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Stream Bank Restoration
Continues To Flow
By Scott Nicholson
Watauga Countys stream bank restoration continues
to flow even after repairs have been completed from 2004
hurricane damage.


About
500 feet of stream bank was restored near the
former Camp Yonahlossee site in southern Watauga
County. Photo submitted
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The Watauga County Soil and Water Conservation
District recently oversaw completion of a project on Lance
Creek, at the site of the former Camp Yonahlossee that
is now a private development.
The project involved removal of a dam that was built in
the mid-1900s and the return of the property to its natural
state.
District conservationist Adam Keener said 500 feet of
stream bank was totally restored, with stream banks, current
design and plantings replacing the dammed pond, which
was about an acre in size. The dam was about 15 to 20
feet high.
The county received a $260,000 grant from the N.C. Division
of Water Quality for the project, and the county worked
in cooperation with the Camp Yonahlossee Property Owners
Association.
Keener said the area was open as a public-access park
off Poplar Grove Road and the improvements should offer
a number of environmental benefits.
It will make a significant impact on aquatic habitats,
Keener said. Theres a restored wetland that
will provide significant habitat for everything from microinvertebrates
to trout. The wetlands will also provide a flood plain
and filtration system.
The project began in October, with the contracted work
performed by Environmental Services, Inc.
Keeners office oversaw the work and the grant requirements,
and said the removal of the dam was augmented with stream
boulders, the planting of black willow, rhododendron and
silky dogwood to stabilize the stream banks, and the installation
of cross veins to both direct the water current and stabilize
soil.
We completely restructured the way the area will
handle water, Keener said, noting that the wetlands
creates a natural flood plain that not only allows potential
floodwater to disburse but also boosts wetland aquatic
species, which have been facing threats from increased
development.
The next stream bank restoration will occur along the
South Fork of the New River.
The county has received a grant of nearly $170,000 to
restore a 500-foot section of stream bank bordering Brookshire
Park in Boone. Erosion of the bank due to changing stream
flows and storms have threatened a walking trail at the
park.
Upstream development changes the waters course and
can affect a complete waterway.
Keener said the Brookshire project will be mostly confined
to the land and there will be little in-stream work, unlike
the Yonahlossee project, in which a 500-foot section of
Lance Creek was completely overhauled and practically
recreated from scratch.
Keener said it generally takes two or three years for
a stream bank to stabilize and restore itself to a more
natural state after a project.
Native aquatic species begin to establish themselves and
eventually the landscape looks much as it would if there
had been no human intervention.
Engineering is underway on the Brookshire project, and
Keener expects work to begin this summer.
The county commissioners are also exploring potential
grants for flood restoration on the adjoining 75-acre
property, which is being planned as a mixed-used development
containing recreation, commercial sites and a possible
affordable housing project.
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