Illahee Forest Preserve

Illahee Forest Preserve Protecting Nature. Preserving Legacy. Connecting Community. Join us as we steward this remarkable forest—for the wild, for the community, and for the future.

Our nonprofit organization works to safeguard wildlife habitat, maintain sustainable trails, support outdoor education, and ensure public access to in the Illahee Creek Watershed. Nestled in the heart of Kitsap County, the Illahee Forest Preserve is a 600-acre natural sanctuary and designated Heritage Park that protects an ecologically rich and diverse landscape. Our nonprofit organization is dedi

cated to conserving this irreplaceable land—home to towering conifers, pristine streams, wetlands, and rugged ravines. We work to safeguard wildlife habitat, maintain sustainable trails, support outdoor education, and ensure public access to a place of peace, discovery, and connection. Whether you're hiking beneath the canopy, volunteering with restoration efforts, or supporting a land acquisition campaign, you're helping protect a legacy that benefits generations to come.

05/06/2026

The second and final sponsored by Beneficial State Bank is tonight from 7:00 to 8:00 PM! They will award a $300 prize to four organizations (two small, one medium, and one large) with the most unique donors during that hour.

The four nonprofits that won earlier this morning are ineligible to win again, so this is your opportunity to help new participants finish at the top!



Track the standings: https://www.wagives.org/p/prizes

THIS IS IT: Donate now to help us reach our goal! DONATE NOW: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preser...
05/06/2026

THIS IS IT: Donate now to help us reach our goal!

DONATE NOW: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

From 7:00 to 8:00 p.m., your donation can go twice as far!
We have two huge opportunities happening TONIGHT:
1. The $300 Boost: The organization with the most unique donors this hour wins an extra $300 from Beneficial State Bank. Every single person who gives helps us win!
2. The $100 Bonus Prize: One random donor who gives this hour will be selected to choose a nonprofit to receive an additional $100. We’d love for that to be the Illahee Forest Preserve!

This is the final push to help us reach our $5,000 goal. We are fighting to protect the Illahee Creek watershed, the natural filter for our community’s drinking water.

Whether you give $5 or $500, you are a unique donor and you help us win. It’s up to us to show up for the land. Let’s finish strong!
DONATE NOW: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

Power Hour is here! Please donate some unique pledges for the Illahee Forest Preserve: https://www.wagives.org/organizat...
05/05/2026

Power Hour is here! Please donate some unique pledges for the Illahee Forest Preserve: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

Exciting news! Right now from 10:00 to 11:00 AM, Beneficial State Bank is awarding a $300 prize to the organizations with the most unique donors during the hour. There will be two winners from the Small category, one Medium winner, and one Large winner.

Help your favorite nonprofit win this prize by donating to them right now and encouraging your friends, family, neighbors, and co-workers to give alongside you. to make a difference in our communities!

Track the standings: https://www.wagives.org/p/prizes

Today is the day to  ! It’s official: GiveBIG is here, and it’s up to us to protect the Illahee Creek Watershed.This lan...
05/05/2026

Today is the day to !
It’s official: GiveBIG is here, and it’s up to us to protect the Illahee Creek Watershed.
This land is East Bremerton’s natural water filter. Every acre we protect recharges the aquifers that provide our community’s clean drinking water. Help us reach our goal of $5,000 to secure this vital resource.
Whether you give a little or a lot, every donation creates BIG change. Show up for the land. Show up for our water. Show up for the Illahee Forest Preserve.
DONATE NOW: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

05/05/2026

is officially underway! Today is the day to show up for nonprofits across Washington State that do critical work to ensure our communities can thrive. to support the organizations that serve the most vulnerable, educate our students, create art, protect our animals, steward the environment, and cultivate a stronger world.

Whether you give a little or a lot, every gift creates BIG change!

https://www.wagives.org

The Lessons of Hattie’s Way: Why We Must Protect the Illahee Creek WatershedDonate Here: https://www.wagives.org/organiz...
05/04/2026

The Lessons of Hattie’s Way: Why We Must Protect the Illahee Creek Watershed

Donate Here: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

By Laura K. Deckman, Illahee Forest Preserve

Growing up in West Bremerton, the most common phrase heard in our house wasn't about dinner or school. It was: “We’re going to the horses.” It happened daily, often twice a day. Horses don’t care if there is a deluge of Pacific Northwest rain or if snow has buried the roads, they have to eat, and we had to get there to feed them. For me and my sisters, “going to the horses” meant a trek to the East side, to a magical stretch of land owned by a woman who would change the course of our lives: Hattie Engstrom.

A Shared Sanctuary
My mother met Hattie when she was just a teenager looking for a place to board her horse, Diablo. By the time my sisters and I came along, the Rainwood property had become our second home. It was where I met my best friends: horses named Comanchee, Camelot War Chief, Rainwood Horizon, Amber, and Lucky.

While we tended the animals, Hattie and her brother, Elmer Elliott, were the quiet guardians of the landscape. Elmer lived just across the pond, and together, the two of them formed a perimeter of protection over the acreage. They ensured the pond and the woods remained the pristine sanctuary we were so lucky to share.

The Architect of Rainwood: Hattie’s Way
A widow who presided over this vast tract of land, Hattie was a force of nature. She was a conservationist long before the word was popular, believing that every leaf and drop of water mattered. She taught us that we could do anything. My mom still recounts seeing Hattie, well into her 80s, climbing onto her roof to clean it off herself. When asked why, she’d simply shrug: “It has to be done, so just do it.”
That iron-willed grit was balanced by a deep, creative kindness. On spring and summer days, we would find her on her front porch, a space framed by climbing wisteria and towering rhododendrons. Her constant companion, a little American Eskimo dog named Eskie, was always by her side.
Hattie’s "best friends" were the squirrels, deer, raccoons, and foxes that lived on the property. Between chores, she would paint these forest creatures on rocks or capture the landscape on canvas. In the kitchen, that same creativity turned into care. Every holiday, Hattie would bake her famous haystack cookies and tuck them away in the grain barrel for us. A sweet, silent message that she was looking out for us while we worked. That was “Hattie’s Way.”

A Refuge in the Storm
On the coldest winter nights, the work was grueling. We filled giant jugs with hot water at home and lugged them across the frozen property to the wells, pouring the steaming water down the hand pumps just to prime them so the horses could drink.Once our hands were numb, Hattie’s house was our refuge. I’d retreat to her kitchen and sit on a small stool with a pink crocheted top, thawing out by the wood stove with my sisters while Hattie and my mom chatted about life.
In those moments, we were just kids finding warmth after a long day’s work. We didn't realize that the frozen pond where we caught frogs in the summer, or the steep slopes we trekked in the winter, made up one of the most vital ecosystems in Kitsap County. We were simply living out the philosophy Hattie modeled every day: that nature isn't something to be conquered or used up, but something to be protected.

The Vision: A Watershed Park and Living Classroom
Today, the Illahee Forest Preserve is fighting to ensure this lifelong work isn't undone. The acquisition of the Rainwood property is the cornerstone of our mission to create a permanent Watershed Park.
This land is a massive natural recharge station. Its steep terrain captures rainfall and pulls it deep into the earth to recharge the underground aquifers, the reservoirs that provide the drinking water for our homes. Today, the lead instructors of this 'station' are a colony of beavers. By building dams across the pond’s outlets, these beavers act as natural engineers. Their work forces the water to slow down and spread out, allowing it to seep deep through the hardened ground. This 'slow water' filters as it travels, eventually replenishing the underground aquifers that provide the very drinking water our community relies on.
In our Living Classroom, this process will become a hands-on lesson. Students will stand at the pond’s edge and see 'Hattie’s Way' in action, learning that the forest, the beavers, and the water in our taps are all one connected story.

Now is the Time: GiveBIG for Illahee
Hattie taught us that if something needs to be done, you “just do it.” Protecting our water for the next generation needs to be done—but it’s on all of us to make a difference.
The Illahee Forest Preserve works every day to steward this environment, educate our students, and protect the wildlife that calls these ravines home. We are facing an unprecedented time when the support needed to preserve these critical spaces is in danger.
GiveBIG is officially on May 5th, but you don't have to wait. Early giving is open now.
Now is the time to rise up. Now is the time to show up for this land and the legacy Hattie left behind. Whether you give a little or a lot, every donation to the Illahee Forest Preserve creates BIG change for our watershed.
Discover and donate to our mission during GiveBIG at: https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

Help us keep the promise. Your support today protects our water tomorrow.

05/01/2026

Looking for a simple way to get outside, give back, and spend time with your people? This is it. Grab your friends, bring the family, invite a neighbor, and join us for a morning at the park.

📍 Island Lake Park (1087 NW Island Lake Road, Poulsbo WA 98370)
🗓 Saturday, May 16
⏰ 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM

We’ll be focusing on general clean-up and weeding to help keep Island Lake Park looking its best. Parks staff will provide all tools, just show up ready to lend a hand.

What to bring:
• Water and snacks
• Comfortable clothes and sturdy shoes
• Layers for the weather
• Anyone you want to spend a couple good hours with

Whether you stay the whole time or just drop in, every little bit helps. It’s a great way to connect with your community and take care of a place we all share.

👉 Learn more about volunteering: Click the LINK IN BIO

Let’s take care of this place together 💚

GIVE BIG FOR ILLAHEEMay 5 | Early Giving Open Nowhttps://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-PreserveNonprofits ...
05/01/2026

GIVE BIG FOR ILLAHEE
May 5 | Early Giving Open Now
https://www.wagives.org/organization/Illahee-Forest-Preserve

Nonprofits across Washington need us more than ever. Now is the time to rise up and show up.

Support the Illahee Forest Preserve and help protect vital forest, preserve the Illahee Creek Watershed, and connect our community to nature for generations to come.

Every gift creates BIG change.

Give today or mark your calendar for May 5

Protect Nature. Preserve Legacy. Connect Community.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vwSaRbxPU_I
12/16/2025

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vwSaRbxPU_I

The Illahee Preserve is a rare, thriving wild place in the heart of Kitsap County. It spans 600 acres of mature forest, ravines, wetlands, and the Illahee C...

🌲 Your Gift Will Be DOUBLED! 🌲Through Giving Tuesday, December 2, every donation to the Illahee Forest Preserve will be ...
11/22/2025

🌲 Your Gift Will Be DOUBLED! 🌲
Through Giving Tuesday, December 2, every donation to the Illahee Forest Preserve will be matched dollar-for-dollar up to $100,000 thanks to Jen and Mike Rudinsky!
Your support helps us secure the Rainwood property, including Parcel Three with its urgent Dec. 15, 2025 deadline - ensuring the protection of its natural habitats, wildlife, and vital ecological systems.
💚 Give today. Double your impact. Protect the future of the Illahee Preserve.
👉 https://www.illaheeforestpreserve.org/donate

Address

5474 Almira Drive NE
Bremerton, WA
98311

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