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Thoughts From a Local Biologist
By Tim Pafford
Reprinted from Watershed, the Dry Creek Conservancy newsletter
When I was a little boy, I was always messing around with
water. I remember an incident of playing in rain-swollen
puddles one stormy winter day after being sent home from
kindergarten with a high fever. And I often came home
muddy and wet after trying to change the course of the
water flowing down the neighborhood gutters. At that time,
for a native of the San Fernando Valley, this was about
as wild and scenic as flowing water could be. Luckily,
my parents loved the outdoors and always provided us kids
with numerous trips to the most spectacular natural areas
California had to offer, including real rivers and lakes.
This opportunity to see natural areas and wild streams
fueled my fascination and steered me to the biological
profession that I have today.
Recently, restoration work on a 1.4-mile reach of Dry Creek
was completed. The benefits to the creek included reduction
of sediment, stabilized stream banks, and flood protection.
The greatest benefit of all was installation of 1,100 trees
to provide shade and nutrients for the creek and an
additional 300 feet of suitable spawning habitat for salmon
and steelhead, and easier passage for the fish to return
home. Upon completion of this project, I had to reflect
back to the old concrete gutter that I once played in, with
its intermittent flows that drained into concrete pipes
which drained to a skeleton of the once respectable Los
Angeles River - now sterile and channelized with a concrete
bottom and sheer concrete walls towering up two stories to
meet business and residential structures.
Dry Creek, with its grassy tree-lined banks as it lazily
meanders through Roseville, can hardly be compared to the
Los Angeles River. Roseville and the neighboring areas are
blessed with a gem. It may not be a blue ribbon trout stream,
but Dry Creek has a lot to offer the community with the
potential for more, well into the future. With proper
stewardship, generations may continue to enjoy the fish and
wildlife the creek has to offer, the serenity of the majestic
oaks that gracefully line the streambanks, the miracle of the
salmon and steelhead runs, and the opportunity for kids of all
ages to investigate nature's wonders in a real stream.
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Sacramento Urban Creeks Council 4855 Hamilton Street Sacramento, California 95841
phone (916) 454 - 4544 email: ucc@arcadecreekrecreation.com
site manager: input@sacto-ucc.org
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