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Restauración de Colorado Gulch:
Mejora del hábitat. Mejora de la experiencia.

IT'S A GRAND SLAM AT UPPER COLORADO GULCH. REDUCING FLOODING, RESTORING CRUCIAL HABITATS, AND RETURNING THE BANKS OF THE BIGWOOD RIVER TO A NATURAL STATE IS A
WIN-WIN-WIN.

PROBLEMS AND LIMITING FACTORS AND HISTORY

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The area south of Heagle Park in Hailey was once the site of a wastewater treatment plant, known as the Riverside Plant. It was built in the early 1970’s to accommodate development in the area. The Riverside Plant provided wastewater service to residents of the community until 2000, which at that time served about 1,500 people. The plant operated for about 29 years until the facility was converted into a pump station (Riverside Pump Station). Today, the collection system gathers wastewater from various sources in Hailey and conveys them to the Woodside Treatment Plant. 

The plant itself required diking and rip rapping in order to prevent erosion damage from the river. The solution to prevent back-flow surging of the plant was to add onto the effluent line and run it downstream until the river gradient dropped low enough to not force water back through the plant. That effluent pipeline is still visible along the stream bank and is no longer needed with the current Riverside Lift Station and the Woodside Treatment Plant.

 

Clearly this reach of the Big Wood River has been heavily altered by anthropogenic activities, which has resulted in highly unstable conditions prone to excessive deposition, bank erosion, and residential flooding. The large magnitude flood (greater than 50-year return interval) experienced in the Big Wood River in 2017 resulted in widespread flooding, erosion, and woody debris recruitment across the basin. Excessive sediment supply and insufficient transport capacity in the project area resulted in sediment and woody debris deposition within the Big Wood River channel. These changes within the river channel have resulted in increased flooding  within the project vicinity.

 

In response to an increased awareness and desire to implement flood mitigation efforts, the scope of the Hailey Greenway Master Plan (HGMP) was revised in July 2017 to include additional analysis and information on river system management throughout the greenway corridor. This project near Heagle Park was identified in the HGMP river management recommendations technical memorandum. The recommendation from the Big Wood River Atlas was to remove rip rap, old road grades, and restore channel  processes to a reach that has been impacted by artificial confinement.  

PROJECT GOALS & BENEFITS

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El proyecto de restauración del río Colorado Gulch (COG) ofreció una oportunidad única para mejorar el hábitat de la llanura aluvial y reconectar 1,200 pies de canales laterales históricos al eliminar aproximadamente 1,300 yardas cúbicas (cy) de escollera y relleno artificial que históricamente protegieron la carretera y el puente de COG. El principal factor limitante para el hábitat de los salmónidos en el río Big Wood (BWR) se ha abordado con éxito mediante la reconexión de su llanura aluvial. Esta iniciativa estratégica ahora permite que el río cree naturalmente un hábitat complejo y proporciona un acceso crucial a las áreas de cría durante eventos de alto caudal.

Before:

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After:

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SOCIOS DEL PROYECTO

  • City of Hailey

FUNDACIÓN TRUCHA Y SALMÓN

  • Blaine County

FUNDACIÓN TRUCHA Y SALMÓN

  • Enviromental Science Associates

FUNDACIÓN TRUCHA Y SALMÓN

  • Trout & Salmon Foundation

FUNDACIÓN TRUCHA Y SALMÓN

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