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See grouse and goshawks in remote Pend Oreille wilderness

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By Michael Penn
The Seattle Times

Salmo-Priest Wilderness, at the extreme northeastern corner of Washington in the Colombia Highlands, is on Audubon's "Palouse to Pines Loop."

See grouse and goshawks in remote Pend Oreille wilderness

Look for northern goshawks in the Salmo-Priest Wilderness of Northeast Washington.

Look for northern goshawks in the Salmo-Priest Wilderness of Northeast Washington.

Birders' Top Spots |

Salmo-Priest Wilderness, Site 15 from "Palouse to Pines Loop" of the Great Washington State Birding Trail

Location: Selkirk Mountains of Pend Oreille County, in the extreme northeastern corner of Washington.

Habitat: Premier alpine destination. U.S. Forest Service land, 39,937 acres of forest and mountains.

Best season for birding: Summer. Go soon for late-summer birding and early fall colors along the Pend OreilleRiver.

Birds commonly seen: Spruce and dusky grouse, northern goshawks, white-winged and red crossbills, three-toed and black-backed woodpeckers, Clark's nutcrackers, boreal owls, pine grosbeaks; plus all four chickadees: boreal, mountain, black-capped, chestnut-backed.

Viewing tips: Salmo Divide Trail — Hike first mile on forested Trail 535. Fire lookout — Stunning vistas of Washington, Idaho and B.C.

Getting there: Backroads-suitable vehicle advised. From Highway 31 at Milepost 16.4, turn east onto Sullivan Creek Road. Drive 4.8 miles. Turn left onto Forest Service Road 2200. Drive 6 miles. Veer left, staying on Road 2220. Drive 14.2 miles. Turn right into Salmo Divide Trail parking. Fire lookout: Return 0.2 mile to primitive Forest Service Road 270; hike or drive 2.2 miles to old tower. NorthwestForestPass required.

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