Tags

Feedburner

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Blog Login



 
 

Federation Blog

Tag >> Broad Creek
Warehouse CreekSelby BayRiverkeeperPollutionPocahontas CreekHarness CreekGlebe CreekGingerville CreekFlat CreekDuvall CreekCrab CreekChurch CreekBroad CreekBrewer CreekBeards CreekAlmshouse CreekAberdeen Creek 7 Jul 2010

South River Tidal Monitoring 2010 Station

by diana

The South River Federation's Riverkeeper Tidal Water Quality montoring is in mid-season currently.  Some of you may have see us out there sampling the water quality.  I have been ask many questions about when and where we sample.  I have provided a GIS map of our current tidal stations.  I have 7 main stem stations, then 14 stations in each of the tidal creeks.  

West RiverWarehouse CreekTarnans BranchSevern RiverSelby BayRhode RiverPollutionPocahontas CreekPatuxent RiverNorth RiverMagothy RiverLimehouse CoveHarness CreekGlebe CreekGingerville CreekFlat CreekDuvall CreekCrab CreekClean UpChurch CreekBroad CreekBrewer CreekBell BranchBeards CreekBacon Ridge BranchAlmshouse CreekAberdeen Creek 13 May 2010

Bay Restoration Strategy

by diana

 

EPA Unveils Chesapeake Bay Restoration Strategy

 The Chesapeake Bay Restoration Strategy is now out as presented by Lisa Jackson (EPA administrator) yesterday.  She stated that only thing needed is money and resources.

I would like to include Three more things:

1)  The absolute old fashion American CAN DO.  With out the can do/will do we will not have anything.

2 ) Much better enforcement,  marinas have put large piers/bulkhead/and pilings into the South River and have only received a 43,000.00 fine, and they did not have to take out the structures that were installed.  So, in reality the company folded the fine into the cost of doing the construction.  The State and Federal agencies need to not only have greater fines but mandate that these structures be removed! 

3)  I would also like to include more education on the true causes of the destruction of the Chesapeake Bay and the South River.  I speak beyond the choir quite often and have learned that most adults really do not know what stormwater runoff it,  they do not know how fertilizer can harm the Bay/River,  they do not realize how poor the infrastructure of our septic and sewer systems is.  I see very well educated folks over-fertilize their lawns in order to get the Crayola crayon green color, instead of managing their lawns in a River-friendly way.

http://wjz.com/local/Bay.foundation.epa.2.1689773.html

 

Broad Creek 13 Oct 2009

Hiking the Trails of Broad Creek

by erik

It's not well publicized, but there are miles of hiking trails behind the Anne Arundel County offices of the Department of Recreation and Parks and the Health Department.  The area is formally known as Broad Creek Park, and probably constitutes about 100 acres of forest with running/hiking trails through it that border and cross the tributary network feeding Broad Creek.  All of this area is public property.

The trail has a great view of the top of Broad Creek (below), which is comprised mostly of tidal marsh and forested side slopes, and is getting ready to really start changing colors with the drop in temperature. 

The trails also give a great view of what is clearly one of Broad Creek's persistent sources of downstream pollution and marsh expansion - serious stream bank erosion (below).  Anecdotal accounts from runners who have used the trails for years document how this eroding material has caused the formerly inundated marshes near tidewater to be converted to dryer environments that now support trees and more upland species.

Stream erosion

 

HistoryBroad Creek 18 Sep 2009

Fossils on Broad Creek

by erik

Out on a site visit to check out an eroding ravine, we turned up a pretty cool set of fossils embedded in a piece of limonite (or bog iron).  Turns out a poorly designed and executed stormwater management pond routinely blows out the downstream channel with such force that it has scoured down to "bedrock" (this material is the closest we come to such a thing in the Coastal Plain) unearthing these former ocean dwellers.

I'm definitely not a fossil expert, but from what I can find on the web, the six impressions in this stone all appear to be from some sort of gastropod (i.e. snail).  Even though this site was 50 to 60 feet up from tidewater, this kind of find is a good reminder that at one time, this whole area was underwater, part of the primeval Atlantic Ocean.


HistoryGingerville CreekBroad Creek 30 Apr 2009

Broad Creek Saw Mill Dam

by erik

Sometimes you'll find interesting remnants of the past in the most surprisingly mundane places.  That's the case with the "Old Saw Mill" on the eastern tributary to Broad Creek.  In the 1878 map below, it's called out as "Old S.M." in the upper right-hand corner. That's Broad Creek on the left and Gingerville (formerly "Gingerwell") Creek on the right.

 Today, the dam remains and is actually visible from Truman Parkway when the leaves are off the trees.  It lies just adjacent to the Park-and-Ride.  Below, you can make out the form of the dam, sloping off to each side of the photo.

 

 As is the case with all of these historical impoundments, this one breached long ago and still delivers its silty payload downstream with every storm event.  The photo below is taken looking downstream through the breach in the dam.  The channel has been carved several feet down through the agricultural soils that were trapped behind the dam when it was functioning.


 

Broad Creek 15 Apr 2009

A Day for Rain Gardens

by erik

On our way to the Anne Arundel County Department of Health for a discussion on bacteria sampling earlier today, we stopped by the rain garden recently installed by Federation volunteers at the corner of their parking lot.  As you can see from the picture below, it's definitely doing its job, capturing and filtering water before it makes its way into the storm drain system and into Broad Creek.