If you are serious, I go on record as supporting something like that 3000% and for roadside litter clean up and a bunch of other programs as well, however I believe it is a pipedream.JackM wrote:
"I also know that getting the trees out would be a huge undertaking and beyond the scope of most volunteer groups."
I have an idea (hear me out):
When state prisoners go to SCI Camp Hill for classification, the tamest among them should be given an option to join a work crew that is tasked to carry out needed conservation/restoration projects across the state. In exchange, they would be awarded "good time" credit against their sentence.
But, now that we have the personnel, to what work shall we put them? An educated stream engineer could determine how and in what manner to ameliorate this downed-tree problem.
I could imagine a crew with chainsaws, axes and manual saws could chop away at these log jams and haul out, or allow to be hauled out, free for the taking, the woody debris deemed to be excessive.
CONSERVATION BOOT CAMP
Bamboozle wrote:
In regards to the clean-up, many years I read about a creek someplace with a similar problem and the folks that coordinated the clean-up used teams of draft horses and men from the nearby Amish community to haul out the logs. I believe the stream was in Indiana or Ohio and the thought was the horses would be a less disruptive to the surrounding area than bulldozers.
ColdBore wrote:
krayfish2 wrote:
...but.... I'm short of a pulling horse team ...
When the Shenango River Watchers went in about ten years ago for a major clearing, they took local Amish and their horses with them. The SRW guys would chainsaw, the Amish would hook up and drag. A week later, other than tree trunks pulled into the woods, you'd never know they were there. The horses did virtually no damage and left very little trace of being there.
They made about 20 miles of river navigable and safe(-ish anyway) again for canoers and kayakers.
www.shenangoriverwatchers.org (I think).
It might be worth a call to ask them for a little guidance on how and where to begin.
That's it, thanks for the link!!ColdBore wrote:
Bamboozle wrote:
In regards to the clean-up, many years I read about a creek someplace with a similar problem and the folks that coordinated the clean-up used teams of draft horses and men from the nearby Amish community to haul out the logs. I believe the stream was in Indiana or Ohio and the thought was the horses would be a less disruptive to the surrounding area than bulldozers.
From my earlier response....
ColdBore wrote:
krayfish2 wrote:
...but.... I'm short of a pulling horse team ...
When the Shenango River Watchers went in about ten years ago for a major clearing, they took local Amish and their horses with them. The SRW guys would chainsaw, the Amish would hook up and drag. A week later, other than tree trunks pulled into the woods, you'd never know they were there. The horses did virtually no damage and left very little trace of being there.
They made about 20 miles of river navigable and safe(-ish anyway) again for canoers and kayakers.
www.shenangoriverwatchers.org (I think).
It might be worth a call to ask them for a little guidance on how and where to begin.
The Clark's Valley was logged and IS logged to this day, however the situation now is NOT normal. The problems are caused by the wooly adelgid, an invasive insect.troutbert wrote:
Streams that flow through old growth forests, that were never logged or roaded, have high amounts of large woody debris (downed trees). That is the normal situation.
Most PA flyfishers have never seen this condition. So their idea of what is "normal" comes from looking at streams that are extremely altered.
In most cases are streams have been channelized, converted from multiple channel systems to a single channel, straightened, relocated, with large woody debris removed.
Bamboozle wrote:
The Clark's Valley was logged and IS logged to this day, however the situation now is NOT normal. The problems are caused by the wooly adelgid, an invasive insect.troutbert wrote:
Streams that flow through old growth forests, that were never logged or roaded, have high amounts of large woody debris (downed trees). That is the normal situation.
Most PA flyfishers have never seen this condition. So their idea of what is "normal" comes from looking at streams that are extremely altered.
In most cases are streams have been channelized, converted from multiple channel systems to a single channel, straightened, relocated, with large woody debris removed.
The area surrounding Clark’s Creek is surrounded with hemlocks, right up to the banks of the stream. I noticed the problem about 10 years ago when the forest floor started to become carpeted with millions of healthy green hemlock needles. Later, entire “healthy” trees sans any needles would fall over, sometimes exasperated by heavy rains however, those trees were also in a weakened condition because of the wooly adelgid.
I noticed a similar “canary in the coal mine” at a place I fish in Western Franklin County. One trip I noticed millions of hemlocks needles on the forest floor. The next time I went there, tons of dead trees had fallen. In the case of this creek, the trees fell across the creek channel, but not always IN the creek, however moving upstream was almost impossible with huge trees blocking your way.
Climbing over them was often impossible so you have to walk around one, sometime four or five huge trees just to move a few yards upstream. The result is you spend more time bushwhacking than fishing.
SteveG wrote:
It's a shame that everyone seems to be so quick to throw in the towel on Clarks Creek and let it degrade to being a stocked put and take fishery. I've taken water temps this past Summer and it has remained within range of ethical catch and release practices. Due to the tiny mountain trickles that constantly feed it cool water.
If in fact the hemlock woolly adelgid is the primary culprit, would not the best course of action be to plant other suitable native trees? I believe this has already been occurring to some degree, as I have seen evidence of some planted, but I do not know which organization did so.
there are still plenty of wild brook and brown trout in the c&r stretch.
SteveG wrote:
I actually went and decided to walk Clark's earlier today. While the situation is at its worst of the FF only area, a vast majority of the all tackle water is fine.
Stumbled across this while searching whether it's "Clark" or "Clark's" Creek because we were just hiking there yesterday (5-6-23) and found your post very interesting. You said about swamps resulting from downed trees and now, 4 years later, that is exactly what is happening. We were surprised at the number of trees jamming up the creek and were wondering if it's possible to form a group of people to volunteer to help clean it up? Are there restrictions? I known it's SGL so I'm not sure if that would allowed.Dear Board,
I know it's been beat to death here on the board, but if there ever was a creek that needed chainsaw work this is it.
I spent a couple of hours today checking out all my old haunts, and by old, I mean pre-Floyd and Ivan. I had a hard time even getting within sight of the creek in some old spots, and when I did I was greeted by flat cesspools locked between logjams.
I understand and appreciate the idea of woody debris providing habit and cover, but the reality of that being a success depends on the stream having a gradient steeper than your average dive bar pool table.
I don't think Clarks drops more than 50 feet in elevation from DeHart Dam to the river, and that's over 15 road miles, and probably close to 20 stream miles? Every single logjam is filled with sandy silt and leaf debris, and that is not good for the stream by any stretch.
I know the creek has been hit with a half dozen hundred year floods in the last 15 years. That's why it needs some corrective action. If not, when the next one hits I'm afraid all of the logjams will release? If that happens we'll wind up with with an 100 foot wide sand wash like they have in the SW deserts.
Honestly, can anything be done before that happens?
Regards,
Tim Murphy 🙂