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Keevin Collier and Dishaun Berry of the Get Hooked Foundation drop off eggs with Michelle Tursi at Butler Creek Elementary’s festive salmon station. Credit: Butler Creek Elementary Schoo

Hatching a Plan for Salmon Stewardship

By Grace Peterman, Education & Outreach Coordinator with NWF and ANWS
November 23, 2022


This article was originally published on National Wildlife Federation’s Blog and is copied here for reference.

O n a gray, drizzly morning at the end of October, a small fleet of volunteers departed the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (ODFW) forested campus. Each carried a cooler with hundreds of precious passengers: Chinook salmon eggs, tenderly wrapped in moist towels, destined to delight students across Portland.

It was Egg Delivery Day — a fall event that volunteers and students alike look forward to all year. Our Fish Eggs to Fry volunteers, with different backgrounds, professions, and ages, came together on October 25th united by a single purpose: spreading passion for salmon conservation.

Left: Volunteer Coordinator Grace Peterman and ODFW STEP Biologist John Cox distribute eggs to volunteers, kept in coolers in damp washcloths for transport. Credit: Morgan Parks/NWF Staff. Right: NWF Oregon welcomes 200 spring Chinook salmon eggs to their office in Sandy. Credit: Morgan Parks/NWF Staff.
Fish Eggs to Fry, an educational program of ODFW, brings salmon and trout eggs to 700+ Oregon classrooms each year. In the Portland area alone, nearly 150 classrooms participated this fall — more so than ever before in the program’s 20+ year history. The National Wildlife Federation and the Association of Northwest Steelheaders partner with ODFW to coordinate volunteers to deliver eggs and provide training and educational resources from the Eco-Schools USA Salmon Stewards program — funded by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde for the last several years through the Spirit Mountain Community Fund.
3rd graders at Clackamas River Elementary are excited to receive their small salmon guests from Morgan Parks, NWF Staff. Credit: Angel Rutherford
By participating in salmon development in the classroom, students gain an early appreciation for one of our state’s most significant keystone species. Students and educators attend to the needs of salmon eggs as they hatch into alevin, before releasing them into local waterways at the fry stage. In the process, students of all grade levels transform into scientists in their own classroom laboratories, performing water quality tests to ensure the health and wellbeing of the salmon. Educators integrate the program into classroom curriculum in a myriad of ways, teaching students about human impacts on salmon habitat, cultural significance of the species for Native and Indigenous Peoples, and the love and empathy we grow through creating art about wildlife.
“Bringing the next generation of salmon to the next generation of stewards was very rewarding.” - Steve Herff, Confluence AmeriCorps Member
Students at Welches Elementary view the eggs with curiosity. “They look like Orbeez,” said many students. Credit: Nancy Blaesing

Volunteers underpin the program's success, setting up aquarium equipment, delivering eggs to schools, and providing classroom presentations and field trip assistance. On Fall 2022 Egg Delivery Day, 28 volunteers delivered 18,000 eggs to 90 schools across the Portland area and beyond, impacting the lives of some 7,000 students.

Volunteers represented ODFW, the Tualatin Valley Chapter of the NW Steelheaders, the Sandy River Chapter of NW Steelheaders, Get Hooked Foundation, Fishers of Men, Clackamas River Trout Unlimited, and Confluence Environmental Center. “Bringing the next generation of salmon to the next generation of stewards was very rewarding,” said volunteer Steve Herff on Egg Delivery Day. “Seeing how the next generation can take the reins and carry us to a better tomorrow was inspiring.”

We are grateful to these partners, our volunteers, and to the salmon and trout themselves who make Fish Eggs to Fry possible. By allowing students to develop a personal relationship with these species through a hands-on learning experience, we can spark a lifelong commitment to wildlife conservation in the next generation. In the words of Baba Dioum, “In the end, we will conserve only what we love; we will love only what we understand, and we will understand only what we are taught.” 

Check out @NWFOregon’s Facebook page for more photos from Egg Delivery Day!


Volunteers are the backbone of Fish Eggs to Fry, going the distance to get eggs into classrooms. Credit: ODFW Staff

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