Press Release

July 22, 2024

Power Paddle to Puyallup Youth Canoe Journey 2024 stopover in Birch Bay State Park

Media contact

Name Sarah Fronk
Department Communications
Email media@parks.wa.gov

BLAINE – The Nooksack Indian Tribe will welcome canoe families today at Birch Bay State Park. The landing is a stopover on the Power Paddle to Puyallup Youth Canoe Journey.

As many as eight canoes, each carrying up to 30 people, will ask the host Tribe permission to come ashore. Canoe landings will occur throughout the day on the beach at Birch Bay by the Heron Center log building.

Parking in front of the Heron Center will be reserved for Tribal Elders and visitors with a disability placard. The parking lot north of the Heron Center will be reserved for additional parking for Tribal families. Special camping accommodations have also been made for canoe families around the park.

Visitors to the park should expect and plan for increased traffic congestion, limited parking and crowds. In support and partnership with the Tribes, Parks staff are responsible for the park logistics and will have staff and signage available to help direct traffic. If you have questions or are not sure where to go, ask uniformed Parks staff.

How to share the park during Canoe Journey

Canoe Journey is a sacred ceremony.  State Parks asks the public to support by respectfully observing while visiting Birch Bay State Park today.

During the canoe landing, please follow these guidelines to respectfully share the space:

  • Pay attention to what is happening and step back to allow space for this to be about the Indigenous people.
  • Listen and observe. Do not interrupt preparations or ceremony to ask questions. Please visit the information booth instead.
  • Be quiet and respectful. Don’t talk during a prayer, when an Elder is talking or, when a canoe family is requesting permission to come ashore.
  • Avoid swearing, speaking loudly, or speaking in degrading ways.
  • Do not touch the canoes unless you are invited to do so by those.

The Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission is honored to lift the voices of the Indigenous People who will gather for the Power Paddle to Puyallup Youth Canoe Journey. Though State Parks is the current steward of some of these lands, these have been Indigenous lands since time immemorial. As an Indigenous ally, State Parks is privileged to use its platform to share these stories in partnership with the Tribes.