Tubbs Hill a major attraction
BILL BULEY | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 months, 2 weeks AGO
Bill Buley covers the city of Coeur d'Alene for the Coeur d’Alene Press. He has worked here since January 2020, after spending seven years on Kauai as editor-in-chief of The Garden Island newspaper. He enjoys running. | March 15, 2025 1:09 AM
COEUR d’ALENE — Tubbs Hill is a priceless treasure, but numbers also show just how well-loved and well-used it is.
A trail counter installed in July 2022 on the popular hiking hill on the shores of Lake Coeur d’Alene tallied 387,027 visitors to the 165 acres in 2024. The peak day was July 4, when 6,474 made the trek up, down or around the city-owned land.
Tubbs Hill, which is home to ponderosa pine, Douglas fir, Western white pine and larch trees, has a trail system that leads around, up to the 2,500-foot summit and down to the shoreline.
It continues to attract locals and visitors who run, walk and hike its trails summer, fall, winter and spring, and has been the subject of a book, "The Treasure Called Tubbs Hill," by Scott Reed.
Despite so many people leaving footprints on Tubbs, its forest health remains in "good to fair."
City urban forester Nick Goodwin said the number of people on Tubbs impacts the trails, retaining walls and overall infrastructure.
"We don't want to treat it like a park," Goodwin said. "We want to treat it like a natural area."
One drawback of the traffic on Tubbs continues to be trash people leave behind.
"Pack it in, pack it out," Goodwin said. "There's no reason we should have volunteers pulling 10 bags of trash off Tubbs Hill."
David Taylor, president of the Tubbs Hill Foundation, said they got a lot accomplished in 2024, including:
• 850 feet of realigned trail constructed
• 40 white pine seedlings planted
• Four sections of Main Loop Trail reconstructed or adjusted to reduce erosion and safety concerns
• 1.2 miles of brush trimmed on trails
• 50 days of Tubbs Hill Ambassadors roaming the trails to provide information to hikers
• Two public cleanup days with many large bags of trash removed
• 135-plus Friends of Tubbs Hill participated in 25 trail-related projects with a documented 423 hours of volunteer time, calculated to be worth $12,792.
"This year was a productive one for the foundation, as several report articles will require significant efforts to keep it clean," Taylor wrote in the Foundation's annual report. "Fortunately the Coeur d'Alene Parks Department was able, with our support, to make major repairs to existing trails and add an additional entry point. These efforts along with the formal and informal cleanups will continue to be required to keep up with the visitation."
ARTICLES BY BILL BULEY
Companions Animal Center has adopted out nearly 2,000 dogs, cats in 2025
Companions Animal Center has adopted out nearly 2,000 dogs, cats in 2025
As if to prove it, signs on two kennel doors proclaim “I have been adopted! I’m currently waiting to be picked up by my new parents.” One is a timid black mastiff. But the shelter remains crowded. Monday, it has about 50 large dogs filling kennels, including in the new wing oped this year, and there is still a four-month waiting list with names of about 80 dogs that people are looking to surrender pets.
Post Falls man named director of ministry with global reach
Post Falls man named director of ministry with global reach
Grassi, a longtime hunter and fisherman, started what was originally called “Let’s Go Fishing Ministry, Inc.” with a focus on outdoors, men and God. It was later changed to “Men’s Ministry Catalyst." The emphasis was on helping men understand their role as defined in the Bible.
Nonprofit foundation helps family become homeowners for first time
Nonprofit foundation helps family become homeowners for first time
The Young Family’s Foundation launched about a year ago with a mission "to empower young, hardworking families to achieve the dream of home ownership. Even if a family saved $25,000, they would still be $19,000 short of the down payment needed to buy a $550,000 home, which is the median price in Kootenai County. It’s estimated that only about 20% of area households can afford to buy a home.