Herbicide spraying planned in Jefferson County

Neighbors of Jefferson County timber company land are being warned that annual herbicide spraying is about to begin.

Jefferson County forest landowners and managers will apply herbicides – various combinations of Oust XP, Riverdale and Transline – on their property by helicopter later this month and in early May.

Sites of the aerial spraying will be throughout East Jefferson County.

Dates of application will depend on the weather.

The herbicide will not be sprayed if it is rainy or excessively windy to ensure the herbicide does not drift onto adjoining properties, said Al Latham, director of the Jefferson County Conservation District.

Neighbors within 1,000 feet of the spray sites are notified by the timber companies involved, normally by house calls, he said.

The spraying will be conducted by a low-flying helicopter which releases spray through multiple, calibrated nozzles.

Latham said the risk to neighbors from the herbicides is not clear.

“Risk – it depends on who you talk to,” Latham said.

But he said the conservation district is taking measures to ensure that neighbors aren’t surprised by the spraying, and so that they can be out of the area when the herbicide is applied, if they desire.

“It’s expensive, so they don’t just do it carte blanche,” Latham said.

“They make every effort not to have any drift.”

The spraying is considered necessary to control vegetation that competes with tree seedlings and affects their growth.

The spraying personnel are regulated by the state Department of Agriculture and the spraying itself is regulated by the state Department of Natural Resources.

All wetlands and streams will be buffered so the herbicide does not contact surface water.

A monitoring program coordinated by the Jefferson County Conservation District has been in place since 1985.

A voluntary agreement was drawn up between the Jefferson County and forest land owners and managers regarding aerial application procedures.

The overall intent of the agreement is to notify the public about the chemicals involved, when and where the spraying will occur.

For more information, phone Dave Stafford at Olympic Resource Management at 360-297-0570, Ext. 25, or the Conservation District Office, 360-385-4105.

More in News

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards to discuss timber, budgets

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Electronic edition of newspaper set Tuesday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition only… Continue reading

Veterans Day ceremony set at Port Angeles High School

The Clallam County Veterans Association will host a Veterans… Continue reading

Suggs flips Port Angeles council race, leads by 10 votes

Sanders maintains lead for position OMC board

Steve Burke.
Auditors: PA pool lacks controls

Report: Director benefitted financially over 6-year period

Community Services Director Melody Sky Weaver at the Port Townsend Carnegie Library. The library will receive a $10,000 gift from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the foundation founded by industrialist Andrew Carnegie. The library was opened in 1913 and the gift is to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Port Townsend, Port Angeles libraries to receive $10K as part of celebration

Corporation to provide funding in honor of country’s 250th birthday

One dies in collision on Hood Canal Bridge

Trooper says driver attempted U-turn at midspan

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless encampment on Thursday. The city hired Leland Construction of Roy to help with the process, which was initiated by the Port Townsend City Council in September. The city gave camp residents until Monday to vacate the premises and began the sweep of the area on Thursday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Camp cleanup

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless… Continue reading

Hospital projects a $7.5M loss in ’26

Interim CEO says it’s cash flow positive

Port Angeles council expects $189M in revenue sources for 2026

Finance director explains funds, from general to taxes to utilities

Taylor gains three votes in Port Angeles City Council race

Hammar maintains lead for position on Port Angeles school board

Rufina C. Garay.
Port Townsend names second poet laureate

Garay appointed following recommendation from panel