Klamath dams are coming out | Dam removal project on the Klamath River | Oregon Field Guide

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  • čas přidán 4. 10. 2023
  • The world's largest dam removal project is underway on the Klamath River in Southern Oregon and Northern California. The project will dramatically change summertime whitewater rafting and remove the lakes some people have built their lives around while reopening more than 400 miles of potential habitat for salmon that have been blocked from swimming upstream for a century.
    Read more www.opb.org/article/2023/10/0...
    www.opb.org/article/2024/01/1...
    Read more about this story and others at www.opb.org/science_environment/
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    #klamathfalls #klamath #damremoval #dam #undamming #OPB #Oregon #PacificNorthWest #oregonfieldguide #klamathdam #damremoval #klamathriver #klamathtribes

Komentáře • 470

  • @cabbagenut
    @cabbagenut Před 10 měsíci +235

    I get really tired hearing about the cost to people, the homeowners, the tourists. You know what's good for people? Functional and stable ecosystems. The short term costs are nothing compared to the long term cost of global ecosystem collapse. Clean water and food are far more valuable than water front real estate and rafting.

    • @maybeebuzzy2265
      @maybeebuzzy2265 Před 10 měsíci +7

    • @billlynn8256
      @billlynn8256 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Bravo!

    • @oakmaiden2133
      @oakmaiden2133 Před 9 měsíci +26

      Waterfront real estate is criminal imo. We have 2 coastlines crammed with private property. Hurricanes wipe them out, tax payers have to clean it up. Beaches should be public access.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci +6

      And Jay just where do you live that you wouldn't complain if I destroyed your way of life?? In the city?? How about I stopped allowing you import your food while exporting your waste so you can live and say silly things online??

    • @jamesratzman8945
      @jamesratzman8945 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Elwha River basin is seeing incredible results. After these last 6 years. The way it once was . Salmon are thriving. Ecosystem flourishing. Hydro generated energy was @ 45 /50 % of what it was designed for originally. 👋✋🙏

  • @JRushHikes
    @JRushHikes Před 10 měsíci +54

    The Salinas river in Central California got rerouted by the Army Core of Engineers, and when you drive that long section of (Highway 101) through all the agricultural fields you can see the old berm where this mighty river used to flow. It apparently used to be very “snakelike” the way it flowed for thousands of years. When big storms hit the valley, the old part of where the river used to be sometimes fills up from groundwater. It wants to flow the way its always intended to do. Native steelhead trout used to populate it as well but now are just a small run of fish. Its always a beautiful thing watching these documentaries and seeing hopeful change for the future of ecosystems and Earth’s rivers. Bless up yall! Its no better time than now to let nature recover and do its thing!!

    • @alibarron7558
      @alibarron7558 Před 6 měsíci

      About 25% of our food comes from the Salinas & Sacramento Rivers, so you want to take the blame for families starving?

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci +2

      What about the ecological disaster this stupidity caused?

    • @pia31415
      @pia31415 Před 17 dny +1

      @alibarron7558 humans can always find another source of food, most animals in an ecosystems cannot

  • @340wbymag
    @340wbymag Před 10 měsíci +50

    The Klamath River restoration will never be complete without also restoring streams and beaver habitat. The beavers will store water that will replenish groundwater supplies, create ideal habitat for birds, fish, and other animals, and will provide water to the river in the summer months. The removal of dams without that stream restoration will fail to improve water quality or to decrease water temperatures and algae blooms in the summertime because there will not be enough freshwater flow. The beavers are a keystone species. The rivers need them to survive.

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 10 měsíci +7

      So true! And that doesn't even get into the effect they have in suppressing wildfires! Cheers to these fantastic critters!!!

    • @TheCriminalViolin
      @TheCriminalViolin Před 9 měsíci +3

      Absolutely, and in tandem with permaculture, it is the most powerful and best way to restore habitats and ecosystems fully.

    • @ResortDog
      @ResortDog Před 9 měsíci +1

      Beaver dams only ever existed up side streams as the yearly floods sluice everything down the gorge.

    • @GO-xs8pj
      @GO-xs8pj Před 9 měsíci +5

      They must bring beavers back to slow the river and store water. They create the habitat for the salmon fry to grow and thrive.

    • @michiganmuckraker
      @michiganmuckraker Před 9 měsíci +1

      So beaver dams are ok but not human dams?

  • @gabrielford3473
    @gabrielford3473 Před 10 měsíci +22

    But whatever will the poor endangered real estate agents ever do? My heart goes out to them. Who cares about a river that has a long history of feeding people with a natural, renewable, and openly accessible source of food. Where's the value in that? How one could ever value that over a general store is mind boggling. I mean, it's yet another way our poor real estate agent could potentially milk you for everything you've got, while stating "it's all about the community". And who'll deny the value of the community general store over one of the most astonishing gifts the planet could offer....free, renewable food. I mean, where's the money in that? Am I right, real estate guy?

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      You are so right.. Like in your city.. I think we should take away the water that flowes into your house and the store that supplies it... Then you MIGHT know the uncertainty destroying entire civilizations has grown to rely on feel like.. I find it funny the native americans are complaining about fish when they get paid THOUSANDS of dollars in stipends from that loss..

    • @marumiyuhime
      @marumiyuhime Před měsícem

      id love to buy one of them houses id live there in a second

  • @REAL4wd
    @REAL4wd Před 6 měsíci +10

    God bless ❤️❤️💪💪 keep up the good work restoring the nature.

  • @crp5591
    @crp5591 Před 10 měsíci +72

    Perfect opportunity and place to reintroduce beavers! I hope the CA and OR Natural Resources departments have given that option some thought. Those critters would do wonders for restoring proper (natural) water retention and vegetation to the areas that were former reservoirs.

    • @billyb9067
      @billyb9067 Před 10 měsíci +10

      The best solution for our times and the future, beavers 🦫🦫

    • @powderbeast5598
      @powderbeast5598 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Yup , "Beaver 🦫 Believer". ✨👍✨.

    • @gregorymillar285
      @gregorymillar285 Před 9 měsíci +8

      About time they're doing something for the salmon. Stupid people worrying about how to make a dollar

    • @peggyjones3282
      @peggyjones3282 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I love beavers. ❤ That is absolutely what's needed.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@gregorymillar285making a dollar is fine, but we have too many people trying to make as many dollars as they can at the expense of others.

  • @MrSoarman
    @MrSoarman Před 6 měsíci +4

    I won't live long enough to see the river restored, but my faith in nature will be the power to revive what was lost, welcome home.

    • @kenmartin861
      @kenmartin861 Před 4 měsíci

      We won't be here to enjoy. We are being removed to built the elites version of heaven on earth.

    • @dcaloha2431
      @dcaloha2431 Před měsícem

      Probably true… removing the damn created an ecological disaster that may take lifetimes to resolve

  • @TwoAcresandaMule
    @TwoAcresandaMule Před 10 měsíci +59

    I hope to see many more rivers freed up in my lifetime.

    • @maybeebuzzy2265
      @maybeebuzzy2265 Před 10 měsíci +2

    • @dcpack
      @dcpack Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes, and world peace, blah, blah....

    • @GOD719
      @GOD719 Před 9 měsíci

      That means less lakes and power. Although. I do want salmon to explode in population

    • @oozlefinch7109
      @oozlefinch7109 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Back to the stone age. Good job.

    • @CANNABISfreedomNOtaxes
      @CANNABISfreedomNOtaxes Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@oozlefinch7109yeah the same people crying for the removal of Dams also want open borders. They are ignorant to the fact that the population needs stored water to survive.

  • @TheCriminalViolin
    @TheCriminalViolin Před 9 měsíci +14

    I have always wanted to see what the natural state of the Columbia river would be be without the dams in it too. And even the heavily modified flows and falls of the Willamette.The more dams are removed from our rivers and streams, the better. So many people, especially ranchers, don't believe you can preserve and guarantee water throughout the year without having a dam to fill a basin, however they're wrong about that. Premaculture, and ironically, bringing back and protecting beavers and their habitats (and that means letting them create dams, floodplains and wetlands) is proven almost everywhere on earth to do that job and do it far better than any human interventions and dams ever have. Got to live WITH nature and the land, not off of it.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      I think you forgot (as everyone in this video) that the climate is now very different.. Drier and hotter summers will practically dry up the rivers and the warmer water temperatures will cause massive fish die offs because many fish cannot survive in warmer waters that are now very prevalent.

    • @TheCriminalViolin
      @TheCriminalViolin Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@tomwillis9051 Except none of that has even happened beyond a very rare occasion in very specific places. Climate change is entirely normal, as is this current climate change event we're experiencing.
      Moreover, I don't see how what you've said has anything to do with what I did. It does even work as a counter.
      And looking at many places in the deserts, its abundantly clear how permaculture using native plants and mimicking beavers has restored forests and grasslands to desertified regions. The Saheel is a great case study showing this, specifically in Niger. Another is in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada, which has a creek basin that a small coop has managed to restore back into a proper very green and healthy ecosystem despite the climate and weather being far drier and hotter. They again used permaculture of native plants, as well as reintroduced beavers which rapidly aided them in restoration.
      And when you do this, even in deserts, the water table, aquifers and thus groundwater all gets replenished again, and sticks around all year, no matter the weather. It turns entire basins people have thought were normally seasonal into year-round streams.
      So if you're of the mind that it cannot work because "the climate has changed into too dry and hot for it to work", you're actually mistaken.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      @@TheCriminalViolin #1 Fish die offs due to temperature have been occuring in several rivers over the last decade. Including the Columbia and the Klamath. They are being identified and mitigated by the dams working with USFW to release large volumes of water to keep the river cool during these hot months.. It is well known but not well reported.
      secondly.. What I said and stand by is that this river is in a drought. It is very possible it will significantly decrease to a point fish will not be viable. Several instances in Northern California rivers doing this.. Large rivers turning to just a stream.
      And your glorious plan to tear out concrete dams to replace them with ones made by beavers is seemingly pointless.. If beaver dams solved the Wests drought problems (drought meaning lack of rainfall) then by definition Most of the west would not be labeled as a desert..
      Lastly, while I think you truly believe your hypothesis. I am sure beavers help just as me taking a pee against a tree helps also but beavers and everything do NOT make it rain more, do not stop over population, do not stop over fishing, do not answer who is suppose to give while others take..
      Two things in logical people's eye cause this #1 human species overpopulation, #2 Human technological advances.. Until you have less people living this will only get worse. Americans are spoiled with big vehicles, big houses, and consuming more than their environment can provide.. But until you stop the chinese fishing fleet from sitting 200 miles off shore with 50 mile long nets in international waters.. Tearing out dams isn't going to do a dam thing to improve salmon populations. It's only a feel good thing for ignorant fools..

    • @ResortDog
      @ResortDog Před 9 měsíci

      less dams less food

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@ResortDog Nahh to people like these. Food comes from the Grocery store.. They say the could grow it or hunt / gather it but they don't really have time to ..

  • @GrandmaBev64
    @GrandmaBev64 Před 10 měsíci +45

    Thank God they are removing the Dams! Dams kill off the whole ecological system! So proud of the Yurok people! Thank you for not giving up. I know it was a hello of a fight, and if the 100-year contract didn't expire, you guys would still be fighting in court. Love Klamath and the Klamath River. That's where I fee myl peace and serenity. Especially on a boat, up-river. The river means more than our recreational desires.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      I think human population growth is what is "killing" off the ecological system.. Maybe we should get rid of a large portion of the population that produce nothing and care for nothing.. Like people who live in the city who have destroyed their ecological system and now want to tell others how it should be done.

    • @Agnemons
      @Agnemons Před 9 měsíci

      BOLLOCKS!!
      Dams do not "Kill off the whole ecological system".
      Dams DO alter an ecosystem. Is that good or bad? That depends on your point of view.
      Nature is quite capable of forming it's own dams through completely natural events. From your perspective that would make nature bad. This is ridiculous. What is natural is change and adaptions to change. Nature doesn't care if a species goes extinct. Another species will just move in or adapt to the niche. 99% of all species that have ever existed on earth are extinct and humanity had no influence on that, humanity did not exist when these events took place.
      Man made interventions in nature are, from natures point of view, perfectly acceptable. They are just a bigger beaver dam. Just think how many creatures are displaced just so a beaver can build it's dam.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 6 měsíci

      No Grandma.. What has and is killing off the ecological system is Human over population.. Everyone is taking 10 times more from this planet than the planet can support.. INcluding YOU !! I don't see you destroying your home, way of life, and careers to fix it.. But you want others to do that under some delusion it's going to fix anything..

  • @powderbeast5598
    @powderbeast5598 Před 10 měsíci +11

    Yes , thanks to the Native Americans.
    4th largest Anadromous fish producer on West Coast North America, "traditional" .

  • @kirkstewart-vf6hg
    @kirkstewart-vf6hg Před 8 měsíci +5

    The klamath once had not only coho and chinook and green and white sturgeon and small scale suckers but dog salmon also and eulechon AKA candle fish runs.
    In my time candle fish runs were so big we could fill a truck bed full for the smoke house.
    Now not one candlefish that I know of .
    Until the candle fish and dog salmon are brought back the river will never be whole.

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před 6 měsíci

      I never heard that the river had any Chums in it ?

    • @billsmith5109
      @billsmith5109 Před měsícem

      Not much discussion of restoration of normal gravel movement. Even undersized culverts can have a big effect. Dams just stop it. Gravel continues to move downstream, and isn’t replaced. It’s something that doesn’t matter over one year. Over decades it’s a big deal. And chum are all about spawning gravel, and a decent estuary. If neighboring stream has adequate number of chum, restarting the runs using remote site incubators is low tech, and doesn’t need professional operation*. I’ve done it, under approval and direction of WDFW. A spring, up out over the flood plain is the key. *Producing fertilized eggs, ensuring no disease, and raising them to ‘eyed up’ are professional operations. My comments just limited to RSI operation.

    • @billsmith5109
      @billsmith5109 Před měsícem

      Not much discussion of restoration of normal gravel movement. Even undersized culverts can have a big effect. Dams just stop it. Gravel continues to move downstream, and isn’t replaced. It’s something that doesn’t matter over one year. Over decades it’s a big deal. And chum are all about spawning gravel, and a decent estuary. If neighboring stream has adequate number of chum, restarting the runs using remote site incubators is low tech, and doesn’t need professional operation*. I’ve done it, under approval and direction of WDFW. A spring, up out over the flood plain is the key. *Producing fertilized eggs, ensuring no disease, and raising them to ‘eyed up’ are professional operations. My comments just limited to RSI operation.

    • @billsmith5109
      @billsmith5109 Před měsícem

      Not much discussion of restoration of normal gravel movement. Even undersized culverts can have a big effect. Dams just stop it. Gravel continues to move downstream, and isn’t replaced. It’s something that doesn’t matter over one year. Over decades it’s a big deal. And chum are all about spawning gravel, and a decent estuary. If neighboring stream has adequate number of chum, restarting the runs using remote site incubators is low tech, and doesn’t need professional operation*. I’ve done it, under approval and direction of WDFW. A spring, up out over the flood plain is the key. *Producing fertilized eggs, ensuring no disease, and raising them to ‘eyed up’ are professional operations. My comments just limited to RSI operation.

  • @JanetJosh-ko3mu
    @JanetJosh-ko3mu Před 8 měsíci +8

    My heart is dancing with joy that the River will be free - I am Shasta amd the copto dam sits on sacred sites

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci +3

      Is your heart still dancing now that it's caused an ecological disaster?

  • @deannamadrigal7503
    @deannamadrigal7503 Před 10 měsíci +30

    Thank you Troy,
    For your persistence and bringing nature back into balance and harmony. 🙏
    Everyone suffers when we don't take care of mother earth. Not everything should be about making a buck.

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 10 měsíci

      Cheers to you!!

    • @psychosneighbor1509
      @psychosneighbor1509 Před 9 měsíci +2

      He drove to the river in a gasoline-powered vehicle, dressed in all the finest Chinese-made clothes Walmart has to offer while his ascites tell a story of at least 2-gallons of whiskey per week(or McDonald's on the reg).
      How come none of these "traditionalists" ever show up on a horse, all-ripped and dressed in buckskin?
      Guarantee there's an EBT card in his wallet...

    • @RianGarn
      @RianGarn Před 5 měsíci

      @@psychosneighbor1509 I love how racist scumbags always shows their true nature.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci +1

      The only thing that was brought back was a severe ecological disaster.

  • @maybeebuzzy2265
    @maybeebuzzy2265 Před 10 měsíci +18

    Very interested to watch the transformation = reformation into a productive salmon habitat🥰 Go fishies and other wildlife that will welcome the habitat!

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

  • @heatherkaye8653
    @heatherkaye8653 Před 10 měsíci +28

    🎉 this is truly worthy of celebration! Now generations to come have a fighting cahnce to see this river in its glory! May the waters remain cool while flowing and let the fish return!

    • @markskibo5159
      @markskibo5159 Před 10 měsíci

      Salmon tastes like POOP! Smelly!

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

    • @heatherkaye8653
      @heatherkaye8653 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Sujad the dam was the ecological disaster

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      @@heatherkaye8653 It really wasn't. Not compared to the disaster it now is.

    • @heatherkaye8653
      @heatherkaye8653 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Sujad the earth has no problems solving its issues out without human intervention. Our technologies are the problem.

  • @aquazack8504
    @aquazack8504 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I think the dam removal is great, natural rivers is what we should strive for.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

    • @marumiyuhime
      @marumiyuhime Před měsícem

      @@Sujad dams are disasters

  • @changes165
    @changes165 Před 9 měsíci +3

    This is so dam cool

  • @RaniVeluNachar-kx4lu
    @RaniVeluNachar-kx4lu Před 9 měsíci +5

    I understand the rafters' plight. But recreation is not necessarily a function that the ecology of the river depends on. It's human activity that has been adapted to human intervention. Before the dams, were there white water rafting trips and guides? Maybe not, or at least they were smaller groups in canoe or kayak?
    But the underlying point is that we can return many modified systems back to their pre-European colonization status. Redwood forests that took a few hundred to a few thousand years to grow, can return but none of us will see it. Forests that are few and far between can reemerge.
    Over the mountains to the plains to the East, the Prairie is waiting for the fences to come down and the annual bison migration to begin again, when dozens then hundreds then thousands of head per herd moving annually between Mexico and Canada. That's such a pipe dream, yet it would be very much tried and true ecology.
    Maybe we will get smaller, in population and we don't need so much land to cultivate into massive farms all over the Plains States? Maybe? Maybe?

  • @brucecochran8297
    @brucecochran8297 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I wish that Lake Pillsbury Dam could be removed from the Upper Eel River. PG&E no longer wants it. Historically it supported great numbers of Steelhead and Chinook. As a Game Warden I patrolled that area for many years. It is a shame for such good habitat is out of production and has been for many years. This strain of Steelhead was the source of hatchery production for many years and is some of the largest fish in California! Many miles of stream have been lost......wold be a worthy project for a group or organization (tribal??)

  • @ryanwalker3453
    @ryanwalker3453 Před 9 měsíci +11

    I hope we will see more dam removals in the future.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci +1

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

    • @ryanwalker3453
      @ryanwalker3453 Před 5 měsíci

      All rivers are different, and some dams themselves create ecological disasters.

  • @timdrahman6813
    @timdrahman6813 Před 9 měsíci +6

    And what is going to happen on the electricity side when the supply is diminished at a time when demand is increasing due to the increase in electric cars? Also, this renewable power source is being removed at a time when utilities are required to convert more of their production to renewable sources.

    • @karenscribner7031
      @karenscribner7031 Před 6 měsíci

      Not to worry, all the people will be in the 15 minute cities walking and riding bikes.

    • @vids595
      @vids595 Před 6 měsíci +1

      These dams produce a tiny amount of electricity. If they produced more then the owners would uses their wealth to win the political fight to keep them. Hydro dams are not renewable energy in that they have massive ecological impacts.

    • @benrodriques
      @benrodriques Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@vids595 those electric cars are even worse

  • @mrgold903
    @mrgold903 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great journalism. Blessing to search for information on a topic and get a wonderfully edited, well rounded, human narrated video that left me with a better feeling of understanding. Carry on by all means. I look forward to follow ups on the progress of the restoration efforts!

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

  • @lemons_s
    @lemons_s Před 5 měsíci +4

    Thank god the removal project got approved. Can't wait to see the restoration of the ecosystem and its stability.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      What about the ecological disaster this stupidity caused? Allah looks down at this and weeps.

    • @ParagonChumba
      @ParagonChumba Před 5 měsíci +2

      And look what you brought us, hundreds of thousands of fish have died off mutilating the ecosystem directly correlated to this dams removal. You caused exactly what you tried to stop.

    • @billsmith5109
      @billsmith5109 Před měsícem

      @@SujadAllah doesn’t sound very bright.

  • @PutinzBeachOhBoy
    @PutinzBeachOhBoy Před 10 měsíci +19

    Now do The Dalles Dam so we can get Celilo Falls back...doubt BPA would go for that.

    • @whskymilkshake
      @whskymilkshake Před 10 měsíci +2

      now you're talking

    • @greatplainsman3662
      @greatplainsman3662 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Wouldn't that be something.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci +3

      And your house.. Omg wouldn't it be great to see your house bulldozed so where you live can return to the natural environmental state of past times.. Where the native americans lived in animal skin houses and moved around to not destroy one location..

  • @mister_ray
    @mister_ray Před 10 měsíci +55

    The same thing needs to happen on the Deschutes river.

    • @whskymilkshake
      @whskymilkshake Před 10 měsíci +9

      and the Columbia

    • @powderbeast5598
      @powderbeast5598 Před 10 měsíci +14

      Wouldn't that be a sight , to see Chinook salmon spawning in Metolius river.
      But how could you grow alfalfa in the desert ? ...

    • @DovetailSales
      @DovetailSales Před 9 měsíci +6

      And the Kennebec in Maine.

    • @westerntruckandtractorrepa1353
      @westerntruckandtractorrepa1353 Před 9 měsíci

      Yes, let's destroy our infrastructure so no one can afford their power bill anymore. Great idea.

    • @rustyholt6619
      @rustyholt6619 Před 9 měsíci +5

      it needs to happen on all rivers ,, the elwah proves it,

  • @Cobbmtngirl
    @Cobbmtngirl Před 10 měsíci +3

    Excellent!

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

  • @danarae6758
    @danarae6758 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Great news!

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

  • @cadespencer6320
    @cadespencer6320 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Now we need to restore Tulare lake and Owens lake!

  • @james-wz4js
    @james-wz4js Před 10 měsíci +9

    Where will the electricity come from that was supplied by the dams? I think people will be crying later

  • @jeffhillstead3302
    @jeffhillstead3302 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I'm in BC Canada.. I am in the West Kootenays wondering if Salmon could return.. Why no fish ladders exist.. Would be amazing.. 😊

  • @jewel58s
    @jewel58s Před 10 měsíci +3

    So glad I got to run this river before the dam comes down. It was a blast. My older son took me for my 60’s birthday. Beautiful area

    • @craigkanish6127
      @craigkanish6127 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Now you’ll have the chance to go back and run the true river. Like surfing a wave pool vs a swell thats traveled thousands of miles to peel across a reef somewhere. It hits a little different, more complex and unpredictable. Do you want predictably or true adventure?

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      @@craigkanish6127Not really, they screwed it up. It's an ecological disaster now.

  • @VagaBumAdventures
    @VagaBumAdventures Před 8 měsíci

    Noah is the last dude rocking the Soul Patch 😂

  • @RobertJohnson-yc8ov
    @RobertJohnson-yc8ov Před 10 měsíci +2

    And at Glen Canyon too !

  • @AngelaS.Gloner
    @AngelaS.Gloner Před 5 měsíci

    beautiful

  • @TheVisualante11
    @TheVisualante11 Před 10 měsíci +2

    God Bless Aaron. Take back build small hydro in along the river now. And make free energy for the locals. Get rid of the Giant Corps.

  • @judsonclayto7813
    @judsonclayto7813 Před 10 měsíci +4

    This is a great video... Thank you

  • @RaniVeluNachar-kx4lu
    @RaniVeluNachar-kx4lu Před 9 měsíci +2

    And with a little luck and some smart biologists, maybe a few of the smaller tributaries will be populated with Beaver again. Those smaller streams can be dammed with logs and debris and they will back up enough water into the upper tributaries to keep the water stable and flowing, maybe less but still flowing even in Summer. It's like a thousand little controlled release valves, these Beaver "leaky" dams.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      They created an ecological disaster.

  • @shawnsanders2182
    @shawnsanders2182 Před 9 měsíci +2

    My question is ,has any of sediments been tested down stream?. how many farmers up stream?.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Nope and they blew the sediment all over place. It's an ecological disaster now.

    • @shawnsanders2182
      @shawnsanders2182 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Sujad nice IMPACT STUDY.

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      @@shawnsanders2182 Yeah, considering the rampant bureaucracy of California, you'd think they'd have known what would happen but no, they screwed the pooch.

  • @pollyquarles6940
    @pollyquarles6940 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank God - this is Loooong overdue

    • @Sujad
      @Sujad Před 5 měsíci

      Why? What's so good about ecological disasters?

  • @markmartin5817
    @markmartin5817 Před 9 měsíci

    What’s it going to do the lake levels of Klamath lake when everyone wants even more water?

  • @rossr6616
    @rossr6616 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Go Salmon Go!

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci

      Going to make it worse for salmon just like what happened here on the rogue river.

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@brandonduarte6757Rogue has been impacted beyond repair.
      Too many people living along the river. Too much run off. Too much fishing pressure.
      Too many sea lions at the mouth. Too many boaters. Too much logging.

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 6 měsíci

      @@jesse75 you really need to lay off those hormone blockers and boosters. No one can be that delusional naturally.

    • @dukester5932
      @dukester5932 Před 6 měsíci

      Your salmon are dead now. The river will never be the same with 60 million yards of toxic sludge. Fools

  • @brucetheriault6780
    @brucetheriault6780 Před 3 měsíci

    Fortunately, cheaper to tear down than to maintain.
    Return of the salmon didn't work in CT (River).

  • @drinny26
    @drinny26 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I think choosing to be a real estate agent or opening a store in a town of 50 houses is their problem not the rivers. 😂

    • @georgehaydukeiii6396
      @georgehaydukeiii6396 Před 3 měsíci

      Absolutely the truth. It's just another case of people blaming their bad decisions on someone else.

  • @jerryminney3555
    @jerryminney3555 Před 5 měsíci

    well i really hope you can keep the river flowing were living in a drought and water is getting scarce , not trying to start anything but the people that live next to the lake are loosing business and a way to live plus they might loose the water in there wells if that happens you will see abandon buildings and houses , so lets go ahead to do this and we shall see what happens take care everybody

  • @ManInTheBigHat
    @ManInTheBigHat Před 6 měsíci

    Anyone from New York living here in K Falls? Or anyone who have lived in New York City and moved to K Falls? I found a great house in Klamath Falls, but I'd like to meet people from back home.

  • @stevet8121
    @stevet8121 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Maybe the Native Americans can get back to commercial gill netting again with their nylon nets.

    • @powderbeast5598
      @powderbeast5598 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Ouch , and true.
      Columbia river gillnetting is pretty disgusting . ...

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@powderbeast5598catches the hatchery and native fish both. That's what I don't like.

  • @user-hb8lx7sw1d
    @user-hb8lx7sw1d Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you for all the hard work.

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Před 9 měsíci

    This will be beautiful again! Sort of like when I go to the chiropractor and feel so much better after I get those painful areas open again! Love to all!

  • @benrodriques
    @benrodriques Před 6 měsíci

    Ask yourself who gets the lake property now that it's drained

  • @lisad476
    @lisad476 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Whats the affect on wildlife???

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 10 měsíci +2

      They've done pretty well with free flowing rivers for as long as they've existed.

    • @dukester5932
      @dukester5932 Před 6 měsíci

      Dozens of dead deer stuck in the muck that have to be euthanized. Bald eagles dead. Geese dead. Otters, etc.
      go take a look at what they’ve done. It’s horrible

    • @lisad476
      @lisad476 Před 6 měsíci

      @@dukester5932 TY for the update..

  • @chesterroberts4647
    @chesterroberts4647 Před 10 měsíci +15

    It’s been 10 years since the the dam was removed from the Sandy river. The fishing is worse now than before it was removed. Maybe in 100 years it will get better?

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Same thing on the rogue river. It made it way worse. Same thing will happen on the Klamath.

    • @unclest1nky
      @unclest1nky Před 9 měsíci

      @chesterroberts4647
      Don't bet on it. All this dam removal will cause the water to go straight out to the ocean, and then what will come is more drought. This is all about water control. The dams were put here for a reason. To hold back water in dry times. Well, more dry times are coming!
      I hope these w0k€ |\|utj0b$ are happy because they're d€$tr0y!|\|g Oregon.
      I can't wait to see how horrible it is here in 10 years.

    • @underthetrees4780
      @underthetrees4780 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@brandonduarte6757 I did find it curious they're won't be sufficient flow to float the river in late summer, but they're confident the fish will return all the way to Klamath Lake during the fall spawn? With what water?

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci

      @underthetrees4780 going to be a creek. I also go for gold on the Klamath, so with low water, it's going to open up new spots.

  • @ryanlande303
    @ryanlande303 Před 9 měsíci

    Snake river is next!!!

    • @brianjohnston4207
      @brianjohnston4207 Před 6 měsíci

      Removing the 3 lower dams is pointless unless you remove the dams upriver. Every dam from Hells Canyon up to Milner would have to be removed to restore the habitat and water quality that salmon traditionally spawned in.

  • @lag9765
    @lag9765 Před 9 měsíci

    It's about dam time...

  • @robsimer9296
    @robsimer9296 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Make believe progress focused like a laser beam.

  • @timwaddell9450
    @timwaddell9450 Před 9 měsíci +2

    So when the dams are removed, and the water goes away in late summer, then what? Additionally, i am willing to bet as the environment changes, water is still used, people just like california, will complain they dont have water. Those dams force water into a water table, that will disapear. Additionally where is your power going to come from?

  • @dangermouse2977
    @dangermouse2977 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Sediment built up behind dams should be dredged and put on depleted valley agricultural soils.
    Perhaps sifted for gold too.
    Decades of built up sediment will affect everything downstream
    including existing banks, gravel bars
    etc.
    including where the river and ocean
    intersect. This could threaten salmon and other wildlife health health

    • @jjxtwo1
      @jjxtwo1 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Have you checked out the Elwha River and how much it benefited from dam removal? The sediment restored the river's delta at the ocean. It's a years long process.

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci +1

      It's going to destroy everything downstream to the ocean. Under 4 feet of sediment. No more salmon spawning beds.

    • @jjxtwo1
      @jjxtwo1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@brandonduarte6757 Nope, wrong. Short-term possibly some issues but long-term great benefits from the sediment being released.

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@jjxtwo1 not according to local scientists. I live out here. Been listening to the scientists for a couple years now plus what happened on our rogue river. Made our fishing way worse.

    • @jjxtwo1
      @jjxtwo1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@brandonduarte6757 We can talk again in 10 years. The river will be healthy.

  • @jenford7078
    @jenford7078 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Damned if you do damned if you don't.

  • @robrectec
    @robrectec Před měsícem

    I feel for peoples' communities and businesses, but salmon and mother nature have been around for much longer

  • @robmueller8825
    @robmueller8825 Před 10 měsíci +18

    This really needs to be happening a lot more within the entire western side of the U.S.

    • @matthewwelsh294
      @matthewwelsh294 Před 10 měsíci +1

      But you would be removing a source of green energy

    • @jimsomerville3924
      @jimsomerville3924 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@matthewwelsh294 They are the farthest from "green". The ecological impacts have been horrendous to river systems of the west. Renewable, yes.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jimsomerville3924 and your "green" solution to provide energy?? And anything you say I will point out the negatives about !!

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci +1

      says someone who probably in on the East Coast getting energy from burning Coal ..

    • @marumiyuhime
      @marumiyuhime Před měsícem

      @@matthewwelsh294 dams are far from green

  • @koholohan3478
    @koholohan3478 Před 9 měsíci

    Introduce beaver. They will engineer a habitat.

  • @kirkgardner2002
    @kirkgardner2002 Před měsícem +2

    Man I am happy they are removing the dam.

  • @ElliottHinds
    @ElliottHinds Před 10 měsíci +4

    It would be nice to have included how much clean power is produced by the hydroelectric dams and what it will be replaced by. Climate change matters.

    • @jeffkerber2399
      @jeffkerber2399 Před 10 měsíci +3

      There is no such thing as clean energy. All forms have some sort of environmental cost.

    • @RCRitterFPV
      @RCRitterFPV Před 10 měsíci

      there is cleaner energy....
      @@jeffkerber2399

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci

      No such thing as climate change. It's a scam wake up. Don't be brainwashed. All predictions have been wrong and they profit off simple minded people's hysteria.

  • @michaelbodner2955
    @michaelbodner2955 Před 6 měsíci

    But you'll have good salmon fishing to look forward to, people won't have to travel south to fish for salmon

    • @dukester5932
      @dukester5932 Před 6 měsíci

      Actually, quite the opposite. The river is ruined. The amount of sediment cannot and will not recover from. The hubris is sickening

  • @glenncombs3471
    @glenncombs3471 Před 10 měsíci +4

    There's gonna be a whole lotta dam water comin' down that river next year.
    ...
    *ahem*

  • @brianjones6500
    @brianjones6500 Před 5 měsíci

    Great job removing the invasive species and planting the local flora; I feel bad for the locals but in my opinion the health of the biosphere is more important. I hope everyone wins in the end and people can adapt to the change.

    • @ParagonChumba
      @ParagonChumba Před 5 měsíci

      Nope In fact hundreds of thousands of fish have died off due to this dams removal and the substantial and rapid change that it did to the ecosystems The salmon that they were trying to save are dying at a far more expedited rate than ever before in history.

  • @WoodandSteel
    @WoodandSteel Před 10 měsíci +8

    Can't wait until the river is free again and people are disappointed because the salmon will not return at expected levels. Be careful what you ask for. Until the real problem is addressed, which is overfishing salmon in the Pacific Ocean.

    • @bogiepull3r
      @bogiepull3r Před 10 měsíci +3

      Salmon won't return to the klamath Basin at all. 1. There's a 40' natural waterfall. 2. They won't spawn in pumice.

  • @michaelbodner2955
    @michaelbodner2955 Před 6 měsíci

    Say goodbye to the prime crappie fishing

  • @donhagerty5669
    @donhagerty5669 Před 23 dny

    11:16 I AM QUITE DISAPPOINTED ABOUT YOUR MISLEADING TITLE TO YOUR VIDEO TALKING ABOUT THE DAM REMOVAL WHEN YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT EVERYTHING BUT.
    I SEE A LOT OF VIDEOS CLAIMING TO SHOW THE TAKING OUT OF THE DAMN BUT NONE OF THEM SHOW ANYTHING CLOSE TO THAT.

  • @jasonfirewalker3595
    @jasonfirewalker3595 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Buy kayaks.

  • @jeffreyhunt1727
    @jeffreyhunt1727 Před 9 měsíci +1

    If you knew there was a very good chance that the dams would be removed, then why did you buy property "lakefront" there! Seems like a very foolish investment!!

  • @stephenfloat1260
    @stephenfloat1260 Před měsícem

    So if these are dams that supply electricity why cut them out of a struggling system that doesn't supply enough power for the future of electric cars ?

  • @bojimbooth
    @bojimbooth Před 6 měsíci

    As long as the Keno dam and link river dam are still here the salmon might not make it as far as you think. Here is a question by removing 4 hydro electric dams where is the replacement power going to come from and don't say solar or wind farms . Since they are more expensive maintenance wise along with not eco friendly either. How many deer, elk, wild horses, and other wildlife are get stuck in the silt and dieing? I'm sure that's ok because, the salmon may or may not run all the way up the river in 5-10 years.

  • @SaddestClown
    @SaddestClown Před měsícem

    I know the intention behind dam removal is good, but oregon has been seeing increasingly dryer climate over the last few years. if those trends continue, we could be really kicking ourselves for not holding on to more water reserves.

  • @brucevanderzanden9638
    @brucevanderzanden9638 Před 10 měsíci +5

    I will wait on the sidelines till I see how this massive project works out. Will the salmon move upstream? What is going to replace the power generation from these dams? I’ll wait and see what happens! Man thinks he can do anything, but I have my doubts. It’s ok to disagree with me. Just be civil and polite.

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Was it not human's belief that they could do anything that has practically destroyed an ecosystem and millenia old free, renewable food source by damming it all up and thinking it would work out fine? Us assuring the natives that they're way was no longer necessary or relevant for we had technology that would render their ways archaic and obsolete?
      I'd look at the damn removal project on the Elwah River in Wa. State for evidence of fishery restoration. It's been a smashing success. These rivers were damned off naturally by ice, covered by glaciers off and on through various ice ages and the fish always make their way back up the rivers. At times the access was blocked over thousands of years. These damns have been there for a split second in the bigger scheme.
      As for power production, I'm not versed on the particulars of the damns on the Klamath, but hundreds of hydro electric damns throughout the west have been rendered obsolete and no longer provide energy in a capacity that offers much, if any, value. Many localities that used to rely on these smaller damns haven't pulled power from them in decades. Again, not sure if that's the case here, but I'd bet so. Cheers to you and we'll see how this works out. Personally I see this as man letting nature regain control instead himself thinking he can do anything. I hope that was civil and polite. I appreciate good debate and also am just fine with disagreements of opinion.

    • @GOD719
      @GOD719 Před 9 měsíci +1

      No. They return to almost the exact same location they were born. So if they were born below the dam. They will not go any further. They could put hatchery fish up stream. And that would work.

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@GOD719 how did fish find their way back up rivers as different ice sheets blocked and unblocked rivers over and over for thousands of years?

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@gabrielford3473 How is the Elwah river a "smashing" success?? I think you got your resource from the youtube academy.. Your comments are not only vague but just plain silly.. What "renewable" food source are you talking about?? a Few thousand salmon?? Do you know how many people live off the salmon?? It's supplmental at best to a families diet.. I do not know of a single native american that lives in a traditional way of live.. Even in this video Troy crying got his over weight butt out of a Brand new Tax payer paid for 3/4 ton pickup to go look at fish on a bridge over the precious river.. Is he the one you are saying is going to his native american technology from a century ago cooking a fish head??
      So no.. Tearing out the dams is going to viewed at BEST a social experiment. My guess it will eventually be viewed negatively and a dam of some source will be needed to be rebuilt so it will hold back water for hot and dry summer periods that the rivers dry up or get too hot for fish.. But companies like Pacificorp just don't want the fight anymore, will tear them out, and be able to say play the win/win card.. If the experiment is a success then everyone's happy.... If it's a disaster (which is what I predict) they will be able to say I was forced to do it and I told you so..

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Před 9 měsíci

      @@tomwillis9051 Well, I guess my career as an environmental (not environmentalist) educator will take a backseat to your "predictions. The fact that I don't deeply involve myself with your nonsense is no indication of me losing an argument. Your just too exhausting with tired, uninformed arguments and I'm more interested in debate with people who are POLITE AND CIVIL, dick

  • @big1dog23
    @big1dog23 Před 10 měsíci +16

    I sure hope it helps the salmon, but I have a gut feeling the net beneficial impact will be marginal. Too many demands up stream, temperatures warming and an already decimated anadromous fish population. There is a cost in loosing a renewable energy source and summer long whitewater resource. Time will tell.

    • @jamesa1841
      @jamesa1841 Před 10 měsíci

      Im surprised. I would have thought they would generate enough power to be worth keeping. Maybe they need replacing anyway? Anyone know? Surely you could have a constant fish elevator.

    • @jimsomerville3924
      @jimsomerville3924 Před 10 měsíci

      @@jamesa1841 The dams only produce something like 1% of Pacificorp's electricity. They were coming up for re-licensing and due to current environmental regulations the company would have had to invest more money in improvements for fish passage than their share of the removal cost.

    • @jimsomerville3924
      @jimsomerville3924 Před 10 měsíci

      I have my doubts as well. This watershed is much different than the Elwha River in WA where removal sounds very successful in fish restoration. But the Klamath dams' electric generation was minimal- 1% of PacifiCorp's total. And the impacts on locals for whitewater or lake recreation are certainly big for the locals, but pretty small big picture.

    • @brandonduarte6757
      @brandonduarte6757 Před 9 měsíci

      Damn removal on the rogue river has made the salmon runs way worse. Plus no flood control.

    • @highclimber25
      @highclimber25 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@brandonduarte6757 also there is not many places left like iron gate where you can camp and launch a boat for absolutely free. going to be sad to see the lake go pretty upset its still there and we cant use it . I was optimistic at first about the benefits for the river and ecology but cant help feeling like its just a huge experiment and the locals are the lab rats.

  • @josephrushin986
    @josephrushin986 Před 10 měsíci +6

    The only thing thats going to change the salmon problem is stopping the off shore sea rapers from foreign countries

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před 6 měsíci

      Also, let Natives start hunting sea lions.

  • @mattalley4330
    @mattalley4330 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Klamath dams are coming out? Is there a closet big enough for them to have been in? Heyoo!!

  • @josephbelisle5792
    @josephbelisle5792 Před 9 měsíci +4

    We once thought dams were good. They do some good things. And I'm very sorry for those who will suffer with the dam removal. I know it's hard for them to see beyond themselves and their tribe but many suffered horrible change when the dams went in. We all have to adapt. But we know the overall affect of dams is too costly.
    I look forward to the day when all dams are gone and the life cycle of our planet at this age is restored. We all benefit from this.

  • @crustmuskandpixiedust
    @crustmuskandpixiedust Před 3 měsíci

    I'm going to school for horticulture and ecological restoration and I love the environmental and cultural wins that are happening right now!

  • @PNWJEEPER01
    @PNWJEEPER01 Před 2 měsíci

    The sediments and water are constantly being tested and, since the removal, the levels of heavy metals and toxins in the water and sediments are rapidly decreasing, as predicted by engineers prior to the dam removal.
    The amount of electricity generated by the dams was not enough for the utility companies to profit from and the dams were already decommissioned as power generating facilities.
    Every potential environmental and/or utility resource complaint by the naysayers has been disproven.
    The only people losing here are real estate and travel agents, who should be- and are -at the bottom of our list of priorities here.

  • @stevencichy137
    @stevencichy137 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I once new a young friend that passed away and died. I always remember that when you see a man made object like a cement building or casino on a beautiful mountain with trees and wilderness up in the Sierra Nevada‘s to me that’s just looks like an ugly zit on somebody’s face or a wart Getting rid of man-made structures and letting nature take over as a certain appeal for a beauty if you want to wait for the right moment of time to go down the stream, it’s better to rely on nature it just seems like more exciting and you never know what you’re going to get in the end.

    • @tomwillis9051
      @tomwillis9051 Před 9 měsíci

      And you live where again??

    • @benrodriques
      @benrodriques Před 6 měsíci

      Hey those indians have to get money somehow. Government doesn't pay them enough to 'survive' the whole this is our way of life crap is a joke. What like 10% of so called 'native' Americans actually could live like they used to.... everything is given to them. Nothing I did ever hurt a colored person's family. Just stop with all this charades already. Poor me stuff. Make the white man pay.

  • @MrSoarman
    @MrSoarman Před 6 měsíci

    The life of the Salmon is the minors canary

  • @FrostyButter
    @FrostyButter Před 5 měsíci

    Waterways belong to the public. They should benefit the public first, not private landowners.

  • @MrJeep75
    @MrJeep75 Před 9 měsíci +1

    More important to have a free flowing river then anything else

  • @KennyWatson-mu9to
    @KennyWatson-mu9to Před 5 měsíci

    The salmon are so beat up by the time they get to Irongate Dam. I don't think they
    Will be able to make it
    Any further before they die. I think that this was Unnecessary!

    • @ParagonChumba
      @ParagonChumba Před 5 měsíci

      And look what happened, hundreds of thousands of fish are dying off specifically due to this damns removal and the substantial changes to the ecosystems that they were not prepared for. All of these fishes deaths are directly correlated to that damn's removal. Full stop.

  • @justinfutch9143
    @justinfutch9143 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Dam removel is only the first step. Then deforestation and natural plant life all the way up a d down needs to be addressed. Its not a quick fix. Those 800 Year old trees that used to be there that helped retain moisture can't be grown over night. I wish.

    • @underthetrees4780
      @underthetrees4780 Před 9 měsíci

      You're talking about an area with wildfire and volcanoes, the trees will adapt and fill in just fine.

  • @mjaltemus
    @mjaltemus Před 4 měsíci

    Disaster! People had no idea this would be the outcome. Since removal of Dam suspended sediment in the water has brought the dissolved oxygen level down to zero twice since the dams were removed. Now, you see muck and mud, dead fish floating to the banks, crawdads, and we see animals trying to crawl out of the water to escape.
    Reply

  • @robertcalamusso1603
    @robertcalamusso1603 Před 9 měsíci

    Huge win for the salmon bull trout and steelhead.
    Who cares about the rafters. ..
    Grow up.

  • @jtto6364
    @jtto6364 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Welcome more water shortages

  • @ParagonChumba
    @ParagonChumba Před 5 měsíci

    And now hundreds of thousands of fish have died off the entire reason why they removed the dam in the first place was to protect these species and they have unilaterally caused this mass die off due to the substantial changes they produced with this dam destruction

  • @thathobbitlife
    @thathobbitlife Před 10 měsíci +1

    Oh those poor rich folks who will loose profit margins 😂😂
    Im so happy for the indigenous communities of Oregon.

  • @LittleDieselDilly
    @LittleDieselDilly Před 3 měsíci

    The native people lost a livelihood and food. Now the people who stole the land are complaining that their un-natural lake will go away.

  • @louislamonte334
    @louislamonte334 Před 8 měsíci

    Get rid of the dams!!

  • @scottyirish3231
    @scottyirish3231 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Environmental win and jobs!!!🙏👏👏👏👏💞

  • @marysplayemail
    @marysplayemail Před 6 měsíci +2

    My son is a member of the Klamath tribe. The audacity of people to claim what was never theirs 😂 someone get me a tissue for all those complaining about losing lakefront property. . Just tears me up

  • @JesgateOnDown
    @JesgateOnDown Před 10 měsíci +2

    Take your Copco real estate selling behinds somewhere that's not going through a natural renewal process & stop whining. There's real estate to sell elsewhere.

    • @ResortDog
      @ResortDog Před 9 měsíci

      The corporations never lose, only their cheap power using customers. The assests were stripped from PP&L by hedge funds decades ago.

  • @jonathandorr2234
    @jonathandorr2234 Před 10 měsíci +1

    When an original ASSUMPTION, was that ‘we can change nature ,’ for our own good, even if it’s selfish.’
    Think of thousands of aspects of clean water nature, completely out of whack, ph, water clarity, sediment movement, algae, and then elec.power and artificial river (section), is ‘worth it.’

  • @PAPOOSELAKESURFER
    @PAPOOSELAKESURFER Před 9 měsíci +2

    International fishing teams found out where the salmon go in the Pacific Ocean to grow up. The Siberian salmon fisheries were wiped out. Facing starvation at home due to grand solar minimum record flooding, Chinese fishing vessels violate local fishing grounds Pacific Rim wide. Good luck to hatcheries preparing to seed a free river. With millions of new homeless over the border, expect devastating poaching by families struggling to survive?

    • @b-boycastertroy
      @b-boycastertroy Před 8 měsíci

      Gotta start somewhere. We can't just keep doing this stupid sh*t. Lots of changes are still needed worldwide.

  • @aldenator101
    @aldenator101 Před 10 měsíci +5

    I wish we could see petroglyph canyon by Horsethief butte again. Dams aren’t inherently wrong and it’s interesting to use the water multiple times through series of dams for more energy. It’s sad we’ve lost so much beautiful history and now beautiful rolling Columbia hills are dotted with hideous turbines. All the energy gets shipped out too but at least it’s green eh.