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ENVIRONMENT
For two decades, this group has fought to preserve iconic Tri-City peaks
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By Sara Schilling sara@tcjournal.biz
Bob Bass remembers the first time he climbed Badger Mountain.
It was 1989 or 1990, and he’d recently moved to the Tri-Cities from California.
A mountain climber, he was on the hunt for good training spots in the area, and “I was looking around saw this hill and thought, ‘Cool. I’m going to see if I can get up this thing,’” he recalled.
It was the first of many climbs for him up the 1,500-foot hill, which has become one of the Tri-Cities’ most popular recreation spots and beloved natural spaces over the last two decades.
That’s thanks in large part to Bass and other members of Friends of Badger Mountain, a nonprofit that formed to preserve and protect Badger Mountain and now is working to create a system of trails connecting four iconic TriCity area peaks: Little Badger, Badger, Candy and Red mountains.
Bass was a founding member of the group, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year.
Back when Bass first started climbing Badger, it didn’t have the network of well-established trails it boasts today. Instead, the hill had “social trails,” or unofficial paths beaten by hikers over time.
But in the early 2000s, Friends of Badger Mountain began working to acquire 574 acres on Badger for preservation. The group raised money, eventually turning the funds over to Benton County to make the purchase and designate Badger Mountain as a county park.
The group has followed a similar formula to help preserve Candy Mountain to the northwest and Little Badger Mountain to the east, working with Benton County and the city of Richland, respectively. The nonprofit group also holds the title to about 80 acres on and around the peaks.
The group has taken on responsibility for building most of the trails, and for trail maintenance.
Badger and Candy each have multiple trails, and Little Badger is next.
The Richland City Council recently approved a master plan, following a period of input from the public.
Bass said his group aims to establish a trail to the summit in 2023-24.
Friends of Badger Mountain also has other projects in the works for the next few seasons, including establishing a trail from the summit of Candy Mountain west down to Kennedy Road and completing a trail connection between
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