OUR HISTORY
From 12,000 BC to 1999
Most of our 175-acre site is a glacial outwash prairie, created when the glaciers receded 10-12,000 years ago. The melting waters flowed over this site creating swales and peaks as well as rifts and nearby kettles. Our L-shaped property has forests on each end - but the center - approximately 135 acres - became prairie. This prairie was protected and enhanced anthropomorphically - that is, under the direct and active management of skilled ecologists, the Coast Salish people. They used fire as a management tool, and selectively harvested flora and fauna - leaving their footprint and creating an interdependence between their cultural systems and the natural world. When Euro-American settlers arrived on Whidbey Island, the prairie where PRI is today was used as pasture for farm animals. In 1945 the land was turned into a Washington State game farm when Whidbey Island Department of Game purchased the site from private landowners for $15,000. They constructed nearly 70 building and erected pheasant pens and runs with a 50 acre footprint. The State raised pheasants until selling the property in 1999.
Au Sable on the Farm (1999-2008)
Since 1980 Au Sable Institute (ASI) has offered upper-level courses for students from more than 50 affiliated North American Christian Colleges and universities. In 1997, ASI, led by Dr. Cal DeWitt, established their second campus, the Pacific Rim Campus located at Seattle Pacific University's Camp Casey. The largest native prairie remnant remaining on Whidbey Island (about 4.5-acre) was discovered the same year on the Game Farm property by the leaders of Whidbey Environmental Action Network (WEAN), Marianne Edain and Steve Erickson. When Rob Harbor, Ebey’s Landing National Historical Reserve Executive Director, learned that Au Sable was looking for property to purchase for their new campus, he notified Dr. Cal DeWitt that the 175-acre Washington State Game Farm south of Coupeville was being listed for sale. When ASI expressed strong interest in the game farm, a bill was passed by the Washington State Legislature that the game farm property could only be sold to a non-profit organization for the price that Washington Fish and Game was over-budget - $700,000. The sale to ASI was finalized 18 June 1999. Cal DeWitt and the Island County Planning Department agreed to a master site plan for the 175-acres and established a new zoning category, the Special Review District (SRD). This greatly limited the development potential - the land having been surveyed earlier for subdivision and houses. Greenbank Farm is the only other SRD in Island County. The master site plan also carried the signature of Seattle’s City Planner.
Getting Settled
The remodeling of the game farm buildings employed energy efficient, sustainable technology designed by Cal DeWitt. The adaptive reuse design was accepted by Ebey’s Landing National Historic Reserve Trust Board to maintain the outward appearance of the buildings and to maximize their internal usefulness. Imagine converting a barn with a dirt floor into offices and classrooms with bathrooms and kitchen, no less! The construction was supervised by Mr. Bob Barr of ASI who lived onsite for a year. The Pacific Rim program moved to the newly restored buildings in 2001. Sheilagh Byler, a former graduate student of Cal DeWitt was hired as the first Director of the Pacific Rim campus and remained in that capacity until Robert Pelant replaced her as Program Director in 2005. Robert started community educational opportunities such as lectures, guided tours of the prairie restoration work, guided bird walks, building bluebird nest boxes in a Coupeville grade school classroom along with their installation at PRI and other outreach programs. Mary Owens, the office manager, played a major role in these early years by implementing strong organizational procedures.
Golden Paintbrush
Initially restoration and research focused heavily on the Golden Paintbrush which was formally listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act in 1997. Only ten small populations remained, eight in Washington and two in British Columbia. The only known populations of the Golden Paintbrush on Whidbey Island were a few small ones on the west bluffs. In 2002, the first out-plantings of Golden Paintbrush plants in the north Puget Sound area happened on the PRI native prairie remnant. More out plantings followed: 100 plants in 2006, 991 plugs in 2007, 1030 plus in 2010. Those small beginnings resulted in recent annual population counts on site of over 40,000 plants! Other recovery efforts included expanding the footprint of the original prairie remnant and identifying 60 species of native prairie plants. Because the oak-savannah ecosystem is also a highly endangered ecosystem in the Pacific Northwest, out-planting of small oak trees began just south of the north forest and in the SW area of the open grassland.
Saving Pacific Rim
The downturn of the economy in 2008 forced ASI to consider selling both their campuses. Employees at the Pacific Rim Campus received a letter of termination in 2008. A strong coalition of instructors who had taught at both ASI campuses as well as affiliated colleges and student alumni protested. Locally, a proposal for a separate entity, initially named Pacific Rim Stewards, compiled by Robert Pelant, Randy Van Dragt, and Joe Sheldon was presented to the ASI board by Robert Pelant. After the first financial plan proposal was denied, a subsequent plan was accepted including approval that a new 501(c)(3) organization be formed to take over the management of the ASI’s Pacific Rim Campus until the new organization could raise sufficient funds to purchase the property. The ASI board reversed their decision to sell the Michigan campus which has grown and continues today as a partner organization with PRI
Pacific Rim Institute
The official 501(c)(3) nonprofit, the Pacific Rim Institute for Environmental Stewardship (PRI) was formed in 2009. With the approval of ASI’s board, the management of the campus and program was given to the new non-profit also allowing PRI time to raise sufficient funds to complete the land purchase from ASI. This effort was led jointly by Dr. Robert Pelant, founding CEO, and the founding board comprised of Dr. Randy Van Dragt, Chair, Dr. Joseph Sheldon, Vice Chair, Dr. Kathleen Braden, Secretary, Mr. Jim Theel, Treasurer, Dr, Hessel (Bud) Bouma, Mr., Rick Baugh, and Representative Norma Smith.
ASI worked cooperatively with PRI for the next several years until the final purchase of the property was completed in 2015. A Memorandum of Understanding between ASI and PRI assured continuation of up to six college classes on the PRI campus until 2043.
The prairie restoration work continued with a major focus on the golden paintbrush. Significant federal grants through the USFWS and USDA NRCS were obtained to facilitate much of the work. By 2023, the PRI campus population of golden paintbrush exceeded 40,000 plants and was a major factor in its removal from the Endangered Species List the same year. Current prairie restoration work has expanded to an additional 20 acres. Off-campus restoration sites include the Navy base, Protection Island, San Juan islands, and Ebey’s overlook near Sunnyside Cemetery.
PRI continues to serve as a role model in sustainable living with the addition of an expansive solar array, a regional seismic (earthquake) detection site, a University of Washington weather station, and workshops for the local community on fruit tree grafting and pruning, bird protection and other subjects. The educational program includes community lectures, local school interactions, and continued offering of courses for Au Sable Institute during the summer. Current programs continue to evolve with new subjects and activities regularly added.
Robert Pelant’s efforts to connect with the local tribes were significant as they returned to this piece of historic land and garden, an important part of their roots, to celebrate their cultural history with their youth. That partnership continues to expand.
Dr. Robert Pelant retired at the end of 2023. The new Executive Director, Dr Forrest Inslee joined the PRI team on 15 April 2024, continuing the current effort to protect the 175-acres with a conservation easement and the ongoing work to maintain and expand programs which enhance the lives of those living on Whidbey Island and beyond.