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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Squaw
Creek committee explores
The Squaw Creek
Stewardship Committee held its third meeting last week and looks to be gaining
momentum in its bid to become a factor in the region's watershed planning
process.
The group is a subcommittee
formed under the auspices of the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council and
meets in Sisters on the fourth Wednesday of each month.
According to Council Director
Ryan Houston, its purpose is to "raise community interest in the watershed."
Houston has been in the post
of director for over a year now and says that the Council is making an
active effort to reach out into the community.
"We try to promote committees
like this in each watershed to create little groups that can work with
us," he said.
Last week's meeting was the
committee's first foray as a group to Squaw Creek itself and took on the
flavor of a field trip. Tour guide for the event was Maret Pajutee, Forest
Service ecologist for the Sisters Ranger District.
The first stop was at the
footbridge in the city park, followed by another viewing a little farther
upstream near the edge of town. The final stop was about four miles north
of town, where the stream still runs free in its natural state.
Pajutee referred to the streambed
in and around Sisters as the "bad and the ugly." She reserved the label
of "good" for the wild portions upstream from Sisters.
In summer, most of Squaw Creek's
water is diverted out of the stream for local irrigation projects, leaving
only a trickle to run through Sisters.
In the 1960s and earlier,
Squaw Creek was the victim of massive channelization projects designed
to create more usable land by keeping seasonal water flow off the historic
floodplain.
The result is an unnatural,
deeper and narrower channel through Sisters that is more like a drainage
ditch than a natural river.
However, the untouched stretches
above Sisters -- and above the irrigation diversions -- are completely
different and have been designated a "Wild and Scenic River" under the
Congressional Act of the same name.
At the city park, Houston
explained how the original stream would have spread itself all around
the park area where the present channel is now constrained by the artificial
banks.
"The river is out of balance,
because of the way it's been tampered with," said Houston.
Pajutee also talked about
the damage to the stream system caused by human tampering. Still, she
conceded that the reasoning behind the man-made changes is fairly obvious.
"From a human standpoint,"
she said, "it's awkward when suddenly there's a river where your house
used to be."
The Watershed Council is working
with the Tribes at Warm Springs, Portland General Electric, the Forest
Service, state agencies and others in an effort to improve the health
of stream systems in the Deschutes Basin.
One of the long-term goals
of the various projects is to restore spawning runs of anadromous salmon
and steelhead to the region's rivers.
At the tour's second stop,
Pajutee pointed out the huge quantities of sand and gravel being generated
by the river's action.
She referred to Squaw Creek
as a principal "gravel producer" for the whole Deschutes system and said
that the resulting sand and gravel is an important factor in sustaining
the stream system as spawning grounds for native fish.
Another of the committee's
goals is to restore some of the river's water volume that is diminished
by irrigation.
A dedicated water right of
1.6 cubic feet per second (cfs) was recently returned to the stream, and
Houston said that current projects already in the works will increase
that figure.
On the whole, Houston said
that the trend was in the right direction.
"Over the last 10 years or
so," he said, "the minimum flow of the stream is up to about eight cfs
or so, compared to zero not long ago."
Joanne Richter is President
of the Deschutes Watershed Council and attended the meeting in Sisters.
"The whole idea of a stewardship
committee," she said, "is that it's community based. The community decides
what the priority areas are and what we need to tackle first."
For more information and for
details of the next meeting, call Len Knott, at 923-6438.
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