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Monthly Meetings

NWWG meets the third Wednesday of every month from 4:30-6PM at the Navarro River Resource Center. All are welcome! Find Out More

Upcoming Events

  • Insectary Hedgerows Workshop on Fri, 17 Feb 2012

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Latest "River Notes"

Bird Walk/Survey out on the AV High School Creek Trail

         This morning Bill Sterling led two 7th grade Science classes down to the Creek Trail for a Bird Walk/Survey. It was a beautiful mo... Read More

Read More "River Notes"

Roads

August 21, 2005

Roads facilitate travel to our homes and places of work. In fact, nearly every activity in a rural community requires getting in a car and traveling on a road somewhere. In a logging operation roads influence aesthetics, logging costs and environmental mitigation. I often find myself asking the question, can an existing problem road, located near a watercourse, be relocated to a ridge and diminish the environmental consequences at the same time facilitate logging method and be financially feasible? During my forestry fieldwork, second only to deciding what trees will be left and cut, is managing roads for improvement and aesthetics. I have yet to meet a road that did not need improvement. Why should you be concerned about roads? Because poorly constructed roads accelerate erosion, which increases stream sedimentation, and can be maintenance nightmares.

According to Danny Hagans of Pacific Watershed Associates the three goals of road improvement are to reduce the chance of sediment delivery as a result of episodic events, reduce chronic delivery of sediment and reduce maintenance. There are many ways to accomplish these goals. Addressing the following points in your road management decisions will insure the ultimate goal, of making roads as invisible on the landscape as possible, is met. Drain roads well and frequently onto stable surfaces, diversion proof crossings, design crossings to pass fish and design crossings for the large episodic event.

There are resources to aid you in road management decision making. A widely used publication is the Handbook for Forest and Ranch Roads by Pacific Watershed Associates. The concepts in the Handbook have been adapted into a "Roads" video. Both are available through the Mendocino County Resource Conservation District (707-468-9223) and the Navarro River Resource Center (707-895-3230). Also check out the website of the Navarro Watershed Working Group (www.nwwg.org) and click on workshops. There you will find a comprehensive write-up from a 2003 Roads workshop.

I welcome responses as well as ideas for future Tree Tips. You can also get an email version by contacting me at thembi@mcn.org,

Thembi Borras is a Registered Professional Forester living and working in Mendocino County, CA USA.
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