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A local work crew (Donald, Tony and Melanie) walk stream systems surrounding their home community of Hydaburg.
The team take stream measurements and trap and study anadramous fish populations. By understanding where specific fish are living, stream reaches (or sections of streams) are categorized as 'anadramous' and added to a regional catalog. This categorization adds protection to stream systems and helps dictate the type of development that can happen in their vicinity (e.g. type of logging activity).
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Photographs by Bethany Goodrich, Sustainable Southeast Partnership
Can't remember the last time I took a decent shot! I seem to be lost at the moment. Came across these two in a quiet stream, they seemed to be heading back to the others.
This small bush river in the forest near Lake Hanlon on the West Coast of New Zealand's South Island does not appear to have a name, the maps are blank, but the Coast is full of many such rivers. They rise in the densely forested valleys and rush quickly down the steep mountainsides to the sea which, on the West Coast, is often only a short distance away.
Watershed ambassadors Krissy Panos and Evelyn Meisenbacher use a rubber duck to measure stream flow.
Stream Assessment Training
Great Swamp Watershed Association
3/21/2015
Mt. Katahdin as viewed from Sandy Stream Pond. Baxter State Park. I love the way the morning sun lit up the mountain side
Our hiking directions drastically played down the stream crossings. A few were easily navigated by hopping rocks but a few parts necessitated taking off your shoes or saying "Fuck it" and just plowing through the water. Towards the end of our stay, I was the first to enter "Fuck It Mode" and Ian shortly followed.