are listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act. The Theler Wetlands sit at the mouth of the Union River, which is critical spawning and rearing habitat for that run. By expanding tidal connectivity, the restoration creates the shallow, food-rich, low-salinity estuarine conditions that juvenile summer chum need to grow before entering Hood Canal.

    The summer 2026 boardwalk construction will be the project’s most visible phase for the public. The elevated structure — built in the footprint of the removed levee — will reconnect the preserve’s currently fragmented trail network, giving visitors and birders full access to what will become a restored salt marsh. The Theler Wetlands is already one of Mason County’s most-visited nature spots, drawing birdwatchers, school groups, and families year-round. The new boardwalk will make the wetlands more accessible and complete the loop trail that has been partially closed during construction.

    The preserve is located at 22871 NE SR-3 in Belfair, just off the highway before the town center. Visitors are welcome during daylight hours. For project updates and trail access status, check the HCSEG website at pnwsalmoncenter.org or WDFW’s habitat recovery pages.

    What to Watch This Season

    Taken together, these two stories reflect the dual outdoor identity of Hood Canal and Mason County’s shoreline: a working fishery used by thousands of families every spring and summer, underpinned by habitat restoration work that most people never see but everyone benefits from. The spot shrimp fishery depends on a healthy canal; the canal depends on functioning estuaries like the one being rebuilt at Theler.

    For residents looking to get outside this May, both opportunities are close and accessible. The shrimp opener on May 10 is days away — time to get gear ready, check your license, and confirm the launch site. And when construction wraps at Theler Wetlands later this year, the newly completed boardwalk trail will be one of the more remarkable walks in all of Mason County: a path through restored tidal marsh, built where a levee used to be, beneath skies that — if the restoration takes hold — should one day carry kingfishers and herons back to a corner of Hood Canal that had been quiet for a very long time.

    Sources


    Related Expansion Coverage

  • Belfair’s Library Is Almost Back — And the Chamber Is Opening Something New at Theler

    Belfair’s Library Is Almost Back — And the Chamber Is Opening Something New at Theler

    Belfair’s Library Is Almost Back — And the Chamber Is Opening Something New at Theler

    Two of Belfair’s most-used community resources are in the middle of exciting transitions, and if you haven’t been following along, here’s the full picture on what’s happening, when things reopen, and where to go in the meantime.

    North Mason Timberland Library: Nearly Done, Under Budget, and Worth the Wait

    The North Mason Timberland Library (23081 NE SR 3, Belfair) has been closed since January 31, 2026, for a comprehensive interior refresh — and the news from Timberland Regional Library is good. As of late March 2026, TRL Director of Operations Brenda Lane confirmed the project is nearly complete and coming in under budget.

    This isn’t a paint-and-call-it-done job. The library is getting new paint, new flooring, new furniture, and a completely reimagined children’s area designed to be more welcoming for families. Library staff put it plainly: “There’s a lot of stuff that hasn’t been touched or cleaned for 30 years.” When the doors reopen — expected sometime in May or June 2026 — North Mason residents will walk into a genuinely different space.

    In the meantime, temporary services continue at the Mason Transit Authority building at 25250 SR 3 in Belfair (just off the SR-3 roundabout), open Tuesday through Friday, 10 AM to 6 PM. You can pick up holds, access printing services, and browse a small collection there. The full online catalog, digital library, and e-book/audiobook lending through Libby remain available 24/7 through the TRL website at trl.org.

    North Mason Chamber Visitor Center: Moving to the Salmon Center

    Here’s something to genuinely get excited about: the North Mason Chamber of Commerce is setting up a brand-new visitor center at the Pacific Northwest Salmon Center, located at 600 NE Roessel Rd in Belfair — right next to the Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve.

    The Chamber secured $45,000 in 2026 funding to make it happen and plans to staff the center part-time, five days a week, noon to 5 PM. If you’ve ever tried to point a visitor toward what makes North Mason special, the Salmon Center location makes perfect sense — you’re literally surrounded by it. The Theler Wetlands trail system, the salmon education programs, Hood Canal’s watershed — it’s all right there.

    This is also well-timed with the Theler Wetlands boardwalk project, which is scheduled for summer 2026 construction. The project will build an elevated piling-supported boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees, reconnecting the full estuary trail loop for hikers, birders, and families. The Salmon Center and the wetlands trail system will effectively anchor a genuinely destination-worthy nature corridor in the heart of Belfair.

    Why Both of These Matter for North Mason

    A library is where Belfair’s kids do homework, where adults job-search and access government services, and where the community meets. A visitor center is where North Mason makes its first impression on newcomers and travelers. Having both upgraded and repositioned in the same spring is a signal that North Mason’s community infrastructure is moving forward — even when the bigger headlines are harder.

    If you want to stay current on the library reopening date, follow the North Mason Timberland Library on Facebook or check trl.org/locations/north-mason/ for the latest. For the visitor center, check northmasonchamber.com.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When will the North Mason Timberland Library reopen?

    The expected reopening window is May or June 2026. Timberland Regional Library will announce the exact date on trl.org and the library’s Facebook page when confirmed.

    Where can I pick up library holds while the library is closed?

    Temporary services are available at the Mason Transit Authority building at 25250 SR 3 in Belfair, Tuesday–Friday 10 AM–6 PM. You can also have holds transferred to any open Timberland Regional Library branch.

    Can I still access e-books and digital content during the closure?

    Yes. All digital lending through Libby, the TRL website, and online catalog remain available. Your library card works for all digital services at trl.org.

    Where exactly is the new Chamber visitor center going?

    The Pacific Northwest Salmon Center, 600 NE Roessel Rd, Belfair WA 98528. This is adjacent to the Mary E. Theler Wetlands trailhead — one of North Mason’s most scenic natural sites.

    When will the Chamber visitor center open?

    The Chamber has secured funding and is in the setup phase. Planned hours are noon–5 PM, five days a week. Check northmasonchamber.com for the confirmed opening date.

    What is the Theler Wetlands boardwalk project?

    Summer 2026 construction will add an elevated boardwalk in the footprint of removed levees at the Mary E. Theler Wetlands, reconnecting the full estuary trail loop. The project is being led by Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (PNW Salmon Center) in partnership with WDFW and other partners.


    Related from Belfair Bugle: Original library coverage: Belfair Business Pulse April 8, 2026 | Resident guide: Library services during the remodel | Sweetwater Creek Waterwheel Park opens near Theler Wetlands

  • North Mason Residents: Complete Guide to Library Services During the Belfair Remodel (and What’s Coming to Theler)

    North Mason Residents: Complete Guide to Library Services During the Belfair Remodel (and What’s Coming to Theler)

    North Mason Residents: Your Complete Guide to Library Services During the Belfair Remodel

    The North Mason Timberland Library is getting the refresh it’s needed for decades — and the good news is that temporary services are running smoothly while you wait. Here’s everything a Belfair-area resident needs to know to keep reading, learning, and accessing services through the spring.

    Where to Go Right Now

    The North Mason Timberland Library at 23081 NE SR 3, Belfair, is closed through at least May — reopen date expected in May or June 2026. During the closure, in-person services are available at the Mason Transit Authority building at 25250 SR 3, Belfair (just off the SR-3 roundabout near Belfair Town Center).

    Temporary library hours: Tuesday–Friday, 10 AM–6 PM

    At the temporary location you can:

    • Pick up holds you’ve placed online
    • Return items
    • Access printing services
    • Browse a small physical collection
    • Get help from library staff

    What’s Available Online 24/7

    Your North Mason library card gives you full access to Timberland Regional Library’s digital services any time, from anywhere:

    • Libby app — thousands of e-books and audiobooks to borrow free
    • TRL online catalog at trl.org — browse and place holds at any branch
    • Digital magazines through Libby and TRL’s digital partners
    • Streaming and research databases — check trl.org for the full list

    Don’t have a library card? You can get a digital card online at trl.org without visiting a branch in person.

    What’s Being Renovated — And Why It Matters

    The North Mason library is getting new paint, new flooring, new furniture, and a completely redesigned children’s area. Library officials noted the building had “a lot of stuff that hasn’t been touched or cleaned for 30 years.” This isn’t a superficial refresh — it’s a genuine reinvestment in a building that serves the whole North Mason community.

    The project is coming in under budget, per Timberland Regional Library Director of Operations Brenda Lane. The under-budget finish means no scope cuts and no extended timeline due to cost overruns. That’s good news for an early reopening.

    The New Chamber Visitor Center — Coming to Theler

    While the library is being refreshed, another community resource is taking shape nearby. The North Mason Chamber of Commerce is setting up a visitor center at the Pacific Northwest Salmon Center, 600 NE Roessel Rd — right next to the Mary E. Theler Wetlands trailhead.

    Planned hours are noon–5 PM, five days a week. The $45,000 project includes part-time staffing to help residents and visitors get oriented to North Mason’s parks, trails, businesses, and amenities. If you’ve ever wanted a single place to send people to understand what North Mason is all about, the Salmon Center location — surrounded by the Theler Wetlands and Hood Canal watershed — is exactly right.

    And this summer, the Theler Wetlands itself gets a major upgrade: a new elevated boardwalk will be built in the footprint of the removed levees, reconnecting the full estuary trail loop. It’s one of the most scenic walks in Mason County — and it’s about to get even better.

    How to Stay Updated

    • Library reopening: Follow North Mason Timberland Library on Facebook, or check trl.org/locations/north-mason/ for the confirmed date
    • Chamber visitor center opening: northmasonchamber.com
    • Theler Wetlands boardwalk project: pnwsalmoncenter.org/theler-wetlands-restoration-project

    Frequently Asked Questions for North Mason Library Users

    Can I still get books delivered to the North Mason area during the closure?

    Yes. Place holds online through trl.org, and choose pickup at the temporary Mason Transit location (25250 SR 3, Belfair) or at another open TRL branch if that’s more convenient for you.

    What if I have overdue items or fines?

    Timberland Regional Library eliminated fines for most materials years ago. Return items to the temporary location or any open TRL branch — no late fees for standard items.

    I have a young child — is the temporary location good for storytime or kids’ programs?

    The temporary location is a smaller space and not set up for programming in the same way the main library is. Check trl.org/locations/north-mason/ for any scheduled children’s programs at the temporary location. Full family programming will resume at the renovated library when it reopens.

    Can I walk to the Theler Wetlands from the Salmon Center visitor center?

    Yes — the PNW Salmon Center at 600 NE Roessel Rd is the gateway to the Theler Wetlands trail system. The trails are free, open to the public, and one of the best birding and walking spots in North Mason. Summer 2026 construction will add the new boardwalk loop.

    Is the Discover Pass required for the Theler Wetlands?

    The Mary E. Theler Wetlands is managed by the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (PNW Salmon Center), not Washington State Parks. There is no Discover Pass required to access the Theler Wetlands trail system.


    Related from Belfair Bugle: Belfair library remodel and new Chamber visitor center at Theler — full story | Community spotlight: Sweetwater Creek Waterwheel Park at Belfair

  • Hood Canal Shellfish Season 2026: New Rules, Open Beaches, and What North Mason Harvesters Need to Know

    Hood Canal Shellfish Season 2026: New Rules, Open Beaches, and What North Mason Harvesters Need to Know



    Spring on Hood Canal means one thing above everything else: it’s time to get your feet wet, your hands dirty, and your bucket full. The 2026 shellfish season is open along Hood Canal — but this year, the rules have changed, and knowing what’s different before you head to the beach could save you a citation and protect the resource that makes this place special.

    The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife updated its recreational shellfish regulations effective April 1, 2026, and two changes matter most for Hood Canal harvesters. First, the minimum size for cockles is now 2½ inches — up from the previous 1½-inch minimum. If you’re measuring cockles at the beach, take that extra moment; undersized cockles go back in the water. Second, the daily limit for geoduck has dropped to one per person per day, down from three. Geoduck beds recover slowly, and WDFW made this call to protect long-term populations in the intertidal zones most accessible to recreational harvesters.

    These aren’t minor tweaks. If you haven’t updated your shellfish knowledge since last season, read this before you go.

    Where to Go Right Now: Potlatch Is Open

    Potlatch State Park — about 12 miles north of Belfair on Hood Canal — is one of the best public shellfish beaches on the canal, and it’s open for clams, mussels, and oysters through May 31. The beach at Potlatch has excellent oyster beds near the highway stretch and extensive Manila clam habitat across the tide flats. Native littleneck clams are present throughout. You’ll need a valid Washington shellfish license (available at WDFW Go Fish Washington online or at local retailers) and a Discover Pass for the parking lot.

    Timing matters: low tide is your friend. Check the NOAA tide tables for Hood Canal before you go — the best harvesting windows are during minus or very low tides that expose the full intertidal zone.

    One important note for Hood Canal harvesters: Dosewallips State Park — a popular spot further up the canal in Jefferson County — is closed to all clams, mussels, and oysters in 2026 under the new WDFW regulations. If Dosewallips was your go-to beach, Potlatch is your best alternative in the region.

    Always Check Biotoxins Before You Go

    This cannot be overstated: marine biotoxins are the silent hazard of shellfish harvesting in Hood Canal. Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) and domoic acid contamination are real risks in these waters, and they cannot be detected by smell, appearance, or cooking. A beach that was safe last week may be closed this week.

    Before every trip — every single time — check the Washington State Department of Health Biotoxin Safety Map at doh.wa.gov/ShellfishSafety.htm or call the DOH Biotoxin Hotline at 1-800-562-5632. Mason County has experienced Hood Canal biotoxin closures in past seasons. The current status changes with water conditions, so bookmark the page and check it same-day.

    Tahuya State Forest: Trail Update Before You Pack the Bikes

    If your spring outdoor plans include Tahuya State Forest — and for North Mason families, they probably do — know that portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail remain temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge. The rest of the Tahuya trail system remains open for ORV riding, mountain biking, and hiking, including the main OHV network. Check the Washington DNR website at dnr.wa.gov/GreenMountainTahuya for current closure details before loading the truck. Discover Pass required for parking at most trailheads.

    The Theler Wetlands: A New Trail Loop Is Coming

    This summer, the Mary E. Theler Wetlands will undergo a transformation that’s been years in the making. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), in partnership with WDFW, is constructing a 1,200-foot elevated piling-support boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees — fully reconnecting the estuary trail loop that was broken when the old levee system was removed as part of the Union River estuary restoration project.

    The restoration work targets habitat for Hood Canal summer chum salmon, listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. When the boardwalk is complete, visitors to the Theler Wetlands will have a connected loop trail that takes them across the restored estuary — a genuinely rare ecological experience right in Belfair’s backyard. Expect some construction activity in the preserve this summer, but the main trail sections remain open.

    Belfair State Park: Reserve Your Spot Now

    Belfair State Park’s Tree Loop campground — the tent camping section right where Little Mission Creek meets Hood Canal — opens for 2026 reservations on May 15. The Tree Loop has about 60 sites and is limited to rigs 18 feet or shorter, making it a tent and small camper area. It books up fast for summer weekends. Make your reservation at washington.goingtocamp.com the moment the window opens. Season runs May 15 through September 15.

    For Hood Canal day use, Belfair State Park remains one of the most accessible spots in North Mason for families — swimming, kayak launches, and the warm, shallow waters that Hood Canal is famous for in summer.

    Your Outdoor Season Checklist

    • Shellfish license: Required for all harvest over age 15. Buy online at fishhunt.dfw.wa.gov or at local sporting goods retailers.
    • Discover Pass: Required at Potlatch, Tahuya, and Belfair State Park parking areas. $30/year or $11.50/day at licensing agents or discoverypass.wa.gov.
    • Biotoxin check: Every trip, same day — doh.wa.gov/ShellfishSafety.htm or 1-800-562-5632.
    • New 2026 rules: Cockle minimum 2½ inches; geoduck limit 1/person/day.
    • Tahuya Howell Lake Loop: Partially closed — washed-out bridge. Check dnr.wa.gov for current status.
    • Belfair State Park Tree Loop: Reservations open May 15 at washington.goingtocamp.com.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What changed in Hood Canal shellfish rules for 2026?

    Two key changes took effect April 1, 2026: the minimum harvest size for cockles increased from 1½ inches to 2½ inches, and the daily limit for geoduck dropped from three per person to one per person. These changes apply statewide, including Hood Canal beaches.

    Where can I dig clams near Belfair in 2026?

    Potlatch State Park, about 12 miles north of Belfair on Hood Canal, is the closest and best public shellfish beach. Clam, mussel, and oyster season runs April 1 through May 31. A shellfish license and Discover Pass are required. Always verify the beach is open for biotoxins before harvesting — check doh.wa.gov/ShellfishSafety.htm.

    Is Dosewallips open for shellfish in 2026?

    No. Dosewallips State Park is closed to all clams, mussels, and oysters in 2026 under new WDFW regulations. Potlatch State Park is the recommended alternative for Hood Canal area harvesters.

    How do I check if Hood Canal shellfish beaches are open for biotoxins?

    Check the Washington State DOH Shellfish Safety Map at doh.wa.gov/ShellfishSafety.htm or call the Biotoxin Hotline at 1-800-562-5632. Check same-day before every harvesting trip — biotoxin status can change quickly with water conditions.

    Is the Howell Lake Loop Trail open at Tahuya State Forest?

    Portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail are temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge as of spring 2026. The rest of the Tahuya State Forest trail system remains open. Check current conditions at dnr.wa.gov/GreenMountainTahuya before your visit.

    When does Belfair State Park Tree Loop open for reservations in 2026?

    Reservations for the Tree Loop campground at Belfair State Park open May 15, 2026 at washington.goingtocamp.com. The season runs May 15 through September 15. Sites are limited to rigs 18 feet or shorter.

    Can I harvest shellfish on private Hood Canal shoreline?

    Recreational harvest from private tidelands you own or have permission to access may be subject to the same WDFW rules including the new 2026 size and bag limits, plus DOH biotoxin status requirements. Contact WDFW or review the annual shellfish regulations pamphlet for specifics on private tidelands access.

    Sources: WDFW 2026 Shellfish Regulations; WDFW Potlatch State Park Beach Page; WDFW Camas-Washougal Post-Record Feb 2026 proposed rule changes; WA DNR Green Mountain and Tahuya State Forest; HCSEG/WDFW Union River Estuary Restoration Project; WA State Parks Belfair State Park; WA DOH Biotoxin Information.

  • Hood Canal Shellfish Season Opens with New 2026 Rules — Tahuya Trail Closure and What’s Coming This Summer

    Hood Canal Shellfish Season Opens with New 2026 Rules — Tahuya Trail Closure and What’s Coming This Summer

    Spring is here and so is shellfish season along Hood Canal! If you’re heading out to dig clams or harvest oysters, take note of the new 2026 rules that kicked in April 1 — the minimum size for cockles is now 2½ inches, and geoduck limits have dropped to one per person per day. Potlatch State Park’s clam, mussel, and oyster season is open through May 31, so grab your shellfish license and your Discover Pass and get out there.

    Over at Tahuya State Forest, heads up that portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail remain temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge. Plenty of other trails are open for ORV riding, mountain biking, and hiking — just stick to marked routes and remember your Discover Pass.

    Looking ahead, the Theler Wetlands trail system is getting a major upgrade this summer. Construction begins on a new pedestrian boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees, fully reconnecting the estuary trail loop. And Belfair State Park’s Tree Loop campground opens for reservations May 15 — start planning those summer weekends on the water.

    • Shellfish 2026 Rule Changes (April 1): Cockle minimum size 2½ inches; geoduck limit 1/person/day
    • Potlatch State Park shellfish season: Open through May 31
    • Tahuya Howell Lake Loop: Partial closure — bridge washout; other trails open
    • Theler Wetlands boardwalk: Construction starting summer 2026
    • Belfair State Park Tree Loop: Reservations open May 15
  • Belfair Business Pulse: Library Remodel Nearly Done, Chamber Opens New Visitor Center — Belfair Bugle

    Belfair Business Pulse: Library Remodel Nearly Done, Chamber Opens New Visitor Center — Belfair Bugle

    Big things are happening in Belfair — and your library is getting a fresh start.

    The North Mason Timberland Library remodel is nearly done and coming in under budget. The library closed back in January for a full interior refresh — new paint, flooring, furniture, and a completely reimagined children’s area designed to be more welcoming for families. Timberland Regional Library reports the project is on track to reopen this spring, likely by May or June. In the meantime, hold pickups, printing, and a small browsing collection are still available at the Mason Transit Authority building off the roundabout on SR 3 (25250 SR 3, Belfair, Tue–Fri 10am–6pm).

    Meanwhile, the North Mason Chamber of Commerce is setting up a brand-new visitor center at the Salmon Center near the Theler Wetlands — a beautiful spot that showcases exactly what makes North Mason special. The Chamber received $45,000 in funding this year to make it happen, and plans to have part-time staff there five days a week. If you haven’t visited the Salmon Center yet, you’ll have another great reason to soon.

    Business & Community Updates

    • North Mason Timberland Library (23081 NE SR 3, Belfair): Remodel nearly complete, under budget. Reopening expected May or June 2026. Temporary services at Mason Transit Authority building (25250 SR 3, Tue–Fri 10am–6pm).
    • North Mason Chamber Visitor Center: Moving to PNW Salmon Center, 600 NE Roessel Rd, Belfair. $45,000 in 2026 funding secured. Part-time staffing planned noon–5pm, five days/week.

    Sources: Mason County Journal (April 2 and March 19, 2026), Timberland Regional Library, North Mason Chamber of Commerce

  • Outdoor Recreation Update: New Shellfish Rules, Potlatch Season & Trail Alerts — Belfair Bugle

    Outdoor Recreation Update: New Shellfish Rules, Potlatch Season & Trail Alerts — Belfair Bugle

    Spring is here and so is shellfish season along Hood Canal. If you’re heading out to dig clams or harvest oysters, take note of the new 2026 rules that kicked in April 1 — the minimum size for cockles is now 2½ inches, and geoduck limits have dropped to one per person per day. Potlatch State Park’s clam, mussel, and oyster season is open through May 31, so grab your shellfish license and your Discover Pass and get out there.

    Meanwhile over at Tahuya State Forest, heads up that portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail remain temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge. Plenty of other trails are open for ORV riding, mountain biking, and hiking — just stick to marked routes and remember your Discover Pass.

    Looking ahead, the Theler Wetlands trail system is getting a major upgrade this summer. Construction begins on a new pedestrian boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees, fully reconnecting the estuary trail loop. And Belfair State Park’s Tree Loop campground opens for reservations May 15 — start planning those summer weekends on the water.

    Key Outdoor Updates This Week

    • Shellfish rules: New 2026 WDFW regulations effective April 1 — cockle minimum 2½ inches, geoduck limit 1 per person/day
    • Potlatch State Park: Shellfish season open April 1–May 31 (clams, mussels, oysters)
    • Tahuya State Forest: Howell Lake Loop Trail partially closed — washed-out bridge. Other trails remain open.
    • Theler Wetlands: New pedestrian boardwalk construction coming summer 2026, reconnecting the full estuary loop
    • Belfair State Park: Tree Loop campground reservations open May 15

    Sources: WDFW Shellfish Regulations, WDFW Potlatch Beach Page, Trailforks Tahuya, AllTrails, WA State Parks, HCSEG Theler Restoration Project