Bear Creek Beaver Dam Analogues Build July 5-8

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Stewardship Pronghorn Fence

Stewardship Pronghorn Fence

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Cottonwood Canyon Riparian Soundscape

Organizer: Jefferson Jacobs

Start Date: 7/5/2018

End Date: 7/8/2018

Region: John Day River Basin

Difficulty Rating: 3 out of 5

Maximum Group Size: 15 participants

About the place

ONDA has been involved with legal action supporting fish habitat in Malheur National Forest for over a decade, and we are now pleased to be entering a new cooperative phase with the National Forest where we are now in the third year of helping to implement a variety of ambitious, multi-year projects restoring key fish habitat on headwater streams.

Bear Creek has its headwaters just east of Long Creek, near Galena and is a tributary of the Middle Fork of the John Day River.  The Creek provides habitat for redband trout and steelhead, and potential rearing habitat for Chinook salmon.  Goldmining, timber harvest, road building and other historic management practices have resulted in Bear creek losing its sinuosity and accessibility to migrating fish. This large scale cooperative project involving work by the Forest Service, Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, local Watershed Council and ONDA will restore connectivity of the creek to the John Day, install Beaver Dam Analogues and large woody debris, as well as remove levees and berms.

View the map.

About the stewardship work

ONDA volunteers will be able to help with all aspects of Beaver Dam Analogue (BDA) construction. Allowing for individual interests and abilities, there will be the opportunity to be part of the team using the hydraulic fence pounder to pound 6-inch diameter wood posts in lines across the creek-bed. Others can help cut and haul branches from onsite to use in weaving into the posts. There will also be the the placing of gravel and rocks to “seal” the structure on the upstream side. July will be the perfect time of year to splash in the water and engage your inner 12-year-old.

The importance of the work we are doing also has many impacts beyond the immediate and structures we install. Having ONDA volunteers help out on this project is a great way to demonstrate ONDA’s long-term and meaningful commitment to the fish habitat that we have been working to protect for two decades; it is also a fantastic way to continue building the cooperative atmosphere with the National Forest.

As always there is no experience necessary. We will teach you everything you need to know to work safely and effectively.  There is ample opportunity to work at your own pace and on aspects that work best with your physical capabilities.

Trip timeline

  • Thursday, July 5, 6 p.m.: Meet at the campsite (directions will be sent in 3-week email before trip).  Get settled in, and have an orientation talk with details about the work over the next two days.
  • Friday, July, 6, 8 a.m.: Head to the worksite. We will be away from camp all day, returning between 4 and 5 p.m.
  • Saturday, July 7, 8 a.m.: Head to the worksite. We will be away from camp all day, returning between 4 and 5 p.m.
  • Sunday, July 8, 9 a.m.: After breakfast we can pack up and head home.

Camp

This trip will involve car camping at an undeveloped National Forest campsite.  ONDA will provide a porta-potty.  There will be no potable water source.  There will be plenty of room to spread out in terms of tent sites, but we will gather in the evenings and the mornings to be able to share information about the work and for some social time.  The campsite is accessible via gravel roads in a standard vehicle: no 4WD required.

Difficulty

Level 3

While pounding the posts with the hydraulic pounder will be very hard work and noisy, there are plenty of other things that will need to be done, such as cutting and hauling brush and weaving it into the line of posts, and moving gravel or rocks.  Everyone can pace themselves, regulate their own level of effort, switch between various available tasks of varying intensities and rest as needed.

Trip highlights and challenges

  • Helping to dramatically change a large watershed for the benefit of fish and wildlife.
  • Working in a lovely high elevation eastern Oregon forest.
  • Easy comfortable car camping situation.
  • Ability to self-engage at an effort level of work that is as light or as challenging as desired.

Participant responsibilities

Participants are responsible for their own food and camping gear, as well as transportation to and from the trip. Sturdy off-trail ankle-high boots are required for this trip.   Participants should be prepared with clothing layers, food and water to spend the day away from camp to conduct the work.  We recommend bringing your own work gloves to provide a comfortable fit. But it is not required.  We recommend that each person bring 2 to 3 gallons of drinking water for the trip, since none is available on site.

Gear provided

ONDA will provide the tools for the work (Including work gloves if you don’t have a pair), excellent guidance in the field, and a few group camping items to make things more comfortable (chairs, tables, dishwashing bins, shade/rain tarp, etc.)  We also provide hot water at morning and evening mealtimes to help expedite meal prep, and espresso coffee in the morning.

Registration

An ONDA registration application and medical form are required for this trip.

Apply Now

You only need to fill this form out once per year and can join additional trips this year by emailing the trip leader directly. You will receive a confirmation email within 10 working days of submitting your form. The confirmation email will provide information regarding which trips you are on the “participant list” for, and which trips are full, and therefore you have been placed on the “waitlist.”

Six weeks before the start of the trip, the trip leader will send out an RSVP to make sure everyone is still able to participate. Based on RSVPs, open spaces will be backfilled with people from the waitlist.

Three weeks before the trip start date, registered and confirmed participants will receive driving instructions, maps, carpooling options, and additional information in an email sent by the trip leader

If you have any questions in the meantime, please don’t hesitate to contact the trip leader.