June 03, 2010

Low water

Dock

Usually in May, the river water is high enough to cover the dock at my parents' camp, and we pile rocks on the top to keep sections from floating away. Then the water level drops as the summer goes on, with more rocks appearing in the river as August comes to a close.

This year, the water is unusually low, about a foot and a half lower than last year. We had less snowfall this winter and a dry spring — and I'm not really sure what all the factors are. The water level is partially controlled by climate and partially controlled by human institutions. Commercial interests -- the need to produce hydro-electic power, the need to keep the Seaway functioning as a shipping lane, the money made by tourism that relies on recreational boating -- often dictate the water level, which can be controlled at the locks. I'd like to think that local ecology, and the needs of the creatures of the marshes, come into play, but I think environmental issues are secondary to commercial interests.

In the 42 years we've had the camp, we've never seen water quite this low on Memorial Day.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

This makes me feel very anxious for the Earth and all the natural places I love...

--Neighbor Lady

Sandy said...

Lovely scene.

Sandy said...

Lovely scene.

Sarah Sometimes said...

there's a note of foreboding in your post, and, yes, I can see that the water is low, but, still, such a beautiful picture, with sharp, clear color. You can see how bright the sunshine was.

Jennifer (ponderosa) said...

It's hard to know what's "normal," isn't it, when people mess around so much? There are multiple dams on the Deschutes River here, including 2 within a mile of my house, so the water level fluctuates like crazy.

jo(e) said...

Yeah, what we think of as "normal" isn't the natural level of the river: the Seaway opened in 1959. So the water levels have been manipulated and managed for decades.

Rev.Dulce said...

Unfortunately, I believe that we can all see how little the environment figures into "commercial" concerns. I can hardly bear looking at the pictures coming in from the Gulf of Mexico.