The Klamath is a 300-mile-long waterway traveling from Oregon's Cascade
Mountains to the Pacific Ocean in Northern California. Once, it was the
third-most productive salmon fishing river in North America.
Today, Klamath River salmon are approaching extinction, thanks mainly to six
dams that span the upper river. But things might change dramatically if a
recently signed Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement becomes reality -- four of
the Klamath dams could be slated for removal. It would be a river-restoration
project unprecedented in scale, and environmental groups are ecstatic at the
possibility.
To see the unfolding Klamath story first-hand, I decided to
kayak the entire length of the river, starting at the aptly named Spring Creek
where boiling pots of sand danced on the bottom of the creek. Water gushed into
the stream from below, clean and beautiful. But several hours later, the scene
had changed when I arrived at a fixture of the southern Oregon landscape --
Klamath Lake. A rank odor wafted on the air, and billions of tiny green algae
flecks floated on the surface of the water. I had only paddled 10 miles, but I
was already a world away from the bubbling purity of Spring
Creek.
Paddling was not always possible. I stood in astonished silence,
wondering how I would make it downstream on a tiny spout of water that emanated
from one of the Klamath River’s dams. The flow was reminiscent of a desert
watercourse in my home of Arizona, not a major river in the Pacific Northwest.
Yet this -- and not Spring Creek – better describes today’s Klamath
River.
It is a river serving many masters: Farmers demand water for
irrigation, Indians fight for their share of the dwindling salmon, and we all
flip light switches from the dam-supported power grid. The Klamath embodies all
that is at stake regarding water issues in the West.
Over the next week,
I came to see the Klamath as a tamed, utilitarian river. I drifted past the A
Canal, where roughly half the river is siphoned into a massive plumbing project
that brings water to 240,000 acres of farmland. I rode returned irrigation
effluent through whitewater canyons, and saw the river vanish into reservoirs
four different times. Once, it even disappeared into a steel grate, leaving me
with a rain-gutter trickle.
During a re-supply stop, I asked an
old-timer in a coffee shop what he thought of the dams coming down. Not
surprisingly, he said, "It's not a good idea." But, he added, "If the fish don't
get their water, they'll die, so they need it. But a man who has to water his
hay, he needs it, too." Many in this region are now fourth-generation farmers.
To them, watering the hay is as inextricably linked to the rhythms of life as
swimming upstream is for the salmon.
Two days from the river mouth, I
saw the other side of the issue. "Hello, there," a Yurok Indian called out from
the captain's chair of his fishing boat. "Hello," I replied, as I paddled near.
The man asked me where I'd been, and where I was going. Then he quickly jumped
to dam politics.
"There's a meeting tonight. We're trying to get those
dams outta there," he said. "Us and the farmers, we're working side by side
right now," he said. "We told them we wouldn't sue them, so they're with us.
They don't like the word sue." Then he reached the heart of the matter. "They
say they'll go bankrupt without water, but this river -- it's all we've
got."
He repeated the same chorus I’ve heard from fisherman on rivers
throughout the West Coast: "I only caught 50 fish this spring.” I waited. "Fifty
fish!" he repeated. "That's not many -- I have to feed a lot of
people."
As I shoved back into the current, I wished him good luck with
the fall salmon run. "Oh, they'll come back," he reassured me. I was less
optimistic, dams or no dams.
Fish die and go extinct for many reasons,
but on the lower Klamath, warm water temperatures are often tagged as the main
problem. Warmer water allows for more bacterial pathogens to develop, thus
increasing the chances that disease will break out in the fish. Then there are
the dams that block fish from reaching their historic spawning beds upriver.
This time, there may be a real chance that the Klamath dams will come down. The
question for the salmon is whether it will be too late.
Tyler Williams
is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News
(hcn.org). He lives and writes in Flagstaff, Arizona.
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