Efforts to improve water quality in the Sprague River have gotten a
financial boost.
A $100,000 grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will be used to
reduce erosion into the river and for riparian habitat health. The money
for the Klamath Watershed Council is earmarked for grazing management
practices beginning this summer.
An overall goal of the project is to benefit suckers in Upper Klamath
Lake, said Ron Hathaway of the Oregon
State University Extension Service.
He said the grant is another step in a long effort to improve the Sprague
River by minimizing effects of cattle grazing. Ranchers in the Sprague
River valley are increasingly supportive of the movement, Hathaway said.
“If we looked back two years we’d never gotten that response. It was
not a relationship of trust. But the community has really stepped up for
what they can do on their land.” Changing attitudes
Dave Ross, restoration manager for Fish and Wildlife, agrees that
ranchers’ attitudes have changed toward grazing issues.
“We have more support and interest from those ranchers than I ever dreamed
of,” Ross said. “Our relationship with them has never been better. We
want the ranchers to stay there and we want to work with them.”
Techniques will vary from ranch to ranch, he said. Some ranchers will
rotate stock from one grazing area to another while others might opt to
open new pastures with additional fencing, Ross said. Still others will
choose to fence off wetlands.
The accumulated effect will be less nitrogen and phosphorous going into
the Sprague River.
“When you have excessive amounts of streambank and soil erosion, the
earth washed into the stream gets released and that gives rise to algae,
which uses up oxygen and kills
fish,” Ross said.
As part of the program, Klamath Watershed Council coordinator Danette
Watson will move from an office in Klamath Falls to a site in the Sprague
River valley. That’s intended to make communication with ranchers easier
and more effective.
Hathaway noted that Watson has had to drive 90 minutes round trip to visit
Sprague River farmers in the past.
The Klamath County commissioners accepted the grant at their weekly
meeting Tuesday, and also authorized receipt of a separate $20,000 Fish
and Wildlife grant to fund, among other things, hiring of part-time
employee Jill Estenson as Watson’s assistant.
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