Washington is paradise to different people for different reasons, many related to nature. Among these is the state’s offerings for sublime motorless boating.Two examples: The Lower Columbia River Water Trail (http://www.columbiawatertrail.org) stretches 146 miles from Bonneville Dam to the Pacific Ocean. And the Cascadia Marine Trail (http://www.wwta.org) is similar in length, 140 miles of magnificent paddling from Olympia to the Canadian border.
Several local officials want to get in on the action. They’re broke, at least when it comes to water trail development, but that destitution might be only temporary. And it hasn’t stopped them from dreaming. As Erik Hidle reported in Wednesday’s Columbian, Vancouver-Clark Parks and Recreation planner Jean Akers met earlier this month with city officials from La Center, Ridgefield, Vancouver and Woodland to discuss an official 32-mile water trail from the Lewis River in Woodland to Vancouver Lake.
Kudos to all involved for the forward thinking. Using existing waterways, the trail “development” at first would involve little more than signs designating the official route, but with a properly aimed marketing campaign, a water trail could become a tourist attraction. Later, more than 30 water-access improvements could be made, some with Americans with Disabilities Act upgrades, perhaps even involving land acquisitions.
But now we’re getting ahead of ourselves and we’re certainly getting ahead of the budget, which is nonexistent. But it’s not too early to start planning. We suspect the Lower Columbia River and Cascadia water trails began without budgets, but a quick visit to either website will show how those two dreams became glittering realities.