Fieldnotes Blog

Northern Lynn Canal Cooperative Weed Management Area

Northern Lynn Canal Cooperative Weed Management Area

Community Watershed Stewardship
  Through a partnership with the Southeast Alaska Watershed Coalition, Takshanuk Watershed Council and the Taiya Inlet Watershed Council have initiated a Northern Lynn Canal Cooperative Weed Management Area (NLC-CWMA) for Haines and Skagway.   The purpose of the NLC-CWMA is to address invasive plant concerns and to facilitate the management of high priority infestations (through various treatment methods) for the purpose of preventing the reproduction and spread of weeds into, within and from the boundaries of the NLC-CWMA. The species of the greatest concern in the Northern Lynn Canal include Reed Canary Grass, Canadian Thistle, Orange Hawkweed, and Spotted Knapweed. Each of these pose a unique threat to their ecological area and the treatment method is tailored to be the most effective for each.           If…
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SAWC Member Group Restoration Work

SAWC Member Group Restoration Work

Community Watershed Stewardship
SAWC Member groups carry out a variety of restoration and enhancement projects to improve watershed health in their communities. A big thanks to the folks at Twin Lions Productions for putting together this video highlighting some of the restoration projects our hard working Coalition member groups are carrying out in their communities! Post by Twin Lions Productions.
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Skagway: The Rain Garden City

Skagway: The Rain Garden City

Community Watershed Stewardship
  A relatively new concept in Southeast Alaska, rain gardens are becoming a popular method for treatment of storm water across the country. Storm water is the excess rain and snow melt that runs off impermeable surfaces such as rooftops, pavement roads, and parking lots. As water runs off these surfaces it can pick up and carry pollutants like oil, fertilizers, soil, and trash that may ultimately flow directly into a nearby stream or harbor. Or, it may go into a storm drain and continue through storm pipes until it is released untreated into a local waterway. Rain gardens are designed to capture runoff from impermeable surfaces like roads and sidewalks, allowing the water to filtrate down through the soil and sediment rather than running into storm drains, which lead directly to…
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SAWC Seeking Interested Candidates for Board of Directors

SAWC Seeking Interested Candidates for Board of Directors

Uncategorized
  The Southeast Alaska Watershed Coalition is seeking volunteers interested serving on the Coalition’s Board of Directors! In order to stay true to our core principle of building a voice for communities we believe this Coalition should be steered by regional leaders and community professionals who work to protect, promote and restore our region’s watersheds. Candidates should align with the Coalition’s mission of inspiring Southeast Alaskans and supporting community organizations working toward the wise management of Southeast Alaska’s watersheds. The Board of Directors is expected to guide and implement the mission and strategic direction of SAWC. As a governing board, roles and duties include providing overall organizational leadership such as setting policies and procedures, providing financial oversight, and working to ensure the organization has adequate resources (money, staff, and equipment)…
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SAWC Begins Beach Monitoring Program in Wrangell

SAWC Begins Beach Monitoring Program in Wrangell

Community Watershed Stewardship
On July 16 SAWC began sampling the waters at City Park and Petroglyph Beach in Wrangell   [caption id="attachment_5038" align="alignnone" width="500"] Petroglyph Beach, Wrangell[/caption] [caption id="attachment_5037" align="alignnone" width="500"] City Park Beach, Wrangell[/caption]   These beaches were identified by DEC as a high priority because of their frequent use for swimming, wading, and recreation activities. Through this project, SAWC will increase public awareness of potential sources and the health risks associated with bacterial contamination and will work with the City and Borough of Wrangell to limit beach access in the event of bacterial exceedances. SAWC staff collects weekly marine water samples from each beach that are sent to and tested in a Juneau lab for fecal coliform and enterococci bacteria. Sampling will continue for 20 weeks during the high-use spring and summer recreational seasons, following…
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Community Practitioners Learn to Identify Bugs for Stream Health

Community Practitioners Learn to Identify Bugs for Stream Health

Community Watershed Stewardship, Events, Trainings & Opportunities
Last week the Chilkoot Indian Association hosted the University of Alaska Anchorage's resident aquatic insect expert Dan Bogan, who led a Macroinvertebrate Biomonitoring Training for community practitioners in Haines. The training teaches participants how to identify and use aquatic invertebrates to gauge stream health. With the University of Alaska Anchorage's Aquatic Ecology Department, Bogan administers the Alaska Stream Team data collection program, a coordinated collaborative citizen-science effort to collect consistent and reliable biological data on the ecological health of Alaska's streams. The Alaska Stream Team hosts an online database where volunteer stream monitors can enter, view, and/or share basic chemical and biological information collected using educational or volunteer-level Stream Team methods.  [caption id="attachment_5007" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Taiya Inlet Watershed Council's Rachel Ford gets her hands dirty to find some aquatic insects[/caption]   Participants in the recent…
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TWC Improves Cannery Creek Fish Passage

TWC Improves Cannery Creek Fish Passage

Community Watershed Stewardship
  Cannery Creek is an anadromous stream that flows into Letnikof Cove, near Haines. It is listed as habitat for Coho Salmon and Dolly Varden rearing. The previous culvert was classified as “red” based on a perch of 108 inches at the outlet and a gradient of 5.77%. It also had a break in the middle that allowed flows to dissipate out of the culvert and only allowed fish passage at tides of 17.61ft. or greater, which is approximately 14% of high tides. The Takshanuk Watershed Council sought funding from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Patagonia World Trout to replace this culvert to allow for unimpeded fish passage.   The failing culvert was replaced with a 95” x 67”, 60’ long rolled aluminum pipe arch culvert. The culvert…
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SAWC Awarded ACWA Grant for Community Watershed Projects in Skagway, Haines, Wrangell

SAWC Awarded ACWA Grant for Community Watershed Projects in Skagway, Haines, Wrangell

Community Watershed Stewardship
  The Southeast Alaska Watershed Coalition (SAWC) was recently awarded funding through the State’s Alaska Clean Water Actions (ACWA) grant to carry out community watershed projects in the communities of Haines, Skagway, and Wrangell. A partnership between the State of Alaska’s Departments of Environmental Conservation, Fish & Game, and Natural Resources, ACWA was created to characterize Alaska’s waters in a holistic manner, and facilitate the sharing of data, resources, and information among state agencies. The ACWA grant program awards funds for projects to restore, protect, or conserve water quality, quantity, and aquatic habitat on identified waters.   Pullen Creek Rain Garden and Outreach, Skagway Funding was awarded to carry out the Pullen Creek Rain Garden and Outreach project in partnership with Coalition member group Taiya Inlet Watershed Council in Skagway.…
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Chilkoot River Eulachon Population Study

Chilkoot River Eulachon Population Study

Community Watershed Stewardship
    [su_slider source="media: 4846,4845,4844,4843,4842,4841" height="400" speed="300"]   An important subsistence resource for many Southeast Alaska communities, eulachon (locally pronounced “hooligan”) are a small anadromous fish that gather in large schools at the mouths of rivers and streams as they prepare to swim upstream to spawning grounds. The arrival of these oily little Southeast delicacies are an official harbinger of spring for the residents that gear up with nets and waders and head out to scoop up the “candlefish” which are often loaded into smokehouses to further flavor and preserve the fish for eating. According to Alaska Department of Fish and Game, watersheds with eulachon migrations in Southeast Alaska include the Unuk, Stikine, Taku, Mendenhall, Lace, Chilkat, Situk, and Alsek.   The Takshanuk Watershed Council in Haines has begun a…
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