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Entries in elwha river (31)

Wednesday
Mar122014

Elwha Sediment Brings New Life Downstream 

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So far about 3 million cubic yards of sediment -- enough to fill about 300,000 dump trucks -- has been released from the giant bathtubs of sediment that formed behind the two hydroelectric dams upstream. And that’s only 16 percent of what’s expected to be delivered downstream in the next five years.

LINK (via:JPR)

Thursday
Jan302014

Here comes the judge......

The Pacific Northwest wild vs. hatchery fish debate has ramped up a bit recently as a result of some advocacy work on behalf of wild fish.

A plan for wild steelhead gene banks in SE Washington, a recent successful Native Fish Society lawsuit on the Sandy, and a Wild Fish Conservancy notice to file a lawsuit against the hatchery programs in the Puget Sound basin has lit a fire under the pro-hatchery base.

What the Native Fish Society and Other Radical Groups Do Not Want You to Know

Why The Wild Fish Conservancy Needs To Rethink Its Threatened Lawsuit

There is even a well organized media campaign around polishing the hatchery turd.

Unfortunately the hatchery vs. wild fish debate resembles the debate around global climate change. Chances are nobody is going to change the other sides opinion, no matter what the science says, and you pretty much know which side of the political aisle each side resides.

So this should add a little more fuel to the fire.

Four conservation groups are seeking an injunction in federal court to stop hatchery coho and steelhead from being used to boost the Elwha River salmon run and to stop the removal of wild salmon to use in hatchery breeding.

LINK (via: The Peninsula Daily)

Ted Williams outlined the issue on the Elwha, along with some facts surrounding the hatchery welfare state, in this piece in Fly Rod and Reel.

We're on the precipice of squandering a once in a lifetime opportunity on the Elwha. No matter which side of the hatchery fence you sit on we should be able to agree that we can give this one up for wild fish.

Tuesday
Jan282014

Latest blast whittles the Glines Dam to about 35 feet in height

The formerly 210 foot Glines Dam on the Elwha has been reduced to just 35 feet.

LINK  (via:Peninsula Daily News)

Watch the blast video on John Gussman's site.

Tuesday
Oct292013

Undamming the Elwha

Worth a half hour of your time.

Monday
Sep092013

The ratio of hatchery-reared salmon compared with wild-hatched salmon were not available

One year after chinook were sighted— the first in 100 years — in the Elwha River above the site of the former Elwha Dam, adult chinook again have been spotted above the dam site, about 8 miles west of Port Angeles.

LINK (via:Peninsula Daily)

Monday
Jul292013

Time Lapse of the evolution of the Elwha River Mouth, 1939 - June 2013