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NOW WELCOMING NEW VOLUNTEERS!
Protect watersheds
Monitor local streams
FREE training begins June 2008
No prior experience necessary
Streamkeepers, Clallam County's volunteer stream monitoring program, is seeking new volunteers to help collect stream health data, perform data entry & analysis, and conduct education & outreach activities. As the program continues to expand, there is a continuing need for additional volunteers. No experience is necessary and all age groups are welcome.
New volunteers join existing stream teams and perform quarterly stream monitoring and other stewardship activities, on streams throughout the county—or provide other kinds of program support, both outdoors and indoors.
The FREE training begins on June 17.
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DAY/DATE |
TIME |
SUBJECT |
PLACE |
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Tues. June 17 |
6-9 PM |
SK Introduction |
Courthouse Bsmt/EOC |
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Thurs. June 19 |
6-9 PM |
SK In Depth |
Courthouse Bsmt/EOC |
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Mon. June 23 |
6-9 PM |
County Orientation |
Courthouse Bsmt/EOC |
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Thurs. June 26 |
6-9 PM |
Field Procedures |
Courthouse Bsmt/EOC |
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Sat. June 28 |
9-4 AM |
First Aid Training (optional) |
5th St. PA Fire Dept |
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Sat. Jul TBA |
9 AM-4:30 PM |
Field Day |
To Be Announced |
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Sat. Jul TBA |
4:30-8 PM |
BBQ/Potluck |
To Be Announced |
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Sat. Sep 13 |
9 AM-1 PM |
Macroinvertebrate Sampling |
Commissioners' Mtg Rm |
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To register or inquire, call Streamkeepers at 417-2281, or email streamkeepers@co.clallam.wa.us.
THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING CITIZEN STEWARDSHIP
OF OUR LOCAL NATURAL RESOURCES!
WHAT IS STREAMKEEPERS? To view a video clip produced by Earth Tribe TV, click: Streamkeepers Video.
If you have dial-up service try this YouTube Link: Streamkeepers Video on YouTube. View other Earth Tribe TV clips at: www.earthtribetv.org
To view an introduction to Streamkeepers of Clallam County, click: Powerpoint Presentation.
Streamkeepers, a citizen-based watershed monitoring program of Clallam County's Department of Community Development, provides volunteer opportunities and project assistance in the effort to protect and restore salmon habitat.
Streamkeepers is:
- A volunteer opportunity for all Clallam County residents interested in monitoring, protecting, and restoring streams in our own watersheds;
- A service provider for watershed planning groups and habitat restoration project sponsors who need monitoring assistance on local streams.
Program Goals
- Provide useful, credible data to local natural resource planners acting to protect and restore streams.
- Report the information collected on a regular and timely basis.
- Perform small-scale restoration projects on local streams.
- Facilitate public involvement in stream monitoring and watershed stewardship.
What sort of work do Streamkeepers do?
Our stream teams perform regular quarterly monitoring at established sites on streams ranging from Sequim to Forks, measuring components of stream health such as the quality of the water, the diversity of life forms, and the integrity of the physical habitat.
In addition, special teams perform other activities, such as trapping juvenile fish, counting redds, replanting riparian areas, controlling invasive weeds, conducting streamwalks, teaching about watershed stewardship in the greater community, and entering & analyzing data.
What do regular stream teams measure?
Streamkeepers trains volunteers to assess a variety of biological, physical, and chemical stream health indicators through a structured quarterly monitoring program:
Biological health
- Benthic macroinvertebrates ("stream bugs")
- Fish & wildlife
- Noxious weeds
- Fecal coliform
Chemical health
- Temperature
- Dissolved oxygen
- Conductivity
- Turbidity
- Nitrates
- pH
Physical health
- Annual Streamwalk
- Photographs
- Reach maps
- Flow
- Gradient
- Cross-section
- Erosion & revetment
- Substrate and pools
- Large woody debris
- Riparian vegetation
Streamkeepers can help on your watershed!
Streamkeepers accepts requests from citizens, organizations, and governments in need of special services. The scope of available assistance includes:
- monitoring services
- data management and analysis
- outreach and education
- hands-on restoration work
- match for grants
For more details, see Streamkeepers´ Monitoring Services.
How do I get involved?
We train new volunteers once a year. Annual training takes place over several evenings and two Saturdays between June and September. We post the training schedule by May.
But you can always join Streamkeepers prior to formal training and learn to perform some of the procedures "on the job."
For more information, contact:
Streamkeepers of Clallam County
Clallam County Dept. of Community Development
223 East Fourth Street, Suite 5
Port Angeles, WA 98362-3015 USA
Phone: 360-417-2281
Email: streamkeepers@co.clallam.wa.us
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