News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon
Awaiting restoration...
Back in the early 1900s, cattle ranchers in the Sisters country worked hard to turn Trout Creek Swamp into good grazing land for their cattle.
"They dug ditches through the swamp to channel the multiple meandering streams into a few deep, narrow ditches so that the water table would be lowered and there would be more dry areas for cattle to graze," according to a restoration project outline provided by the Sisters Ranger District.
The hard work paid off. The 20-acre area 10 miles west of Sisters (then privately owned) became pretty good cattle range. It is not, however, a very good swamp anymore.
Ditches eroded, dumping sediment into Trout Creek. Non-native Reed Canary Grass has moved in and is choking out native grasses.
The U.S. Forest Service hopes to restore the area to its former condition as a year-round wet meadow, home to the kind of plants and animals that depend on that sort of habitat. Red-band trout are among the species affected, according to the Forest Service.
According to the project outline, foresters have several options in restoring the swamp.
These include:
The work would be done in the late summer and early fall, according to the project outline.
The Forest Service is taking comments through Friday, July 6. E-mail [email protected] or call 541-549-7730.
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