Upcoming Events
Volunteering with OWF
At OWF, we often receive requests for ways our supporters could do more for conservation in Oregon through volunteer opportunities for us or for one of our fiscally sponsored partners. A fun way to volunteer with our organization is by helping us with one or more of our fundraising or educational events.
If you are interested in serving at one of our 2025 or future events, fill out this form. For more information about our events, see info below. Questions? Contact Rebecca Roberts at rebecca@myowf.org.
Deadline for Project Committee Grant Submissions
Visit our Grants page for more information.
Deadline for Project Committee Grant Submissions
For more information, visit our Grants webpage.
Deadline for Project Committee Applications
For more information visit our Grantmaking webpage.
Deadline for Project Committee Applications
For more information visit our Grantmaking webpage.
Board Meeting
Please save this date for the Oregon Wildlife Foundation Board of Director's meeting. This is a hybrid meeting. Materials and a Zoom link will be provided two weeks prior. Location TBD.
An evening with Ben Goldfarb, author of Crossings: How Road Ecology is Changing the Future of our Planet
Join us for an evening with journalist and author Ben Goldfarb in person. Register for the talk HERE. If you cannot attend in person, you can stream the talk HERE.
Author of Crossings: How Road Ecology Is Shaping The Future of Our Planet, named one of the best books of 2023 by the New York Times, and Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, winner of the 2019 PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award.
Tickets are free of charge but sign up using the link above to let us know to reserve your spot. Books will be available for purchase at the event. If you would like to reserve a copy of one or both books, please check the appropriate boxes during registration. Reserved books can be purchased at our event. Thank you to our partnering bookstore, Annie Blooms Books.
* Please note a change in venue to the Multnomah Arts Center
Board Meeting
Please save this date for the Oregon Wildlife Foundation Board of Director's meeting. This is a hybrid meeting. Materials and a Zoom link will be provided two weeks prior. Location TBD.
Herman's Birthday
Oregon Wildlife Foundation Invites Public to Celebrate Herman’s Birthday
(CASCADE LOCKS, Ore.) – Herman the Sturgeon is kind of a big deal in Oregon; a white sturgeon with a colorful history celebrating a birthday on Saturday, June 22. You are invited to join that celebration and toast it with “High Five, Herman” special summer IPA, courtesy of and available at Ferment Brewing Company’s tasting room in Hood River.
Herman’s story includes trips between the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife’s (ODFW) Roaring River Fish Hatchery near Scio and the Oregon State Fairgrounds in Salem. Beginning in the 1930’s and up until the 1980’s, one Herman or another was a mainstay at the State Fair’s Animal Village exhibit. Life on the road is hard on a fish so ODFW stopped trucking Herman places and started planning for a permanent home.
To provide Herman with a safe and healthier environment, a campaign was launched in 1997 to build him a suitable habitat at Bonneville Fish Hatchery in the Columbia River Gorge. In partnership with ODFW, the Oregon Wildlife Foundation (OWF) raised the funding needed, more than $350,000, to construct the Sturgeon Viewing and Interpretive Center at Bonneville Fish Hatchery. Dedicated on Sept. 27, 1998, the Center is one of Oregon’s top visitor attractions.
The Center has served its purpose and mission for over 25 years. However, prolonged exposure to Columbia River Gorge weather has taken a toll on the building, and the interpretive signage within it needs to better speak to a present-day audience.
The Foundation is currently working with ODFW on a development plan for the hatchery, including needed repairs, improvements, and updates to the Interpretive Center’s signage.
If you would like to help us in our efforts, tax-deductible donations can be made using the following form https://secure.givelively.org/donate/oregon-wildlife-foundation/sturgeon-interpretive-center
“Bonneville Fish Hatchery is the right place for Herman to be and for the public to learn about sturgeon conservation challenges,” said Tim Greseth, Executive Director of the Foundation. With the Columbia River just a stone’s throw away, visitors can imagine what the river might have been like when it was teeming with salmon and these prehistoric fish.”
OWF also owns and operates Spruce Gifts & Provisions stores at the hatchery and in downtown Hood River. The store at Bonneville features coffee drinks, treats, local and regional gift items, and, of course, Herman the Sturgeon memorabilia. Proceeds from the sale of merchandise at Spruce Gifts & Provisions stores help support fish and wildlife conservation throughout Oregon.
The Foundation cordially invites you to join them in celebrating Herman’s birthday between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on June 22. This is an all-ages experience to celebrate the passing of another year in Herman’s long and storied life. Come out and wish him a happy birthday, take an “ussie” with a legendary fish, sign Herman’s birthday card, and pick up a souvenir of your visit to Bonneville Fish Hatchery.
Guests, 21 years of age and older, are invited to continue the celebration at Ferment Brewing Company’s tasting room in Hood River with their “High Five, Herman!” IPA. “High Five, Herman!” was brewed using regional, environmentally responsible ingredients from mission-driven suppliers. Mainstem Malt, a company that works directly with farmers in the Columbia River Basin to supply Salmon-Safe grains, provides the malt for this beer. The hops, sourced from Crosby Hops in Woodburn, are also Salmon-Safe, meaning they are grown using watershed-friendly and climate-resilient stewardship practices to protect water quality and wildlife habitats.
Sturgeon Conservation
Herman the Sturgeon is approximately 10 feet long, weighs over 500 pounds, and is over 80 years old, but who cares, age is just a number! There are records of larger and older white sturgeon in the Columbia River and elsewhere in Oregon, but Herman is an excellent example of this large and long-lived species. Worldwide, there are 23 species of sturgeon, with seven found in North America. Only two, white and green sturgeon, are found along the West Coast and in Oregon. Both are Oregon Conservation Strategy species, see www.oregonconservationstrategy.org for more information.
Herman comes from a long line of prehistoric bottom-feeders. Sturgeon evolved during the Jurassic Period of the Mesozoic Era, when dinosaurs still roamed the earth. Sturgeon have changed very little since then. What has changed is the availability of quality sturgeon habitat and their food supply.
According to an information sheet on sturgeon from ODFW, “White sturgeon in most of the Columbia River Basin aren’t listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), however, these populations still face many challenges. The free-flowing river systems these fish have adapted to have now been impeded by hydropower dams, separating the river system into reservoirs. These dams have had many negative impacts, including direct mortality, restricted movement and blocked access to the ocean, flooded historic spawning habitats, and reduced habitat complexity. Climate change has increased the frequency of low water years, increasing temperatures within the Columbia River Basin and creating other unfavorable and lethal environmental conditions.”
Bonneville Hatchery and Sturgeon Viewing and Interpretive Center
The Sturgeon Viewing and Interpretive Center is located at Bonneville Fish Hatchery, 70543 NE Herman Loop, in Cascade Locks. From I-84, take Exit 40 to Bonneville Dam/Fish Hatchery. Follow the signs to the hatchery and park in the parking lot. For more information on the Sturgeon Viewing and Interpretive Center visit www.myodfw.com/bonneville-hatchery-visitors-guide.
Oregon Wildlife Foundation
Oregon Wildlife Foundation is an apolitical operating charitable foundation dedicated to increasing private and public funding support for wildlife conservation projects in Oregon. Since 1981, OWF has directed tens of millions of dollars in private and public support to a broad range of projects throughout Oregon. For more information visit www.myowf.org.
Board Meeting
Please save this date for the Oregon Wildlife Foundation Board of Director's meeting. This is a hybrid meeting. Materials and a Zoom link will be provided two weeks prior. Location TBD.
Clays for Conservation
Join us for Oregon Wildlife Foundation's 2nd Annual Clays for Conservation Event!
Our 2024 event will be held at Mid-Valley Clays & Shooting School on Friday, June 7, 2024. Spend the morning with OWF friends and supporters for a fun competition. Your Platinum, Gold or Team Sponsorship will include clays and ammo for a team of five (5). Ticket sales for our raffle will be available for purchase. Lunch will be served and prizes awarded.
Thank you for supporting OWF's conservation work in Oregon!
PROTECT WHAT YOU LOVE: New Conservation Films
The Portland EcoFilm Festival invites you to be inspired by a program of new short films celebrating diverse approaches to conservation around the world. Directors and special guests will join us after the films for a community conversation about conservation. (Total running time: 75 minutes)
Includes the winner of this season’s Best Conservation Film Award, DR. MARK: PANGOLIN HERO and the winner of this season’s EcoHero Award, Jojo Nyaribo.
Also includes Reel Earth Films Production THE LONE WOLVERINE OF THE WALLOWAS by Director and Producer Alan Lacy (the subject of Alan's film is a research project that the Foundation underwrote).
- Sponsored by Oregon Wildlife Foundation
Board Meeting
Please save this date for the Oregon Wildlife Foundation Board of Director's meeting. This is a hybrid meeting. Materials and a Zoom link will be provided two weeks prior. Location TBD.
Board Meeting
Please save this date for the Oregon Wildlife Foundation Board of Director's meeting. This is a hybrid meeting. Materials and a Zoom link will be provided two weeks prior.