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Located about 25 miles South East of Sun Valley Idaho,
Silver Creek rises from the ground as dozens of small feeder spring
creeks. These small streams flow for short distances of anywhere
from a few yards long to a few miles into the property now known as The
Nature Conservancy of Silver Creek in Idaho. As Silver Creek flows from
the Nature Conservancy it enters a checker board of private and public
land. It is in the upper reaches (about 25 miles of stream) that Save
Silver Creek is monitoring. It is in the upper half of Silver Creek that
conservation efforts have been concentrated over the years and future
conservation efforts on Silver Creek will most likely be conducted in
these upper reaches. Silver Creek is famous for it's diverse eco-system
and world class fishing. Trout have fooled fisherman for many years on
Silver Creek. Many species of birds frequent Silver Creek or call it
home. The natural attractions of Silver Creek are magnificent. But time
and humans have changed Silver Creek over the years. If left to it's
own, without human intervention, Silver Creek would be a small
narrow stream with a mix of gravel, weeds and natural silt under the
surface and lush riparian vegetation on it's stream banks. But this is
not how Silver Creek is today on much of the stream. Granted, much of
the stream is as it was hundreds of years ago, some of it is not. When
cattle where first introduced in the area, Silver Creek suffered. The
cattle over grazed the riparian areas and trampled the stream banks
causing the soil to erode into the stream. Farming has also been a
contributor to the loading of windborne soil into Silver Creek. The high
winds of Winter and Spring carry dust for many miles eventually ending
up in Silver Creek. All of this soil in the stream over time has covered
spawning gravel and displaced native species if insects and plants. In
combination with the streamside vegetation disappearing, Silver Creek
was not the healthy stream it once was. Realizing this, The Nature
Conservancy purchased a large parcel of property at the confluence of
all the feeder streams. This purchase gave the Nature Conservancy
control of a major portion of Silver Creek that needed attention. Since
then, TNC has acquired more land and easements to help protect Silver
Creek. Through the efforts of citizens and The Nature Conservancy for
over 25 years, Silver Creek has improved as a fishery and diverse
eco-system. TNC has re-vegetated stream banks, improved habitats and
studied in detail the workings of Silver Creek. But there are still
problems. Problems that are not necessarily in TNC property boundaries.
Problems that exist in all portions of Silver Creek. Thermal pollution,
New Zealand Mudsnail and human pressure are threats that still exist or
are new problems. This is where Save Silver Creek might be able to help.
For over 30 years studies have been conducted on Silver Creek by various
agencies and TNC but where never made public or put in one easy spot to find
them. This is frustrating when you need information to find solutions.
It is our hope to gather as much of this past data and store new data as
we can. We wish to bring to the public, information that concerns Silver
Creek such as current and future conservation improvements and studies.
Silver Creek is a valuable resource in Idaho, we all need to keep an eye
on it's health.
Thank You,
Save Silver Creek.org
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