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Places
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Lees
Ferry (page 5 of 5)
Lees Ferry Today
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A river trip through the Grand
Canyon beginning at Lees Ferry first takes boaters through majestic
Marble Canyon. Photo NAU.PH.96.4.91.64 by Bill Belknap courtesy
of Cline Library Special Collections, Northern Arizona University.
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During the first five decades of the twentieth century, only thirteen
Grand Canyon river trips launced at Lees Ferry. In fact, through the 1940s
and 1950s until construction began on Glen Canyon Dam, trips through Glen
Canyon were far more common than those through Grand Canyon. Thousands
of people boated the calm waters from Hite, Utah down to Lees Ferry, making
visitation at Lees Ferry higher than at any other previous time. After
completion of the dam, boating in the Grand Canyon increased tremendously,
rising from 280 boaters in 1962 to 16,000 in 1973. Today, the number of
boaters is controlled by NPS and maintained at about 20,000 per year.
The creation of Glen Canyon Dam has had dramatic effects on the ecology
and stream dynamics of the Colorado River within the canyon downstream
of the dam. Before the river was impounded by the dam, it carried a tremendous
amount of sand and silt, especially during spring floods, scouring the
canyon bottom and eroding and depositing material on the river shores.
Now, water discharge by the dam is controlled, virtually sediment-free
and of a much colder temperature, leading to many changes in the river
ecosystem. Beaches are eroded, but cannot be resupplied with sand; native
plants and fish have been displaced
by exotics; some wildlife has disappeared, while other species, such as
waterfowl and Peregrine falcons, have increased. In 1994, an attempt was
made to simulate flood conditions with a large release of water from the
base of the dam. Results from the experiment were mixed, and management
of river flows remains a controversial issue.
Another effect of the dam has been the establishment of and/or encouragement
of exotic and invasive species
throughout the river corridor, including tamarisk,
Russian olive, and several fish species,
all of which may compete with and displace native species, changing the
composition and functioning of the river ecosystem. Restoration programs
are underway to eradicate some of these exotic species, restore habitats,
and allow native species to recover.
The clear, cold waters released from Glen Canyon Dam, flowing past Lees
Ferry, at a consistent temperature of 46-48 degrees F, support one of
the country's premier "tailwater" trout fisheries. Trophy rainbow
trout feed in great numbers in the first 20 miles downstream from the
dam, drawing anglers from around the world. While many people enjoy the
fishing here, and the attraction is a significant boost to the local economy,
the trout are not native to this section of the Colorado, and the conditions
allowing them to thrive are driving the remaining native
fish ever closer to extinction. This odd transformation of Lees Ferry
to international fishing haven is just the most recent in a long, colorful,
and sometimes bizarre history of human endeavor that has focused on this
modest gap in the labyrinthine canyons of the Colorado River.
Previous Page
--Researched and written by Shannon
Kelly
References:
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Park. Edited by Webb, R.H. Utah State University Press, Logan, 542
pp.
Rusho, W.L. and Crampton, C.G. 1992. Lee's Ferry: Desert River Crossing.
Cricket Productions, Salt Lake City, UT, 168 pp.
Resources:
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