Well, in the rebirthing process, anyway......
A few weeks ago someone made a reference to a dam removal here. As
Wisconsin is known to be a national leader in this laudable endeavor
(over 130 at last count), this prompted me to take a look at what's new
in the months since I last checked. A Google search turned up numerous
hits, the third of which was a link to The River Alliance of Wisconsin
website:
http://www.wisconsinrivers.org/
I immediately noticed that the Alliance and Friends of the Milwaukee
River were co-hosting a "Canoes and Brews" outing, a roughly 7 mile
Trip down the Milwaukee River to a local microbrewery/restaurant, the Rock
Bottom Brewery, scheduled for July 22. After reading up on the latest
dam removal information, I went back and looked at the information on
the "Canoes and Brews." Sounded like fun, so Becky and I signed up.
Friday night, we bought a rack to put on Becky's car (my faithful old
van went to the great parking lot in the sky this past spring), and
Saturday morning found us en route to the Milwaukee River at Lincoln
Park, just about six miles due east of the house.
Among the first arrivals (we pulled in behind the first of the
organizers after inadvertently following them for several blocks), we
sat around for a bit and chatted with other participants. At the
scheduled start time, 11:00 a.m., we began launching boats, a process
that ate up nearly half an hour, in a stagnant and silt-laden backwater
off the main channel. We started out near the back of the pack and
stayed there till after the first of two portages, one of them
around a dam (one of several.....at least four that I've been able to
locate on Google Earth.....that still remain on the river) and the
other around a natural bedrock ledge. Near the end of the first
portage, the entire group assembled to listen to a couple of brief
talks, delivered by the organizers, about some of the environmental
problems that still plague the river.
Foremost among those problems (not surprisingly) is the continued
existence of the few remaining dams. Listening to the spiel, I was
somewhat surprised.....and not altogether pleasantly so.....to discover
a much more moderate stance among the members of both hosting
organizations than I had expected. No fire and brimstone.....no plans
to dynamite the dams by moonlight.....no monkey wrenching. Opposition
to dam removal centers primarily around the usual objections of land
owners along the banks, the abundance of pollutants (most notably, the
ubiquitous PCBs) in the sediments behind the dams, and cost. As I
said, the talks were brief......and it was clear that virtually
everyone wanted to keep them as brief as possible and get back on the water.
Hence, there was little discussion. Had there been, someone would
surely have pointed out that none of the objections have nearly the
force that they once did......and that this is why the pace of dam
removal across the country is accelerating. There is one other (and
increasingly more intractable) problem that is actually exacerbated by
dam removals, and I'll get back to that in a moment.
Nine years ago (seven years before the first "Canoes and Brews") there
would have been one more portage, around the North Avenue dam. The
removal of this dam is one of the great success stories on the river.
Before it was taken out (so we were told on Saturday) there were just 3
species of fish recorded in the stretch that we floated. The most
Recent species count is 30. In the early spring of last year (there
Was still ice in some isolated shady spots), Becky and I floated most of
this same stretch. I was very surprised to see many live mussels and
even a stonefly hatch. Steelhead and salmon (as well as other species,
including the odd brookie) find their way up from Lake
Michigan as far as Thiensville (and possibly further.....I'm not sure),
some 20 miles upstream during their spawning runs, attracting many
eager anglers. Others fish for resident species throughout the season, as
we
saw on our outing last weekend. We were told that they keep and eat
the fish they catch......a practice I think as yet premature. But, great
blue herons are an inevitable sight. Their lesser cousins are
frequently spotted. Kingfishers scold so frequently that one wonders
when they find time to feed. Canada geese and several species of ducks
patrol the banks, guarding their broods against all comers. There are
deer, beavers and even wild turkeys in the greenbelts and on the
parkways. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources has been
restocking the river with environmentally sensitive sturgeon for
several years (it's too soon the cheer, but there's reason to be hopeful).
The
channel through what used to be the pond behind the dam has been
constricted so as to provide a couple hundred yards of white
water......just a hint of excitement on what is otherwise a supremely
placid stream.
Coming into downtown, less than half a mile beyond the rapids, the
Other major problem on the river comes quickly and forcefully into focus.
Development. Ironically, as water quality improves and the upper
portions of the river within the metropolitan area become aesthetically
more pleasing and biologically healthy, gentrification with its
attendant development will only increase. More green space would be
better, but the land is valuable and will become ever more so as
conditions improve. Historically, Milwaukee has been a major
industrial and commercial center which (like millions of other cities, towns
and
villages) owes its very existence to the river. Factories, warehouses,
and other commercial enterprises line the banks on both sides through
downtown, all the way to the mouth. Or, did. Some still remain, but
many have already been converted into apartments and condos. High rise
office buildings fill the heart of downtown. There is a new "river
walk" lining both sides. In fact, for its last mile and a half the
river no longer has banks......it has walls. Of course, all of this is
better than the indiscriminately polluting ********s it replaces. The
problem of pollutants in the river (including, of course, raw sewage)
was compounded by the fact that there is virtually zero gradient
through downtown......water leaves the river only as it is pushed out
by more water from upstream, and the flow can be reduced to zero when an
east wind blows off the lake and pushes it all back up.
As far back as the third quarter of the 19th century (not so very long
after the city's founding) conditions on the river were so bad that by
1888 the city installed a pump (at 500,000,000 gallons per day it was
the highest capacity pump in the world at the time) near the Lake
Michigan shore that took water from the lake and pumped it half a mile
across the east side to just below the North Avenue dam and dumped it
back into the river, creating an artificial current to flush downtown.
The pump is still used to this day. Even so, the flotsam produced by a
major metropolitan area coats the surface of the river. Despite
various periodic cleanup efforts upstream, a vast amount of floating trash
finds its way to downtown and takes a long time to find its way through and
into the lake (not so, unfortunately, for massive amounts of sewage
that still shoot through the system, due to what is presumably some
sort of ill-conceived connection between the sewers and the storm drains,
every time a major storm comes through).
Fortunately, these matter didn't weigh heavily on us for most of the
trip. Much more troublesome for most were the frequent groundings in
shallow water before getting to the greater depths in downtown. Even
in very shallow draft canoes an kayaks, no one failed to find the bottom
frequently. However, the tedium of lurching and poling and scraping
was relieved by watching the many newbies do (or try to do) the same. In
the intervals, most people (yeah, there are always a few who can find a
way to be miserable) enjoyed the opportunities the placid water
afforded to talk with old friends and new and to enjoy the scenery;
despite its urban setting, the river's banks are mostly heavily timbered
through most of its length.
This has been a very busy year for me. This outing was my first
opportunity to get out in the kayak since last fall. It was great to be
on the water again. Feeling a bit frisky after a couple hours of drifting
and desultory paddling, I picked up the pace and fifteen minutes later
found myself very near the front of the pack. Settling into the groove,
I poured it on to keep up with a couple of kayakers who pulled out
ahead of the rest. Half a mile from the takeout I started to dig hard
and finished alone at the Rock Bottom dock. A few minutes later someone
paddled up and informed me that everyone else was getting out a bit
upstream...we weren't supposed to come all the way down to Rock
Bottom in the boats.
Oh.
Well, having made it safely out of my boat and onto a much higher dock
under the expectant gaze of a hundred pair of eyes on the patio, I wasn't
about to tempt fate by trying to get back in it. Instead, I dragged it the
length of the dock and then boosted it up a seven foot concrete wall and
the three foot steel rail above it. By far, the hardest work of the day.
Becky and I spent the next hour or so sitting on the patio, next to the
river,
sharing appetizers and beer with some of our new friends. Most of the
crew were seated in the indoor dining room..odd, on such a beautiful day.
The RAW and the FMR will be co-hosting a moonlight paddle from the
Milwaukee Rowing Club's facility at the north end of downtown to the
mouth of the river and back in celebration of the full moon on the evening
of
August 8. Details can be found at the above listed website. I'll be there.
Moonlight and city lights...anybody in the neighborhood should come on
down and join us..should be a good time.
Wolfgang