
Funds for labor and some materials have been provided by NEAP. Gold Ridge Resource Conservation District is supervising the work,
along with a general overview from the California Department of Fish and Game
and the Natural Resource Conservation Service. The Rex Foundation has provided
additional funding, administered through the Bodega Land Trust, to cover the
cost of revegetation materials, tools and technical advice.
Habitat restoration has focused on preserving the existing vegetation and
establishing new plantings. These efforts benefit the fish by stabilizing the
streambanks, maintaining a lower water temperature, providing shelter against
predators, and attracting sources of food.
Log jams that accumulated during flood flows have knocked down trees and
diverted the force of the water into the banks, causing erosion. The log
jams high on the banks have been removed. Tree trunks and other large pieces of woody debris which offer the young fish cover and protection have been left alone
or moved into more strategic positions and anchored in place. Alders,Bays,
and Willows will be planted along the creek to hold the bank together
and shield the fingerlings from predatory birds. Further plantings in pastures
bordering the creek will widen the wooded riparian zone, while exclusionary
fencing will keep livestock out of the creek bed.
Employing fishermen/women has utilized their knowledge of fish and the field
training they received during an earlier restoration project on Walker Creek.
The fish and other beings which dwell in Salmon Creek thank them.
Salmonid habitat restoration is underway on a stretch of Salmon Creek
downstream from the old Bodega creamery. Perennial pools in the area provide
critical nursery habitat for juvenile steelhead and possibly coho salmon.
The Federal Northwest Emergency Assistance Program (NEAP), is providing funding for labor and some materials to repair badly damaged banks and to redirect the creek flow at two creekside properties in Bodega, the Dennis Albini Ranch and the Cassidy/Bleifuss homestead. Although storms have delayed much of the work, it is well underway, and these labor-intensive projects will be carried out as the weather clears.
The project is intended to provide temporary employment to commercial salmon fishermen who have been put out of work by federal fishing-area closures. The habitat restoration will not only benefit the spawning steelhead, salmon and their fry, but will put more fish in offshore fisheries (for the fisherfolk), and assist local citizens with the expense and labor of repairing badly damaged creekbanks.
Colin Close, project coordinator, is working with local folk in
watershed communities. She seeks to understand landowner
perspectives and strives for "a marriage between a healthy
environment and healthy economy." Colin claims that funding is
still available for some small projects. If you have a project
that needs assistance, you can submit a grant application. Call
Colin Close, (707)836-0585.
Table of Contents
"Stream Restoration
Fish and Landowners
Win-Win Situation""The Fish
and
The Watershed"More Articles
Willow Revetment
Restoration ProjectThe Map
Some
Project PhotosSend Mail