Oregon
Related: About this forumWhat I learned while riding in a sacred canoe. Bartell's Backroads video
Four dams on the Klamath are coming down. Here is some powerful background on the story of the river and the Native Americans.
AllaN01Bear
(22,913 posts)lovely canoe. i dont watch youtube videos anymore .
Permanut
(6,593 posts)Uncle Joe
(59,996 posts)Thanks for the thread barbaraann
barbaraann
(9,282 posts)I think it's amazing that the dams are actually coming down.
love_katz
(2,750 posts)I have been following this story for awhile. This is beyond excellent. There's also a website that tells the story of the degradation of the Redwoods and of the many challenges involved in healing the land and restoring the natural forest. I will check my email for the name of the website, and come back and post it here. It's the Sempervirens fund, at Sempervirens. org. I am not affiliated with the organization, and won't receive any benefits from posting the link. The website has information about the extraordinary challenges involved in healing the damage to both the Redwoods and the Klamath River.
barbaraann
(9,282 posts)We all need to do what we can for our wounded planet.
PufPuf23
(9,233 posts)Could not find a single mention of the Klamath River at the Sempervirens site nor an individual whose bio relates to the Klamath River. Maybe there is mention somewhere I did not look at the site. There are other groups, Tribes, and agencies that focus on the Klamath.
Not slamming the Sempervirens Fund, good and historic organization but nothing to do with Klamath River.
Live on the Klamath River. Has always been my home.
I posted a thread about the Klamath dam removal last month in the Environment and Energy Forum.
The largest US dam-removal effort to date has begun
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1127171833
Made a post in the thread that includes a trip by dugout from Somes Bar (Siskiyou-Humboldt County where the Salmon River joins the Klamath)
Here is a rare treat about the Klamath River and how appeared 100 years ago.
California's Redwood Wonderland - Humboldt County; Thornbury, Sunset Press 1923
The entire book is some kind of wonderful. Two of the later chapters describe a trip by dugout canoe from Somes Bar (mouth of Salmon River where Humboldt County meets Siskiyou County to where the Klamath meets the Pacific Ocean at Requa in 1921. The road from the coast reached Orleans in 1921. Chapter XXIV (page 148) Down the Klamath and Chapter XXV (page 156) From Martin's Ferry to Requa (Martin's Ferry is the is the intersection with Bald Hills Road (still partially unpaved) that is the back entrance to Redwood National Park and traverses Lady Bird Johnson Grove prior to joining 101.
What is described is country that after less than 75 years of miners and other settlers and the impact of their activities, most that occurred when the area was only accessed by mule, horse, or foot. Thornbury drove to Orleans and went by trail to Somes Bar. The dams being removed are father up the Klamath in Siskiyou County and Oregon.
Here is the link to a pdf (page 149): https://archive.org/details/californiasredwo00thor/page/148/mode/2up