A mile of Latah Creek protected near Spangle

February 1, 2008

Bryant/Sayre easement protects 322 acres

Hangman Creek flows through the Bryant Sayre easement

Paul Bryant wasn’t looking to buy a lot of land. He just wanted maybe 5, maybe 10, or maybe 15 acres with a little topography and trees near Spokane and near his mother and brothers. A realtor showed him some land along Latah Creek that a doctor wanted to buy and subdivide. Would Paul be interested in one of those lots? Paul joked that if the doctor didn’t buy the land, he would take the whole thing. You guessed it – Paul Bryant is now the happy owner of 322 acres with a river running through it.

In December 2007, Paul Bryant and his wife, Caroline Sayre, permanently protected that land from subdivision by donating a conservation easement to Inland Northwest Land Trust. “It was never my intent to develop it,” says Paul. “I could have divided up the land, but the older I get the less interested I am in making deals and more interested in leaving things alone.”

“The Hangman Creek (Latah Creek) watershed doesn’t have a lot of places that are completely natural. (The stretch of Latah Creek running through the Bryant property) looks like it probably did 100 years ago,” says Walt Edelen of the Spokane County Conservation District. “Having 300 acres in easement is a great legacy. Over time places like this will be few and far between.”

Paul Bryant’s stretch of Latah Creek “is not incised or channelized,” says Doug Pineo, a Shorelands Specialist for the Washington Department of Ecology and also an INLT member. “It has an intact riparian corridor, beautiful basalt cliffs, and nice examples of dry ponderosa woodlands with bunch grasses and other native plants.”

West Valley Outdoor Learning Center students learn about stewardship at the Bryant/Sayre easement.

Paul and Caroline allow West Valley Outdoor Learning Center to use their land as an outdoor classroom. One day last fall, fifth graders were looking for animal signs for NatureMapping, searching for macro-invertebrates from the creek, and learning about invasive plants. Kara Bloch, INLT’s 2007 Stewardship Coordinator, helped students learn about land stewardship by removing noxious weeds.

The conservation easement precludes the development of 12 to 22 homes. The easement is designed to permit farming and grazing of existing fields and will allow timber harvesting to promote wildlife habitat and forest health and allow the construction of one additional house on the property.