As it enters the Yurok Reservation, the Lower Klamath River is as picturesque as it gets. Clear water rushes over gentle rapids, framed by verdant hills and a cerulean sky. An untrained eye would never notice the devastation beneath the surface save for the tiny fish floating lifeless in the water.
Over the past several weeks, an outbreak of the parasite Ceratonova shasta has ripped through young salmon throughout the lower reaches of the Klamath watershed. Driven by high temperatures and low flows out of Iron Gate Dam, the disease is resulting in what the Yurok Tribe is calling a “catastrophic” fish kill.
Congratulations to Wheeling Nailers tickets winners
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Man sentenced for his role in Drug Trafficking Conspiracy
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Sika Sarnafil Awards Contractor of the Year Winners for 2020
Share Article CANTON, Mass. (PRWEB) May 17, 2021 Winners of the annual Contractor Project of the Year competition were announced today by Sika Sarnafil, the worldwide market leader in PVC roofing and waterproofing membranes. Winners were recognized for outstanding workmanship in five categories: Low Slope – New Construction, Low Slope – Re-Roofing, Steep Slope, Sustainability and Waterproofing for projects completed using a Sika thermoplastic PVC membrane for roofing or waterproofing applications.
“Congratulations to the winners of the 2020 Projects of the Year competition,” said Brian J. Whelan, Sika Sarnafil’s Executive Vice President. “Each entry is judged on project complexity, design uniqueness, craftsmanship and creative problem solving. We salute the winners for their dedication to the roofing industry and installation excellence.”
By Dan Armitage, host of Buckeye Sportsman, Ohio’s longest running outdoor radio show
Great news for northwest Ohio anglers: a walleye has been found in the Sandusky River upstream of the recently demolished Ballville Dam near Fremont. University of Toledo graduate student Taylor Sasak has spent the last two springs searching for signs that walleye are moving past the site of the former Ballville Dam that was removed in 2018 on the Sandusky River near Fremont, and finally struck gold.
The fish was captured in late April while electrofishing in a boat as part of Sasak’s ongoing research project. She actually caught 13 walleye near Portage Trail Park and one walleye near Wolf Creek Park above the former obstacle, the first time walleye have accessed the habitat that had been blocked for more than a century.