Fall 2008
Vol. XVII, No. 4

 


District Manager's Corner

Pat Frost

Pat
These are the last days of autumn. It is the season during which we take stock in our productivity. Our gardens have been put to bed – tomatoes have been cooked down into sauces, apples have been picked, wrapped and stored and a couple of pumpkins sit on the counter waiting to be turned into pies.

Fall also is a very productive time for the District. In fact September and October were a blur of activity. This issue of the Conservation Almanac is our opportunity to highlight some of the most memorable projects. Here are some things to keep in mind as you look through the photo-essays: this was the tenth anniversary of Environmental Education Camp and also of the Salmon Festival. The well-attended open house event at the Young Family Ranch was a first for us, but followed on the heels of our most successful Summer Day Camp yet. All of these activities were the products of a wonderful aspect of living in Trinity County – the spirit of community cooperation and the strong partnerships amongst local organizations, including our new partnership with the Trinity High School Future Farmers of America.

One cord that binds these great projects together is the AmeriCorps Watershed Stewards Project. It isn’t a coincidence that this is the tenth year we have had members of the Watershed Stewards Project in Weaverville, working with us on watershed restoration and conservation projects, teaching watershed and fisheries-based lessons to students and leading community outreach events. This year we have had the great good fortune of having Erica Spohn as our AmeriCorps member. Her dedication and energy helped us make events like the Salmon Festival the best ever. Her year of service with us is coming to an end, but Erica's impact on the District and our community will not end with her last day of work.


Lewiston Outreach


 

Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) teamed with the Trinity County Resource Conservation District (TCRCD) to host a meeting of landowners in Lewiston October 18. The purpose was to discuss options for limiting erosion and reducing sediment delivery from the area's fire damaged watershed. Landowners in attendance expressed interest in focusing on certain areas more than others, with a desire for continuing work to develop a long term plan.

So far, team representatives have visited about 30 properties at landowners' request to help identify problem areas. Some issues being examined include erosion caused by lack of vegetation or due to improper construction of roads and grading practices; fire hazards; stormwater diversion and erosion at stream crossings or undersized culverts; and accumulated sediment.

The team is studying costs and feasibility of creating sediment basins to capture and store eroded soil. Sierra Pacific Industries, with partial funding from the Trinity River Restoration Program, constructed debris dams and planted 10,000 trees to help control erosion on its lands in the burned area. TCRCD purchased culvert for use by landowners to install in trenches, through an in-kind match from landowners. The District is also developing a fuels reduction program intended to limit impacts of future wildfires by managing vegetation. The District will be doing some planting on private and public lands, plus manual work on existing vegetation to promote healthy plants and limit regrowth. The long term purpose is to decrease erosion through selective improvement of area vegetation.

 


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