Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Shocking Observations from Lake Koshkonong - Rock River


Brian, we just got in from a Memorial Day boat ride that included  the river from Newville to Indian Ford dam, what we found may be of shocking news to some people. The water level was at 776.97' .

   Observations:
1. water level at our seawall on Ellendale Rd. was 26" below top of seawall

2. All Lowland areas, including Green's Run, Hurd Farms, Saunders Creek area were all within the river banks

3. We found 3 piers that had collapsed and have been unusable for years (no decking and twisted beyond repair) that were partially under water

4. We didn't even see any boats throwing 3' wakes washing out all the homes along the river   

XXX

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Coolest weather in weeks on the way

From Chicago Tribune

Chicago's 95-degree high on Monday was the hottest early season temperature observed here over the Chicago area's 142-year record of observations. New records were also set across 16 states and in nearly three dozen cities, including 96 at Toledo, Ohio, 95 in Detroit, Mich. and South Bend, Ind., 93 in Flint, Mich. and 92 in Cleveland, Ohio.

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Monday, May 28, 2012

Memorial Day - Be Safe Have Fun and Remember the Day

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Is the Water Level PERFECT Today??

98 degrees on the Sunday before Memorial Day - water level is 777.06 -- 3/4 ths of an inch ABOVE the RKLD requested Summer Water Level.

Help our case by taking a photo of your shoreline today and tomorrow!

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History of Memorial Day

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Slow/no wake speed restriction lifted

Janesville Gazette


JANESVILLE--The Rock County Sheriff’s Office has removed
the
slow/no wake speed restriction placed on the Rock River
throughout
the county, according to a department news release.
If you have questions about the slow-no-wake ordinance, visit\
Rock Co Sheriff Dept. and under quick links, click Slow-No-Wake
Ordinance.

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River-choking invaders make easy bowfishing

From the Milw Journal Sentinel


By 1890, as many as 35,000 carp were stocked into Wisconsin waters.
And by 1895 the carp stocking program was discontinued, wrote Becker, as the fish had been planted throughout the state.
Problems associated with carp were noted soon after the fish's introduction to Wisconsin.
At the 1901 meeting of the American Fisheries Society in Milwaukee, General E.E. Bryant, a member of the Wisconsin Conservation Commission, reported that within 5 miles of Madison there were "billions" of carp and that every fisherman saw them, cursed them and refused to catch them.
A 1944 account from George Peabody in Appleton said the introduction of carp to Lake Koshkonong had destroyed the fishing for bass and pike, roiled the waters and ruined duck hunting through destruction of wild rice and celery.
In his book, Becker details a Madison pond stocked with carp in 1944-’45. The pond had dense growths of waterweed and sago pondweed and lesser amounts of pickerel weed, coontail and wild rice.
Just 51 days after the carp were added, the pond’s aquatic vegetation was "reduced to a very critical stage." The wild rice had been uprooted within a few days of stocking, the sago pondweed torn out quickly and the coontail soon after. Only the waterweed, heavily grazed, and the pickerel weed remained. When the pickerel weed was attacked, however, it was destroyed completely in less than two weeks.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Funny Ridiculous - SNW Trigger

Lake level is at 777.52

Hey out there - it is STILL SNW!

At least until 3 tenths of 1 inch spill over the Indianford Dam....

Would not want those wakes washing out piers that have been set too low.

Legal Brief Prepared in Lake Koshkonong Case

Read More Here


The Great Lakes Legal Foundation is preparing a friend of the court brief on behalf of MWFPA and Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce in the Lake Koshkonong case.
The brief is being written in support of the petitioners in a dispute between the Rock-Koshkonong Lake District and the WI DNR over state-controlled water levels at Lake Koshkonong. However, at issue in the case are fundamental questions about agency authority and the reach of the public trust doctrine

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Slow/no-wake order still in effect for northern parts of Rock River in Rock County

From the Janesville Gazette

NEWVILLE--Parts of the Rock River in northern Rock County from north of Janesville to the mouth of Lake Koshkonong remain under slow/no wake orders today, according to river stage data from the U.S. Geologic Survey.

The Rock County Sheriff's Office on Friday had predicted that slow/no-wake orders placed last week on the northern part of the river would be removed early Saturday, but the river remains at 7.71 feet, about 2 inches above the county's new slow/no-wake standard for the river, according to USGS data filed at 8 a.m. today.
The sheriff's office is in charge of posting and enforcing slow/no-wake orders on the river.
A new countywide standard requires the sheriff's office to post slow/no wake orders when water levels at the mouth of Lake Koshkonong are above 7.5 feet. The water levels are based on data from a USGS river gauge at Lake Koshkonong.
You can keep track of water levels on the Rock River at by checking a map of USGS river gauges at http://waterwatch.usgs.gov/?m=real&r=wi.
To check water levels at the river near Lake Koshkonong, click on the icon marked "USGS 05427235 Lake Koshkonong near Newville."

______________________________________

Interesting that the local unit of government, RKLD, would not be asked if their prediction were somewhat close (it wasn't).


RKLD reports water levels daily, every day, for 13 years.  We know more than anyone how the lake behaves - after all, we have invested heavily in that knowledge.

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Saturday, May 19, 2012

SNW is OFF

And the Lake Level 777.81 - yet the new county ordinance says SNW trigger is 777.5

Thanks Rock County Board of Supervisors for making the issue worse than it ever was prior to your expertise in hydrology being on display.

On Again...Off Again....Confusion Prevails


Slow/no-wake to be lifted from river
   JANESVILLE
   Officials on Friday removed a slow/no-wake order for portions of the Rock River in southern Rock County, and slow/no-wake orders could be lifted from the river in northern part of the county early today, the Rock County Sheriff’s Office reported.
   A new countywide standard requires the sheriff’s office to issue slow/no-wake orders when water levels exceed 7.5 feet on Lake Koshkonong and 6.5 feet at Afton. The levels are based on readings by U.S. Geologic Survey river gauges.
   Water levels at Afton had 
fallen to 6.5 feet Friday, but they remained at 7.89 feet at Lake Koshkonong, according to the sheriff’s office.
   The sheriff’s office said slow/no-wake could be lifted early today for stretches of the river north of Janesville to the mouth of Lake Koshkonong.


____________________________________________

When is an ordinance not an ordinance?!?!  Is 777.5 the trigger or not?!

And 778 is the level the RKLD was willing to go with as a trigger for SNW.

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Thursday, May 17, 2012

Public Comment RE: CURRENT SNW Order


Hey Brian,

Bring me some clarity….water goes up and crests on Saturday, now that the water is coming down the Rock County Sherriff issues a “slow no wake” order…??? Brian, What can I do to make this a “right to wake” state. We need to push the collective boater rights agenda forward, how can I help create more wakes…??? From a concerned summer soldier….

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Visual Observations were that the river was NOT high...


Brian,

Last night (the 16th) I emailed the Sheriff’s office asking why there was a 9 day delay in setting no-wake this time, and why the high water in March/April went completely unnoticed.  This morning I received the following reply:

Ken:

Please call me reference your questions.

Captain Jude G. Maurer
Law Enforcement Services
Rock County Sheriff's Office
200 East Highway 14
Janesville, WI  53545
608-757-7944

So I called Captain Maurer this morning (the 17th) to discuss the reasons.  He indicated that the Sheriff’s office was caught off-guard by the high water, that they had not observed any heavy rainfall, and that their visual observations were that the river was not high.  He said that the Sheriff’s office was not watching the USGS web site, and that the Sheriff’s office is not accustomed to enforcing no-wake early in the spring.  He said that they checked the website and confirmed the level was over the trigger point on the 15th because they received their first complaint on that day.

The list of people who did not inform the Sheriff’s office until the 15th includes county supervisor Sandra Kraft, who I personally informed of the lack of enforcement of her precious ordinance in an email way back on March 14th.
Ken

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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Slow/no wake ordinance in effect on Rock River


Gazette staff
   JANESVILLE
   The Rock County Sheriff’s Office issued a slow/no wake order Tuesday for the Rock River throughout Rock County.
   A county ordinance adopted in January set a countywide standard for slow/no wake operations on the river. Before the ordinance, towns enforced the previous slow/no wake conditions.
   The new county ordinance calls for slow/no wake conditions when the water level exceeds 7.5 feet on Lake Koshkonong and 6.5 feet in Afton.
   “Deputies will place slow/no wake signs along the 
river at all public access points between the northern Rock County line and the southern Rock County line,” Spoden said.
   Rock-Koshkonong Lake District officials opposed the ordinance. They argued that the standard is too restrictive. The district preferred a slowno wake standard tied to the flood stage, which is 9 feet near Newville. The lower levels in the ordinance could curtail boating in late spring and early summer, they said.
   Exempted in the form of an amendment to the ordinance are special events on the river, including the Rock Aqua Jays water ski shows in Janesville’s Traxler Park.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Lake has crested

Lake level = 778.17 and dropping from 778.19 on Sunday.

We are 2 feet ABOVE DNR Summer Target.

And 8 inches ABOVE the new Rock County Ordinance for SNW trigger - are boat wakes washing away your shoreline??

Are the landings posted SNW??

Friday, May 11, 2012

Happy Boating

Warmest Spring in 142 years

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Thursday, May 10, 2012

What Is Happening on the Lake

The water level is low for this time of year, but we just crossed the 778 level.  Expect levels to continue creeping up, despite little rain in the forecast, due to heaving rains earlier this week in the watershed north near Beaver Dam.

Anyone notice the new Rock County SNW ordinance is yet again, NOT being enforced (or posted)??

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Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Safety Line

Has been lowered at the Indianford Dam.

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

SNW has become MORE arbitrary


Brian,


No press releases from the sheriff’s office.  Looks like the new ordinance is once again being ignored. 

Seems to me like little has changed in the last year.  We once again have a system that is not consistent, predictable or based on sound engineering.  If the new ordinance were enforced, we would have 2 out of 3, and the third would become pretty obvious over time.  

I’m sure that at some point we will have a No-wake imposed at some arbitrary river level which is not spelled out by law.  

But this time there will be no accountability at all because no elected official has any authority to make that decision.  In this way we have regressed.

XXX

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Monday, May 07, 2012

Board Meeting Thursday

May 10th, 6pm at Tallgrass

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Sunday, May 06, 2012

Gate Operations Question

Brian -
When were the gates last closed, and why is the lake level higher without our usual snow melt/Spring Precipitation?
Russ
_____________________

The gates were last closed on October 17, 2011 to slow the drain as we were approaching the Winter Draw Down for 11-1 through May 1, 2012.

At this date last year, the level was 779.26 -- today it is at 777.34

That equates to 23 inches lower lake level this year - due to less snow and rain.

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Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Why wetlands are important




This is what is wrong with our tax code - if 80% of wetlands are held in private ownership, then pay fair taxes on it, otherwise accept the community/environmental value of wetlands and move all wetlands, like lake and riverbeds, into Public Trust.

_________________________________________

By Carl Schwartz and Tracy Hames

International Migratory Bird Day is about to celebrate its 20th anniversary. Created in 1993, the event is now hosted at over 500 sites throughout the Western Hemisphere, reaching hundreds of thousands of youths and adults. Amazingly, nearly 10% of this year's celebrations will be held right here in Wisconsin, launched by the rapidly expanding Bird City Wisconsin program.
Wetlands will be a major focus of many of these events since they are critically important for songbirds, shorebirds, waterfowl and wading birds. Over 75% of Wisconsin's wildlife species use wetlands during a portion of their life cycle.
For most wetland-dependent birds, habitat loss in breeding areas translates directly into population losses. That's why so many conservation advocates and bird lovers in general bemoaned Gov. Scott Walker's decision to sign into law a bill that weakens wetland protection in Wisconsin. Since passage of this legislation, citizens have been calling the Wisconsin Wetlands Association concerned about the effects this law will have on the wetlands in their communities.
It is clear that simply relying on governmental regulation to protect our wetlands is not enough. Citizens need to get involved - to become active in their communities and watersheds to ensure that wetland protection is realized.
Bird Day is a great opportunity to reflect on why we should care about wetlands. Let's look at the facts.
Wetlands are important components of every Wisconsin landscape, whether urban or rural. They provide flood protection, water quality enhancement, groundwater recharge, fish and wildlife habitat and recreational opportunities.
A new study, conducted for WWA, found that Wisconsin's wetlands are worth between $3.2 billion to $152 billion in benefits every year. The Rapid Assessment of the Economic Value of Wisconsin's Wetlands is the first broad valuation of ecosystem services provided by Wisconsin's wetlands and one of only a few on this scale in the United States.
Since European settlement, however, nearly half of Wisconsin's wetlands have been lost to development - nearly 5 million acres. A portion of those that remain are protected by federal, state, tribal or local governments.
One of these, the Kakagon and Bad River Sloughs complex, recently was designated a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. This is the first tribally owned "Ramsar site" in the U.S. and the third Ramsar wetland in Wisconsin. Yet nearly 80% of state wetlands remain in private ownership. This humbling statistic emphasizes the need for all of us to do our part.
How can you get involved in protecting wetlands? First, explore and learn about the wetland resources in your community. Go hiking, hunting, bird watching, canoeing and take advantage of field trip opportunities offered by many organizations, including WWA and the Friends of the Cedarburg Bog, to name just two. Remember, to truly care for a resource, we must live closely with it.
Second, join in with others who care for wetlands. When citizens take an interest in wetlands, good things happen. In Wisconsin, there are countless examples of private individuals working together to protect, restore and care for wetlands. Just a few examples: the "Wild Ones: Native Plants, Native Landscapes" conferences held annually in Milwaukee since 1977, the Swamplovers Foundation in Cross Plains, the Lake Koshkonong Wetlands Association near Fort Atkinson and numerous friends groups established to support protected areas.
Both WWA and Bird City Wisconsin stress the economic incentive for communities to practice conservation. The EPA estimates that more than half of all U.S. adults hunt, fish, bird watch or photograph wildlife, spending a total of $59.5 billion annually, and that the value derived from observing and photographing wetland birds alone is at least $10 billion.
Get to know the business community and your neighboring landowners. Attend county, city and town planning and land use meetings. Get involved in nonprofit groups working for wetlands. WWA and Bird City are committed to working with citizens, communities and governments to promote the protection, restoration and enjoyment of wetlands. Meaningful wetland protection must come from the people who live with these resources day to day.
That's one reason Bird City has made partnering with other organizations to recognize IMBD a key part of its effort to mobilize a coalition of citizens and public officials to build healthier communities for birds and people. With funding from TogetherGreen, the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin and the Milwaukee Audubon Society, Bird City's program aims to ensure that urban residents maintain healthy populations of birds and grow an appreciation for them. It offers public recognition to communities that work to conserve birds while celebrating IMBD.
Carl Schwartz is state coordinator for Bird City Wisconsin; Tracy Hames is executive director of the Wisconsin Wetlands Association.

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Tuesday, May 01, 2012

Dredging Update - Role of Tribes

I received an email late yesterday afternoon from the Corps staff archeologist, Brad Perkl, who works out of our St. Paul, MN office.

He stated that he was able to speak with Mr. Quackenbush (the Ho-Chunk Nation THPO).  Mr. Quackenbush still wants to see either a tribal monitor or an archaeologist on hand for the construction.  However, Mr. Perkl believes Mr. Quackenbush will be comfortable with having a monitor on site for the initial construction and then re-evaluate the need for a monitor for the duration of the project.  The monitor will need to report to the Ho-Chunk and the Corps 5 days before the start of the project and at the end of the first day of construction.  The tribe and the Corps will determine how long they should stay out there.

Mr. Quackenbush is supposed to follow up the phone call with an email to Mr. Perkl, stating his request.

Please advise if you would sign and accept a Corps permit with this as a special condition.

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