Jack Island Preserve Stewardship Projects

An island family donated the 18-acre Jack Island to the San Juan Preservation Trust in 2007. While the island is undeveloped and hosts a wide variety of wildlife, it also is home to a very thick undergrowth of invasive plants including English ivy (Hedera helix), English holly (Ilex aquifolium) and English laurel (Prunus laurocerasus). The Preservation Trust has relied on dedicated volunteers and crews from the Washington Conservation Corps (WCC) to systematically remove these plants to reduce the threat these invasives pose to our native flora. While we have made some significant progress, this eradication effort will need to continue for many years into the future.

See recent stewardship project updates

Learn more about the history of Jack Island Preserve

A WCC crew member hacks away at ivy choking a cedar
A WCC crew member hacks
away at ivy choking a cedar
Dead ivy: Ivy girdled at the base dies off naturally, freeing these conifers from the accumulated weight and reducing chance of windfall during heavy storms
Ivy girdled at the base dies off
naturally, freeing these conifers
from the accumulated weight and reducing
chance of windfall during heavy storms