I grew up by the Elwha River. I remember canoeing with my father on the lake behind the Glines Canyon dam, and camping in two campgrounds now wiped out by the new course of the river. Good childhood memories, but the free-flowing Elwha will provide better memories for today’s families.
This can be done with some dams. There are many small dams that provide no benefits to humans. This cannot be done for a large portion of dams. We need them
Several small local dams were removed in the Fall about twelve years ago. Naysayers said it would take years for the sediment to disperse. By Spring the river was clear and beautiful and fish were free to live as they were meant to live.
@@RykerRallySome species don't adapt well to heavy sediment clogged rivers caused by dams. Smallmouth are a good example, we still catch them upstream from the dam but I haven't been super successful. It's night and day compared to downstream where the rivers flow is constantly excavating and depositing sediments based on flow. You're not wrong by any stretch though.
I've done some calculation work on the hydrodynamics of rivers. Let me tell you this: I learned that rivers move A LOT of water at any one time. When you factor in even small, fractional percentages of the water as containing sediments, a decently sized river can easily move a mountain of sediments in a year's time. There is no way it could ever take a river to move a massive amount of sediment in years' time -- I've watched rivers move boulders like they were pebbles.
I watched this happen from inception at the symposium at Peninsula Community College in 1995. Over $300 million to deconstruct, the results are priceless
I visited the Elwha about 20 years ago prior to dam removal and then again this year to see the changes. You can still tell there was a dam and reservoir at the upper dam area, but no longer at the lower one. The vegetation there has grown up so much it's looking very natural and like there was never a dam at all. I also saw a group of salmon in the river about midway between the two former dam sites. They were really big too, easily 50-60 pounds in size. It was great to see that. It was like seeing them come home again, and where they belong.
I was present for the dismantling of the White Salmon River damn in the Columbia Gorge and it is amazing really, just how little time it takes for the nature to come back. A beautiful thing to witness.
I live in Washington State. The Elwha river was noted for having Chinook (King) salmon that were 100lbs or more. That was prior to the dams in the early 1900's I live by a river that my grand father used to fish. It feeds into Puget Sound and he used to count on catching at least a couple of 60lb Kings each year. Not anymore but the river can come back.
The dams were also originally there to help stop the flooding of the reservation at the mouth of the Elwha river There were also salmon over 100 lbs in the Hoh and Bogachiel rivers that are not there anymore with no dams on the rivers just over fishing and over netting
@@catlee8064 huh? didn't you watched the video? how can these dams be anything but destructive and degenerative? don't just look at temporary things think long term bro
@@erfan4244 I am thinking long term....like using hydro (renewable energy source) rather than coal/oil fired power stations.....but by all means, let some fishes swim up stream....
I lived across the street from where the dam was. It took a long time for all the sediment to flow out and when it did at first it caused more problems than it did good but now it looks as though everything is returning to what it was years ago. That and the beach that was created at the mouth is fantastic to walk on
I watched the doco on this dam a few years ago. It's amazing how damaging dams and the straightening of rivers are. Both against the ecosystem and increasing atmospheric temps.
This is such eco bullsheet. Dams prevent flooding which DESTROYS eco systems. Dams also provide water habitat just like natural lakes. You eco-ignoramus are so gullible.
Log jams? If you want to get the best revival possible, you have to bring in Beavers. THEY are truly a keystone species. You said the salmon are, but the salmon depend on the beavers to make sure they have a consistently deep enough stream to swim in. Without beaver dams filling the land with water they can dry out in the summer. With dams saturating the water table, rivers keep running all year. Truly a keystone species.
@@earlysdaDid you watch the video? Coastal erosion, huge reduction in native fish populations, reduction in wildlife as a whole and the destruction of forests in the river basin are the direct results of dams. Did you know the massive blades of those wind turbines are not the easiest to recycle? There are acres of discarded massive turbine blades that are stacked high. The industry was quick to make them without a clue how to recycle them.
Another example of how the human species have harmed the world. Im glad they finally realized their huge mistake. Thanks for sharing this. I also shared this on my social media and encourage others to do so so more people can see this amazing video that enlighten us the importance of reserving and caring about our nature
Yes you can talk about harming the world while you use electricity to watch this on your device. If you wanted to do something for the fish, stop the over fishing of stocks by ocean going fleets.
@@MinusMedley Yeah except none of these dams help with that anymore. Their reservoirs are full of silt and do nothing to stop flooding. Letting the river scour the riverbed reduces flooding by allowing the water to actually have a channel to leave the area.
I am excited to go to the Elwha one day. Hopefully when the salmon are running. I am also watching as the process of removing the dams on the Klamath is proceeding. The only two dams on the Eel river are also on a path for removal. I grew up on the Wilamette River in Oregon and have seen streams filled with salmon. I cannot express the feeling that comes to me to know these rivers are being freed. One day maybe I can see streams and rivers full of fish in the northwest again.
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Videos like this are great news of what is happening. Specifically targeted dam removal is what can revitalize the ecosystem in so many ways. Back in the 20th century dams were built with reckless abandon without regard to the environment. Dam removal is one of the best things we can do to restore the environment.
@@CraigFThompson Why would that suddenly happen? We are only talking about four minor dams being removed on the Klamath River. These were old dams that had long outlived their usefulness and removing them is a net positive for the environment and the salmon population just for starters.
I loved living at the former Lake Mills. We were just one of just two families living at the dam. It was the most magical place with beautiful seasons. Thunderstorms were absolutely incredible. The two old houses were tiny but livable and cozy with a big fireplace in the middle.
It's amazing how changes that seem small can have enormous impacts. I think about the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone National Park. The reintroduction has radically changed parts of the park for the better.
Not the same. Wolves in numbers too great absolutely decimate livestock and wildlife. They are the most efficient and successful land predators. Left unchecked, they’ll eat everything to death.
It's crazy how destructive as a species we are. It takes nature millions of years to get the ecological balance in the area just right to sustainably support life and in a moment on the scale of time we up-end all of it. Our actions sure do you have far-reaching effects. It's nice to see that we can help bring balance rather than tipping the scales in one way or the other.
Thanks for creating & sharing this, Leaf of Life 🌱 My favorite part about dam removals is when _NONE_ of things opponents say will happen . . . happen ☮️
great video ; its a good start at least , at first 150 dams removed in the last 3 years sounds great but then u realize there are 2000+ dams that are in danger of failing atm and need to still be removed and you realize that this is still an enormous task ahead of us
We been petitioning our govt to remove some dangerous old unused low head dams in my county, they claim a few lives a year average, there’s 5 in the county in question. They could have destroyed all 5 in 98 when we first tried, for less than $10k total, now it’s $5k-$6k each but they still say they can’t afford it
My small city just removed their tiny obsolete dam a few months ago and it already looks 100% different. There are some unfortunate buildings that were built around the dam that now look strange being there like The Mill restaurant but I think everyone will adjust just fine. Hopefully we start seeing a beautiful green river side vs mud a sediment.
@InsertHandleHere968 I know it is 7 months later, but I live across from an area where the bunnies play and sometimes, they jump like that! It is hilarious to see!
Like them or not, dams are the cleanest method of harnessing a CONSTANT and DEPENDABLE supply of electricity for the masses. If not for hydropower, there would be coal and nuclear power plants and few people support either. We desperately need to keep working on clean new sources of energy.
So proud, the Orcas will have more preferred food now. Love the vision that started this. Plz lets not take so long to do this and continue the vision with new generations of those who see the long view.. and let's NEVER again let greed dominate the natural environment, like OIL does now...
Not in Texas we seem to be adding dams in the Trinity River. We don’t have salmon but I’m sure it’s affected multiple fish species. The section around Downtown Fort Worth especially. But good work love seeing these removals especially around salmon country.
Agreed. And all those Metroplex lake house owners would definitely lobby to keep those artificial lakes in place. And the state would have increased incentive to keep those homeowners happy because it relies almost entirely on sales tax and property tax, rather than income tax, for revenue.
I don't know how to feel about dams. They destroy ecosystems, yet the reservoirs they create are a vital source of freshwater. The only alternatives are canals, which drain rivers and lakes completely, and desalination, which is harmful to the oceans. Rainwater harvesting is useful, but it can't provide enough water for millions of people either. How can we hydrate ourselves sustainably then? I guess we need to choose where to build dams carefully.
Probably even more important is the huge amounts of electricity they provide 24/7. Something only matched by nuclear or fossil power plants. And we're trying to stop burning stuff so all we have left is hydro and nuclear for the secure base load. If removing a dam means using a coal fire power plant that could be worse.
@@adddude7524 I'm not worried about that because there plenty of green alternatives. Geothermal, wave, solar, wind all come to mind. Freshwater however, is a limited resource, so that honestly worries me even more.
The same issue is on the east coast as well . The Farmington river in Connecticut use to have a huge Atlantic salmon run and theyve been trying for decades to reintroduce them unsuccessfully! The issue us the rainbow dam at its mouth going into the Connecticut river ! The dsm has a fish ladder but its the wrong design and tears the salmons belljes up and they die going over it ! The lamprey and some shad make it over though !!
Great work so far! The proces of healing and restoration can speed up by adding gravel to the decraded stream (like in the Elbe river in Europe) and dividing the river into two seperate streams (the way they did in the south of India).
Yeah as they build more dams lol that we are actually trying to remove, and beavers destroy land not improve it they put levees in danger because they burrow too
This isn't the only area where obstacles for spawning salmon have been removed, and all the results are the same. That's why I'm completely stunned the city of Vancouver BC would even consider building into the water when they already know about the negative effects of the Stanley Park seawall and the city's marinas. People know, but will keep repeating the same mistakes.
Nah they already have alternate options that were better smarter options that don’t stop salmon migrations. And I’m sure the rich folk miss their lake front property or boating but salmon survival is more important. They can drive up stream I’m sure there’s 10 more dams holding up the place.
Notice how harmonious the earth, humans and animals are when people don’t pollute and leave its structure alone? Leave the dam building to the beavers. That’s what they’re for. Our Creator knows what we need. 😊
Bringing back species we drove to extinction, like the sockeye salmon mentioned here, would be an awesome use of cloning. I'm curious if there is any effort towards that.
Fantastic for the world! I know how wonderful it is when I have a back-up and it gets released! It is horribly sad that some fish and probably other animals went extinct from the placement of the dams, but super great that some are growing in population!
Interesting video. However, the young lady speaking might want to work on her hissing Sibilant S when speaking. It was rather distracting, almost shrill.
@@JustinC-d6z interesting. Like from the video it seems that they were pretty close to some bigger cities which I would bet would still use some electricity. Or they were really almost useless in that place or state? Then it would probably make sense to destroy them
Yay! So good to see Mother Nature win a few! But I gotta wonder why these dams were built in the first place? Hydro power? Water for Ag? How is that provided for once the dams are gone?
This shows how resilient the planet truly is even when man attempts to control it. No matter what humans do the planet will always eventually win so don’t worry about climate change.
Good news but, do the companies who built them have to set aside money for there decommissioning in the US ? Given that the mechanical parts like spillway gates and valves have a max design life of 60 years, I'd guess they're primarily being removed for safety reasons to prevent an uncontrolled release of water which may exceed the spec for the rest of the dam.
In Scotland the estates that had salmon angling rights were a big lobby and fish ladders were incorporated into most of the hydro electric dams. These were successful in maintaining salmon numbers and became tourist attractions in their own right.
@@gubermon5903 The upper dam on the Elwa was absolutely producing energy when decommissioned. And yes, both of the dams were illegal in that agreed to fish passages were never constructed. Hatcheries were then, after the fact, chosen as a viable alternative……which they are not in any real way. Hatcheries are barely better than nothing….but thats it, barely better than nothing. Read “Mountains in the Clouds”…….
I grew up by the Elwha River. I remember canoeing with my father on the lake behind the Glines Canyon dam, and camping in two campgrounds now wiped out by the new course of the river. Good childhood memories, but the free-flowing Elwha will provide better memories for today’s families.
Great perspective!
💚
Why was the camps wiped out, did they move the river
@@MrJeep75 The river moved itself after it was allowed to flow freely. Wild rivers do that.
This can be done with some dams. There are many small dams that provide no benefits to humans. This cannot be done for a large portion of dams. We need them
Several small local dams were removed in the Fall about twelve years ago. Naysayers said it would take years for the sediment to disperse. By Spring the river was clear and beautiful and fish were free to live as they were meant to live.
@@RykerRallySome species don't adapt well to heavy sediment clogged rivers caused by dams. Smallmouth are a good example, we still catch them upstream from the dam but I haven't been super successful. It's night and day compared to downstream where the rivers flow is constantly excavating and depositing sediments based on flow. You're not wrong by any stretch though.
I've done some calculation work on the hydrodynamics of rivers. Let me tell you this: I learned that rivers move A LOT of water at any one time. When you factor in even small, fractional percentages of the water as containing sediments, a decently sized river can easily move a mountain of sediments in a year's time. There is no way it could ever take a river to move a massive amount of sediment in years' time -- I've watched rivers move boulders like they were pebbles.
Lets hope that so called extinct fish make a come back. Scientists have been wrong before and be wrong again.
What a beautiful sight! ♥️
Do hope the salmon return!
@@Sanchuniathon384 Especially with El nino years.
It's nice to see a positive story about the environment, sadly doesn't happen that often.
I watched this happen from inception at the symposium at Peninsula Community College in 1995. Over $300 million to deconstruct, the results are priceless
I visited the Elwha about 20 years ago prior to dam removal and then again this year to see the changes. You can still tell there was a dam and reservoir at the upper dam area, but no longer at the lower one. The vegetation there has grown up so much it's looking very natural and like there was never a dam at all. I also saw a group of salmon in the river about midway between the two former dam sites. They were really big too, easily 50-60 pounds in size. It was great to see that. It was like seeing them come home again, and where they belong.
Welcome back, Dear Nature!
AND GOODBYE FOREVER CHEAP ELECTRICITY!!
This is awesome! I remember going to the Elwa Dam not too long before it was removed. It's so good to see how much has changed.
I was present for the dismantling of the White Salmon River damn in the Columbia Gorge and it is amazing really, just how little time it takes for the nature to come back. A beautiful thing to witness.
The best thing about this is how perfectly Nature recreates its perfect conditions. Human constructions are temporary obstructions only.
I live in Washington State. The Elwha river was noted for having Chinook (King) salmon that were 100lbs or more. That was prior to the dams in the early 1900's I live by a river that my grand father used to fish. It feeds into Puget Sound and he used to count on catching at least a couple of 60lb Kings each year. Not anymore but the river can come back.
The dams were also originally there to help stop the flooding of the reservation at the mouth of the Elwha river
There were also salmon over 100 lbs in the Hoh and Bogachiel rivers that are not there anymore with no dams on the rivers just over fishing and over netting
@@ellsworthwhitehead2703
@@ellsworthwhitehead2703
Yeah, common to see gill nets strung across river mouths on a res in the pnw.
Bigfoot is so happy about this he doesn’t have to live month to month anymore.
So happy they're *finally* doing something to undo the centuries of damage on our Earth!
Actually the most damage we did to earth happened only in the last century 😢 only one century and we destroyed so much
.....destroying a dam which could of powered 1000s of homes with no carbon emissions?? Yeah that isnt a good thing right?
@@catlee8064 huh? didn't you watched the video? how can these dams be anything but destructive and degenerative? don't just look at temporary things think long term bro
@@erfan4244 I am thinking long term....like using hydro (renewable energy source) rather than coal/oil fired power stations.....but by all means, let some fishes swim up stream....
So should we stop all renewable energy?
I lived across the street from where the dam was. It took a long time for all the sediment to flow out and when it did at first it caused more problems than it did good but now it looks as though everything is returning to what it was years ago. That and the beach that was created at the mouth is fantastic to walk on
amazing .. more countries should join in .. not just dams but making the planet a better place to live for every animal
I watched the doco on this dam a few years ago.
It's amazing how damaging dams and the straightening of rivers are.
Both against the ecosystem and increasing atmospheric temps.
This is such eco bullsheet. Dams prevent flooding which DESTROYS eco systems. Dams also provide water habitat just like natural lakes. You eco-ignoramus are so gullible.
Yeah, too bad they are not increasing :-)
So you are against renewable energy?
@@earlysdaWhat are you talking about? I support having dams and building more.
As long as you are now OK with burning more coal to fuel your electric car.
Wonderful. It's just so tragic it takes decades of destruction for us to learn. At least sometimes we do. Well done.
Dam, nice video.
Log jams? If you want to get the best revival possible, you have to bring in Beavers. THEY are truly a keystone species. You said the salmon are, but the salmon depend on the beavers to make sure they have a consistently deep enough stream to swim in. Without beaver dams filling the land with water they can dry out in the summer. With dams saturating the water table, rivers keep running all year. Truly a keystone species.
Well hell, why are you wasting time here in the TH-cam comments? Go be one of the hundred experts actually shepherding and studying this project
@duder9752 Right back at ya! 😎
Free the rivers! 💙💚💙
Great to see Nature flourish again!!
The removal of the dam dams is fantastic.
The free flowing Elwha River is a great start.
ignorance.. so destructive, it is good to see people trying to undo the damage others have done
So renewable energy is bad?
Other people didn't know back then the consequences of building dams. Now that more is known dam projects are less likely to be approved.
@@earlysdaDid you watch the video? Coastal erosion, huge reduction in native fish populations, reduction in wildlife as a whole and the destruction of forests in the river basin are the direct results of dams.
Did you know the massive blades of those wind turbines are not the easiest to recycle? There are acres of discarded massive turbine blades that are stacked high.
The industry was quick to make them without a clue how to recycle them.
@@dps6198dps, agreed completely.
Let's do coal and nuclear responsibly in order to live decently.
@@earlysda
Nuclear is the best.
Only question is will people be COMPETENT enough to take all precautions when on duty.
Imagine letting nature take its course is usually the best thing for everything.
Another example of how the human species have harmed the world. Im glad they finally realized their huge mistake. Thanks for sharing this. I also shared this on my social media and encourage others to do so so more people can see this amazing video that enlighten us the importance of reserving and caring about our nature
Another example of how the human species have harmed the world. I'm glad they finally realized their huge mistake. - So what are you, a wombat?
@@HB-C_U_L8R lol
Gonna regret this decision is ten years, when the rains disappear.
Yes you can talk about harming the world while you use electricity to watch this on your device. If you wanted to do something for the fish, stop the over fishing of stocks by ocean going fleets.
@@MinusMedley Yeah except none of these dams help with that anymore. Their reservoirs are full of silt and do nothing to stop flooding. Letting the river scour the riverbed reduces flooding by allowing the water to actually have a channel to leave the area.
I am excited to go to the Elwha one day. Hopefully when the salmon are running. I am also watching as the process of removing the dams on the Klamath is proceeding. The only two dams on the Eel river are also on a path for removal. I grew up on the Wilamette River in Oregon and have seen streams filled with salmon. I cannot express the feeling that comes to me to know these rivers are being freed. One day maybe I can see streams and rivers full of fish in the northwest again.
I'm so proud of my fellow Americans. Nice job
Thank you for all that you do and having the insight to do the right thing.
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Just looking at the picture the water and trees are gone looks worse to me
Remove the damns add the beavers!!!!
You have to get some beavers in there too
And that'll only mean more dams....
Videos like this are great news of what is happening. Specifically targeted dam removal is what can revitalize the ecosystem in so many ways. Back in the 20th century dams were built with reckless abandon without regard to the environment. Dam removal is one of the best things we can do to restore the environment.
....An environment that'll be ruined by the addition of fossil fuel-based power generation.
@@CraigFThompson Why would that suddenly happen? We are only talking about four minor dams being removed on the Klamath River. These were old dams that had long outlived their usefulness and removing them is a net positive for the environment and the salmon population just for starters.
It is nice to hear some good news and see positive outcomes
Finally some good news.
uplifting to hear some good news
Thank you so much for doing this! Now if we can just encourage others❤❤❤
I loved living at the former Lake Mills. We were just one of just two families living at the dam. It was the most magical place with beautiful seasons. Thunderstorms were absolutely incredible. The two old houses were tiny but livable and cozy with a big fireplace in the middle.
It's amazing how changes that seem small can have enormous impacts. I think about the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone National Park. The reintroduction has radically changed parts of the park for the better.
Not the same. Wolves in numbers too great absolutely decimate livestock and wildlife. They are the most efficient and successful land predators. Left unchecked, they’ll eat everything to death.
It's crazy how destructive as a species we are. It takes nature millions of years to get the ecological balance in the area just right to sustainably support life and in a moment on the scale of time we up-end all of it.
Our actions sure do you have far-reaching effects. It's nice to see that we can help bring balance rather than tipping the scales in one way or the other.
Wonderful!
This is wonderful stuff; I had no idea so many dams had already been removed. Incontrovertible examples for the rest of the world to follow!
Restoring the natural fish runs is well worth it. Good job folks.
A good news story. Bravo, you Folk.
Thanks for creating & sharing this, Leaf of Life 🌱 My favorite part about dam removals is when _NONE_ of things opponents say will happen . . . happen ☮️
This is bloody beautiful
No beavers ... yet?
@@erdelegy Yeah, but the Beavers are still better! :D
great video ; its a good start at least , at first 150 dams removed in the last 3 years sounds great but then u realize there are 2000+ dams that are in danger of failing atm and need to still be removed and you realize that this is still an enormous task ahead of us
We been petitioning our govt to remove some dangerous old unused low head dams in my county, they claim a few lives a year average, there’s 5 in the county in question. They could have destroyed all 5 in 98 when we first tried, for less than $10k total, now it’s $5k-$6k each but they still say they can’t afford it
Dams are great !!! We needed them back then, and could use some new ones today !
Glad to see the changes happening
My small city just removed their tiny obsolete dam a few months ago and it already looks 100% different. There are some unfortunate buildings that were built around the dam that now look strange being there like The Mill restaurant but I think everyone will adjust just fine. Hopefully we start seeing a beautiful green river side vs mud a sediment.
I needed this good news for today!
They are now looking at all the dams in the Willamette Valley, Oregon system to remove or change for the fish and other wildlife.
Amazing transformation!
Beautiful Video.
Thanks for visiting
We just gonna ignore the flying bunny? 😂
@InsertHandleHere968 I know it is 7 months later, but I live across from an area where the bunnies play and sometimes, they jump like that! It is hilarious to see!
Like them or not, dams are the cleanest method of harnessing a CONSTANT and DEPENDABLE supply of electricity for the masses.
If not for hydropower, there would be coal and nuclear power plants and few people support either.
We desperately need to keep working on clean new sources of energy.
Nuclear.
@@JA-gx4hbChernobyl, Three Mile Island, SL-1, and other nuclear "disasters"....
I'd much rather stick with good-ol' hydropower!
@@CraigFThompson nuclear power has came a long way in 40 years.
So proud, the Orcas will have more preferred food now. Love the vision that started this. Plz lets not take so long to do this and continue the vision with new generations of those who see the long view.. and let's NEVER again let greed dominate the natural environment, like OIL does now...
DAM! That's awesome...
Not in Texas we seem to be adding dams in the Trinity River. We don’t have salmon but I’m sure it’s affected multiple fish species. The section around Downtown Fort Worth especially. But good work love seeing these removals especially around salmon country.
Agreed. And all those Metroplex lake house owners would definitely lobby to keep those artificial lakes in place. And the state would have increased incentive to keep those homeowners happy because it relies almost entirely on sales tax and property tax, rather than income tax, for revenue.
I don't know how to feel about dams. They destroy ecosystems, yet the reservoirs they create are a vital source of freshwater. The only alternatives are canals, which drain rivers and lakes completely, and desalination, which is harmful to the oceans. Rainwater harvesting is useful, but it can't provide enough water for millions of people either. How can we hydrate ourselves sustainably then? I guess we need to choose where to build dams carefully.
Probably even more important is the huge amounts of electricity they provide 24/7. Something only matched by nuclear or fossil power plants. And we're trying to stop burning stuff so all we have left is hydro and nuclear for the secure base load.
If removing a dam means using a coal fire power plant that could be worse.
@@adddude7524 I'm not worried about that because there plenty of green alternatives. Geothermal, wave, solar, wind all come to mind. Freshwater however, is a limited resource, so that honestly worries me even more.
Increase the price of water.
@@HexaDecimus Increasing the price of a fundamental human right is a terrible idea.
For a lot of the dam’s being removed they are serving no purpose. All they are doing is harming our waterways.
The same issue is on the east coast as well . The Farmington river in Connecticut use to have a huge Atlantic salmon run and theyve been trying for decades to reintroduce them unsuccessfully! The issue us the rainbow dam at its mouth going into the Connecticut river ! The dsm has a fish ladder but its the wrong design and tears the salmons belljes up and they die going over it ! The lamprey and some shad make it over though !!
Great work so far! The proces of healing and restoration can speed up by adding gravel to the decraded stream (like in the Elbe river in Europe) and dividing the river into two seperate streams (the way they did in the south of India).
Green grassy dam wall giving way was in my state(shown close to the end of the video 7:37) was a dam failure that is being rebuilt, not removed.
And remember to introduce beavers. According to the information I have, they enhance wetlands.
Yeah as they build more dams lol that we are actually trying to remove, and beavers destroy land not improve it they put levees in danger because they burrow too
We have beavers here in wa already
@@guillermoguzman8953 I’m sure anywhere where there’s a water source there will be beavers which is a good sign of a healthy environment
THUMBS UP!
Wow it was beautiful when the dam was there
Great video. Thanks!
Very nice!!
This isn't the only area where obstacles for spawning salmon have been removed, and all the results are the same. That's why I'm completely stunned the city of Vancouver BC would even consider building into the water when they already know about the negative effects of the Stanley Park seawall and the city's marinas. People know, but will keep repeating the same mistakes.
For some a dollar makes nothing a mistake….
......"follow the money" always @@olyokie
Vancouver BC is owned by the Chinese now. They’ll strip the earth so long as they can be king of the ashes 😂😂😂
Really? I was just there and they still take Canadian currency.
Bigot Much?@@namedrop721
They'll strip the earth if people let them. That's where the money factor comes in. Makes me wonder who the 'bad guys' are. @@namedrop721
And in ten years they will be building one twice as big to try and keep the lights on .
Nah they already have alternate options that were better smarter options that don’t stop salmon migrations. And I’m sure the rich folk miss their lake front property or boating but salmon survival is more important. They can drive up stream I’m sure there’s 10 more dams holding up the place.
Ever heard of fish ladders ? used around the world to give fish access to the head waters of rivers .
Notice how harmonious the earth, humans and animals are when people don’t pollute and leave its structure alone? Leave the dam building to the beavers. That’s what they’re for. Our Creator knows what we need. 😊
Thanks great video
Hallelujah!!!
Bringing back species we drove to extinction, like the sockeye salmon mentioned here, would be an awesome use of cloning. I'm curious if there is any effort towards that.
Great report!!!
Thanks glad you enjoy it
Fantastic for the world! I know how wonderful it is when I have a back-up and it gets released! It is horribly sad that some fish and probably other animals went extinct from the placement of the dams, but super great that some are growing in population!
Great video
Glad you enjoyed it
Interesting video. However, the young lady speaking might want to work on her hissing Sibilant S when speaking. It was rather distracting, almost shrill.
What about the electricity it probably used to produce? Any replacement for that? Or about flood protection?
They were built to power saw mills in the 20's
@@JustinC-d6z interesting. Like from the video it seems that they were pretty close to some bigger cities which I would bet would still use some electricity. Or they were really almost useless in that place or state? Then it would probably make sense to destroy them
Yay! So good to see Mother Nature win a few! But I gotta wonder why these dams were built in the first place? Hydro power? Water for Ag? How is that provided for once the dams are gone?
FYI...salmon are Anadromous not anadronomous.
Excellent
Awesome!
Fabulous
🇺🇸🐋
Very quick on those slides.
This shows how resilient the planet truly is even when man attempts to control it. No matter what humans do the planet will always eventually win so don’t worry about climate change.
Yes, please remove dams and stop salmon farming. It doesn't benefit the salmon.
Yeaaaaah!
Questa è una bella notizia❤
Good news but, do the companies who built them have to set aside money for there decommissioning in the US ?
Given that the mechanical parts like spillway gates and valves have a max design life of 60 years, I'd guess they're primarily being removed for safety reasons to prevent an uncontrolled release of water which may exceed the spec for the rest of the dam.
I'll bet they don't.
I think this is brilliant.
Good luck with 1200 windmills you need to replace every 20 years. Good day for the elite and a kick in the ball to working man.
Beautifull,..best invested money
Thank you
BRING BACK BEAVERS!!!
I agree I'm a big fan of beaver!
@@avid2112The one that resides between two human female legs....
And yet hydralic energy is still a good thing imo. Better than burning coal. They just need to implement systems that let the wildlife go through...
In Scotland the estates that had salmon angling rights were a big lobby and fish ladders were incorporated into most of the hydro electric dams. These were successful in maintaining salmon numbers and became tourist attractions in their own right.
These dams aren't producing electricty.
@@gubermon5903
The upper dam on the Elwa was absolutely producing energy when decommissioned.
And yes, both of the dams were illegal in that agreed to fish passages were never constructed.
Hatcheries were then, after the fact, chosen as a viable alternative……which they are not in any real way.
Hatcheries are barely better than nothing….but thats it, barely better than nothing.
Read “Mountains in the Clouds”…….
Agree, there HAS to be a middle ground we can find with all our technological advances.
Both of the Elwha dams produced electricity. That is why they were built
The story does not speak about the Native tribe in WA state that started requests for dam removal.
As long as you don’t use electricity or drinking water from municipal districts .
What tribes live here. ? 😊
Well dam, that's great!!
How do they count the fish?
What was the purpose of these Dams, and how is the purpose being met now?
A good start.