By LEE JUILLERAT
H&N Regional Editor
CHILOQUIN — The
Chiloquin Dam is gone.
It was located along the
Sprague River near the city of Chiloquin, and was slated
for removal for some time.
Dave Arter, construction
engineer with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, said the
aging structure was so deteriorated that it came down
easier than expected.
“It wasn’t quite the
challenge we anticipated,” Arter said. “The quality of
concrete in 1914 was not the quality of concrete we have
today.”
Dam removal work on the
190-foot wide, 11-foot tall structure began in late July
and was completed Aug. 20 — 69 days ahead of schedule.
Fish passage
Biologists said it
blocked the passage of 95 percent of the endangered Lost
River and shortnosed suckers from Upper Klamath Lake to
upstream spawning habitat. They believe the removal will
provide access to 80 miles of habitat. The two suckers
are a traditional food for Klamath Indians, who annually
hold ceremonies to welcome the spawning run of the
fish.
“We’re way ahead of
schedule,” Arter said. “We hope that by Oct. 15 we will
have completed everything.”
Work remaining
Crews from Slayden
Construction of Stayton, the project contractor, are
realigning the shore near the former dam and backfilling
and covering
a former irrigation canal. Cost of the project was
previously estimated at more than $9 million.
Arter said the backfilling is more than
80 percent complete and work is progressing on building
an irrigation system for the Glenn Kircher family, which
used the canal.
Arter said most of the 1,500 cubic
yards of concrete and other materials from the dam
(“over the years a lot of it eroded and washed away”)
was used to fill the old canal, which is
being covered with two feet of topsoil for future
planting. Seeding of the former canal and disturbed
areas with certified weed-free seed will begin next
week.
“By the time a year goes by, it’s going
to be hard to know there was a dam there,” Arter said,
noting crews used 1914 river surveys to return the area
by the old dam
to its natural contours.
“ We’re trying to restore it to
approximately what it was in 1914. We’re almost there.”
Unknown is what
will be done with sinker logs littering sections of the
river near the former dam, which is less than a mile
from the Sprague’s confluence with the Williamson River.
Officials believe
the logs are remnants from early logging days.
Arter said officials from the Bureau,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, Forest Service, Oregon Water Resources
Department and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
are reviewing data and will decide on a course of
action.
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