Friday, March 27, 2009

Wild & Scenic Success

I was sitting here pondering this wonderful victory in the Wild Rivers and Wilderness Bill just signed by President Obama. I think it's important to deconstruct this victory a little bit.

You should know that the work to get this bill passed started over a decade ago when FOR started pushing to get rivers and creeks declared eligible for Wild & Scenic Status. The push has continued and steady work has been applied.


To get this done we worked with folks you might not expect. Buck McKeon and Mary Bono-Mack are two Republican Representatives and they were essential, as the rivers we were looking to protect flow in their districts. In recent times the Republican Party has not been very friendly towards the notion of conservation, but it didn't always used to be that way. Pete McCloskey, a Republican at the time, authored the Endangered Species Act (which was signed by Richard Nixon). Peter H. Behr, a Republican State Senator, wrote the California Wild & Scenic Rivers Act. It is a very refreshing thing to see politicians casting off dogma for Do-ma.


River saving, as an activity or organizational goal, is not full of quick victories and banner waving. River saving is a long process for determined people. It is a pragmatic business where allies are constantly sought from right, left and center.


I am proud to work for Friends of the River as we have proven that we are that type of organization and there are now many more miles of free flowing California Rivers that will forever be protected.



Bjorn

Development Director, dad and Fly Fishing Nut



A picture taken from the banks of the Owens River. The headwaters of the Owens are not protected thanks to the recently passed bill.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Breaking News: Congress Passes Wild Rivers and Wilderness Bill

and it is heading to President Obamas desk.


The House of Representatives today approved by a vote of 285 to 140 a bill that places 105 miles of California rivers to the National Wild & Scenic Rivers System. HR146, the Omnibus Public Lands Protection Act, also protects as Wilderness more than 750,000 acres of public lands in the
state. Overall, the legislative package includes 150 bills that protects more than a thousand miles of Wild & Scenic Rivers and two million acres of Wilderness nationwide. Since it has already been approved by the Senate, the bill now goes to President Obama’s desk for his signature.
River conservationists were ecstatic about the bill’s passage. “This is the largest addition of California rivers protected in the national system since 1981,” said Steve Evans, Conservation Director of Friends of the River. “It is also the most diverse group of rivers in the state to be protected,” he said.
The bill protects as Wild & Scenic Rivers portions of eight streams in the state, including the Owens River headwaters in the eastern Sierra Nevada, Cottonwood Creek in the White Mountains, Amargosa River in the Mojave Desert, Piru Creek in the northern San Gabriel Mountains, and the North Fork San Jacinto River, Palm Canyon Creek, and Bautista Creek in the
San Jacinto Mountains. In addition, the wilderness component of the package protects the headwaters of several rivers, including the West Walker, Owens, Santa Clara, and San Jacinto. The bill not only protects rivers that provide spectacular public opportunities for hiking,backpacking, fishing, and hunting, it also protects habitat for many rare and endangered fish and wildlife species, including the Paiute cutthroat trout, Yosemite toad, Amargosa vole, and mountain yellow-legged frog. Many of the streams also provide clean drinking water for use
downstream. The California bills included in the omnibus lands package represents true bi-partisan support for
river and land protection. Representative Buck McKeon and Representative Mary Bono-Mack, two California Republicans who introduced the original bills to protect wild rivers and lands in their districts, worked closely with California’s Democratic Senators, Barbara Boxer and Dianne
Feinstein to secure the legislation’s passage through Congress.
All of the California streams protected in the legislative package were first nominated by Friends of the River and then determined eligible for federal protection by the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Wild & Scenic designation will protect the streams from new
dams and ensure that the public lands through which they flow are managed by the respective federal agencies to protect the rivers’ outstanding natural and cultural values. Within three years
after designation, the federal agencies will develop and implement and comprehensive river management plan for each stream to ensure their permanent protection. The eight California streams protected in the omnibus package joins a prestigious list of streams
totaling more than 2,000 miles protected in the National Wild & Scenic Rivers System since 1968, including portions of the Smith River, Klamath River, Scott River, Salmon River, Trinity River, Eel River, Van Duzen River, American River, Feather River, Tuolumne River, Merced
River, Kings River, Kern River, Big Sur River, Sisquoc River, and Sespe Creek. All these streams represent California’s fast-disappearing heritage of free flowing rivers and outstanding
natural and cultural values.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Wild Fish, Delta, Steelhead and the Moke

A few more odds and ends.


  • Why Wild? The question asks "why buy wild salmon?" The answers are many and the reasons are good. If you think buying a farm-raised salmon is sparing the resource, you are mistaken. Learn why wild salmon are the only salmon you should put on your dinner plate.

  • Steelhead – these magnificent fish have diminished in strength all over the West. Patagonia has an interesting essay about the fish, its fisheries and why you should care.

  • Delta - I gave a presentation about CA's water future to a group of Delta Striper fisherman at a clinic put on by Dan Blanton. It was a great gathering of concerned and active anglers. The Delta is in the middle of just about every water war around the State.

  • The fight for the Moke is gathering pace. Here Patagonia Fly Fishing Ambassador Mikey Wier's take on the issue.

The snow is in the mountains, the rivers are inching higher, runoff is around the corner, Spring is, in theory, here and soon the bugs will start moving and the fish will start to feed. It is a good time of year.


Silver Fork of the American. A pretty little place.

Bjorn - Avid Angler and Development Director for FOR

Monday, March 16, 2009

Can't wait for the 2010 Ca Rivers Festival

Thank you to all of the Friends of the River Volunteers - the heart of the California Rivers Festival - with which the event would not be possible!

The food was great, presentations were interesting, lots of knowledgeable vendors, beautiful day next to the river...Check out our Photo Album

Anyone get any crazy deals?

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Save the Moke!

The key word is needless. EBMUD does not need to drown more of the Moke to get water. There are a host of other real-world solutions.

The threatened river is loved by many for its beauty, for its beginning kayak runs and year-round angling. It is very regrettable that EBMUD is cultivating the fear of future water shortages directly into needless river destruction, we need your support so that we can ensure the voice of the river is heard.

Learn more here: www.friendsoftheriver.org/savethemoke

Comment - tell us about your experiences on the Moke, share pics and videos...we cant lose this cherished section of the Mokelumne

Monday, March 9, 2009

The Last Descent - Kayaking for the last time...

The Last Descent Join a group of whitewater kayakers on their journey to some of the world’s most amazing rivers ... descending them possibly for the last time. Nepal's Marsyangdi River, Uganda's White Nile and India's Brahmaputra River all are threatened or are in the process of being destroyed by large-scale hydroelectric projects. The award winning film documents the struggle of indiginous people, the destruction of the environment and local economies while finding world class whitewater. The film closes with the movement to restore Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park.

Watch the trailer here: http://www.thelastdescent.com/trailer.html

Film viewing with personal introduction by Scott Ligare at the California Rivers Festival - This Saturday! Learn more here: http://www.californiariversfestival.org/

the most dramatic, remote, gorgeous canyons in CA...

California Classic - workshop at Saturday's California Rivers Festival
Join in the fun and excitement - enjoy the thrills and spills - view some of the most dramatic, remote, gorgeous canyons in CA. You will see clips of the Bear, Bald Rock, Burnt Ranch, Cherry Creek, Dardanelles, Fordyce, Giant Gap, Golden Gate, Middle and Upper Kings, North and Lower Stan, Pauley Creek, Purdons Crossing, and San Joaquin - right up to the end with a final hurrah and total flip. Plus recall the past with great music that will date us - Don't miss the fun we offer the viewer! Welcome presenters: Rorie Lin Gotham, Mark Hascall, and Bob Santin.

Learn more at: www.californiariversfestival.org

Thursday, March 5, 2009

River of Renewal Film Screening

At the California Rivers Festival, view "River of Renewal" which examines the water and wildlife crisis in the Klamath Basin—a bioregion as large as Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire combined. The communities that harvest food from the Klamath Basin—raising crops and cattle, catching salmon in the river and offshore—have all suffered due to the lack of enough water to serve the needs of irrigation and fisheries alike. This film takes a journey to the Klamath Basin to reexamine the water issues. Learn more about the Klamath River and watch the trailer by clicking here.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

California farms, cities warned they may lose access to state's creeks, rivers

"Thousands of California farms and cities have been warned that their permission to pump water from rivers and creeks could be cut back if the drought worsens..."

'...The city of Sacramento, for instance, depends on diversion rights in both the American and Sacramento rivers. Some of these rights are considered to have high seniority, but this may not protect the city from cutbacks later this year if the drought worsens.
"It's not a property right," said Ronald Stork, senior policy advocate at Friends of the River.
"Providence has to provide the water. And if she doesn't, your water right is not going to be anything more than a piece of paper.'

Read the Sacramento Bee article, by clicking here.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Richard Bangs, Rain and the Eng Theng

Random odds and ends and a report about the Fly Fishing Show in Pleasanton.
  • 2007 Mark Dubois Award Winner Richard Bangs will be giving a slide show about Morocco at Mountain Travel Sobek. They are good people.

  • At FOR World Headquarters (aka our Sacramento office) we are, in theory, 88% of normal for precipitation. Paso Robles is at 49% of normal, which isn’t good for drought, but might be good for fire scorched hillsides. It can be hard to make heads or tails of our water picture at the moment. It is easy to tell, however, that one year of decent rainfall that approaches normal, won’t get us out of the water fights we have ahead of us. As I write this from my Placerville home, it is raining on a 45% angle and the big pines are swaying like a tired angler after a few Steelhead Pale Ales.

  • I was at the Fly Fishing Show in Pleasanton over the weekend, manning the Friends of the River table. Some of our fellow river-savers were out there, Western Rivers Conservancy and Trout Unlimited were within casting range. It was good to spread the word about our work with the mad-for-fly-fishing masses. It was also good to hear how many folks had heard of Friends of the River or were getting our emails through their Fly Fishing Clubs. During the slow periods I got to work on filling my fly box. I tied about 2 dozen #16 bead head pheasant tails and twenty #14 Eng Thengs (a fly from my home water of the Upper Sacramento invented by Dunsmuir guide and all around good guy, Wayne Eng). Thanks to Big Bird for working the table with me on Saturday.

For a fly fisherman in California, this is a beloved sight... the Red Barn on the Fall River. Located to the East of Mt. Shasta, the Fall River is the largest upwelling of spring water in North America and happens to be one heck of a fishery.

Bjorn - FOR Development Director and fish nut.