| As many of you know, our chapter sponsored the Deep River Project for over four years in an effort to promote awareness, conservation, education and recreational access in the river corridor and basin. That project wound down in late fall last year, and this past spring a new group called Friends of the Deep River (FODR) was formed as a chapter of the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League (BREDL). This group is continuing with many of the Project's activities, working cooperatively with the Watershed Alliance of the NC Conservation Network (sponsor of Clean Water Lobby Day), River Network, Haw River Assembly and other nearby river groups. In recent months we have been monitoring the early stages of construction of a major sewer line in and near High Point, garnering some publicity as we delayed the removal of a tree with an active Redtail hawk nest containing two chicks not yet fledged. We really appreciate the help and advice we got from several Audubon sources (Lynn Moseley and Andy Wood among others) and from David Rabon of the US Fish and Wildlife Service in Raleigh. Even more recently we have been observing along the wide swath of forest being cleared to build the pipeline, and are trying to get the city and its contractors to bring stream crossings up to minimum standards in order to prevent unnecessary erosion and sedimentation, said to be the major problem of streams in NC today. In a combined educational effort, I represented FODR and went to the Archdale Library with Alice McCall of Pearson Audubon and gave a short program for children in which we made Secchi disks and used them to estimate the turbidity (cloudiness, mostly from sediment in this case) in nearby and aptly named Muddy Creek. Things were pretty hectic for a while, but the kids and their parents seemed to appreciate it and had lots of good comments that showed they've been studying related topics in school. If you'd like to try this at home, get a paint can lid, divide it into quadrants and paint them alternately black and white, and lower it into the water on different days. Make notes as to water conditions, how long since the last storm, etc. and measure how deep it goes before it seems to disappear--that's a pretty good inverse measure of turbidity. A river access point conceived under the Deep River Project was recently completed and paid for out of the remaining Project funds in a chapter account. Jonathan Lewis, son of member Mike Lewis, built a boat access point on the riverbank at Mendenhall Plantation in Jamestown for his Eagle Scout project. I can attest to his good planning and execution because shortly after I saw it for the first time it was totally inundated by the runoff from a heavy rain, but when I went by again nothing had changed. Now paddlers can park in the lot and carry a kayak or canoe a few hundred feet down around the replica Indian village under construction, for an outing on the 2+ miles of river between Main St. and the Oakdale Mills impoundment--don't get too close to the dam, especially when the mill is operating. This is a scenic little section of river where you can get out of sight (but not earshot) of civilization for a while, and you may see turtles, herons, and kingfishers as you paddle under the old railroad bridge. |
Here is our latest flyer, to which I would add one more bullet point about looking for opportunities to remove some of the small dams that are not much used anymore. Late last fall the dam at Carbonton was breached and that section is now flowing much more freely than it has for almost a century. I'm looking forward to paddling there before long, and to hearing from anyone interested in being a Friend of the Deep River! FRIENDS OF THE DEEP RIVER
|