Like most of the stream basins
in the Sisters area, Trout Creek has seen the tampering hand of man.
Forest Service officials say
that Trout Creek Swamp is an old grazing site that has been tinkered with
since at least the 1930s. At the time, the land was used for grazing and
ditches were dug to drain the swamp in order to create drier pastureland
for cattle. Alterations to Trout Creek's tributary system continued on
into the 1970s.
Now, however, the Forest Service
would like to see the area returned to its natural state. Mike Riehle,
Fisheries Biologist for the Sisters Ranger District, is heading up a plan
to restore the area.
"We're in the early stages
of planning a meadow restoration project out there," Riehle said. "I'm
excited about this because it's a sizable meadow project, and we haven't
done many of those in this district."
Trout Creek, Riehle says,
is aptly named and abounds with native redband (rainbow) trout.
The goal of the project, he
said, "will be to mimic a natural system that retains water as well as
those containing beaver dams. Such meadows hold water in the swamp longer
in the summer and improve fish habitat."
The redband trout is a Forest
Service-listed "sensitive species."
Riehle said that "the classification
does not mean the fish are endangered, but they are a 'species of concern'
that we want to keep closer tabs on so they won't become endangered."
Trout Creek originates from
the snows of the North Sister, and a multitude of springs join it from
the wetland area that is the subject of this study.
Riehle explained that the
Trout Creek Swamp ditches were not built to irrigate the area.
Rather, the intent was the
opposite, and the alterations feature deep cuts through the wetlands that
strip groundwater off the land.
"Our proposal," Riehle said,
"is to fill in those ditches and restore the natural wetlands."
Natural meandering stream
channels are still visible in the area, and the Forest Service wants to
put the water back where it belongs.
When water saturates a meadow,
the moisture is retained in the system and the riparian health of the
region is enhanced by the natural water reservoir created in the soils.
As a result, the stream keeps
flowing longer during dry spells and rebounds more quickly when water
flow increases again.
Riehle said that, historically,
beavers played an important role in the retention of water in the area's
stream systems.
Beavers created dams, ponds
and diversions that retained water and soaked the soils of the stream
basins.
The industrious rodents that
gave The Beaver State its name, however, have been mostly trapped out.
Even in areas where the animals
do not conflict with pasture use, they are often removed by landowners
who don't like to see their aspen trees become beaver treats.
The Forest Service's plan
for Trout Creek Swamp will be designed to duplicate the soil saturation
achieved by beavers, and there's always the possibility that beavers might
establish themselves in the area.
Another problem in the area
is encroachment of lodgepole pine into the drying meadow.
Even as recently as the 1970s,
aerial photographs showed that the meadow was mostly free of trees. But
now there are 30-foot trees where once stood only grass.
"One of the proposals is to
remove most of the lodgepoles encroaching into the meadow," Riehle said.
There is also some concern
about reed canary grass, an exotic plant which tends to displace native
wetland plants.
"It's a unique plant community
that we're trying to revive, and it includes a number of interesting carnivorous
plants," Riehle said.
Some of the swamp's more unusual
flora include two species of sundew and two species of bladderwort.
Trout Creek normally peters
out and flows underground before it reaches Sisters.
Technically, though, it's
a tributary of Indian Ford Creek. The natural channel for Trout Creek
actually passes north of the Forest Service compound in Sisters and behind
the Sisters Industrial Park.
Every once in awhile, a wet
year sends the creek right through town. The last time was five years
ago when it flooded Camp Polk Road just beyond the airport.
Some of the channel in that
area has since been better defined and a culvert installed to minimize
future flooding.
Riehle stressed that the Forest
Service wants the public to know that the restoration plan calls for only
the ditches in the swamp area to be filled -- not the creek itself.
As part of the project process,
the Forest Service is developing an Environmental Assessment (EA), a document
in which the agency examines the potential impact of a proposal such as
this.
"The EA will go out to give
people an opportunity to express any concerns," Riehle said, "and the
whole idea is to improve fish habitat."
He hopes that the EA will
be available by early next year, giving the public further opportunity
to comment on the proposal.