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Five-Star Restoration Program Descriptions
Bolam Pass Wetlands Project
Southwest Colorado Youth Conservation Corps, Durango and Dolores, Colorado
EPA Region 8
Sixteen members of the Southwest Colorado Youth Conservation Corps (SCYCC)
put the "wet" back in wetlands at a high mountain location near Durango
during a one-week Five Star Restoration Partners Initiative project in
August, 1998. Working in partnership with the USDA Forest Service's hydrologist
team on the San Juan/Rio Grande National Forests and the San Juan Mountains
Association (a national forest support group), the SCYCC repaired 1.5
acres of wetlands on Bolam Pass that faced a severe threat of drying out.
The actual acreage treated protected a further 100 acres of wetlands surrounding
a mountain lake.
Bolam Pass straddles the watershed divide between the Dolores and Animas
Rivers at a 9,000 foot elevation. It is an area of high public use and
interest. The flatter terrain in and adjacent to the Pass is a unique
high-elevation wetland complex of bogs, open-water potholes, and channels
interspersed with spruce forest and alpine shrublands. Water from the
wetlands drains to the East Fork of the Dolores River where it provides
habitat for a variety of fish species.
The Hermosa Park Road bisects the wetland. In several areas, the improper
placement of culverts under this road has altered the drainage pattern
through or between wetlands resulting in gullying, headcutting, and overly
rapid drawdown of water. These conditions have seriously compromised the
biological integrity of the affected wetlands.
Youth corps crews recruited from Dolores and Durango "spiked out" (camped)
at the Pass for the week and fixed the drainage problem by building check
dams along the water channels to slow the flow of water. The crews built
check dams by digging perpendicular trenches through the channel, placing
a 10-foot piece of filter cloth in the channel, and then filling the cloth
with dirt and rocks. Corpsmembers then replaced dirt and grass on top
of each filter cloth "burrito-style" check dam. This type of check dams
mimics natural processes in the wetland.
Other partners included The Training Advantage (a nonprofit organization
specializing in training for disadvantaged youth and adults), the Dolores
School District/Town of Dolores, Durango School District 9-R, and the
Native Plant Society. Matching funds came from the Berger Foundation through
a grant from the Colorado Environmental Youth Corps Initiative.
| EPA Grant Amount: |
$8,000 |
| Matching Funds: |
$13,828 |
| Contact: |
Andy Dey
Southwest Colorado Environmental Youth Conservation Corps
PO Box 2704
Durango, CO 81302
Ph: 970/259-1086 x.12
Fx: 970/259-2037 |
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Laurie Gruell
San Juan Mountains Association
PO Box 2261
Durango, CO 81302
Ph: 970-385-1210
Fax: 970-385-1243 |
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