holyoutlaw: (me meh)

This summer I have a number of questions to answer about the seeps in North Beach Park.

The best way to answer the questions about location, size, and number is by walking the stream from where it bubbles up from the ground to the end of the main park. Maybe this is just an excuse to explore the park in a way I haven’t yet, but I think that’s the rationale for a lot of my so-called “research.”

I used a Garmin eTrex 10 for recording trail and waypoints. But, um, didn’t know how to save, so I lost all that data. The walk was still worthwhile, though, because I worked out a consistent method for data recording and what to observe.

Before I got to the head waters, I noticed something about this yew tree:
Yew (Taxus brevifolia)
This had been almost completely enclosed by a holly and laurel thicket until some of us went at it with a weed wrench. This picture was taken yesterday; compare to this picture taken in April. The angles are pretty different, but it looks to me like the yew is really spreading out towards the light. That was the good news; the bad news is that I’m also seeing more signs of herbivory.

Here is one of the places that underground water bubbles up into the park:
The headwaters

This is at the base of the slope that comes down from 24th Ave. There are a couple others that I’ll have to find. They’re all in the part of the park we call “Headwaters Bowl.”

The Headwaters Bowl is large, flat, and open, surrounded by slopes. There is very little canopy cover, and what there is comes from trees leaning over the bowl from the slopes. This makes the Headwaters Bowl a scrub/shrub wetland.

I did find this small seep:
Small Seep
and took several more picture of it. One of the questions about the seeps is their flow rate. How I’ll do that is yet to be determined. I think a more important issue might be how deep is the soil layer. For instance, because the stream has a sandy bed, the footing there is quite firm, as opposed to places with a deep, saturated soil layer.

Another seep I discovered is very large, about 200-300 square feet. I remember it from other seasons. The footing there is quite firm, which means I think that the soil on the top is being carried into the stream. If that’s the case, I’ll try slowing down the movement with either barriers or plants. If it turns out the seep is running over the glayed soil (anoxic sand), we might have to put down barriers to catch the dirt for a while. I’m reluctant to put down barriers because I think the water will find the one way through, and then channelize and move faster, when the intent is to slow down the water. Straw wattles might do the trick, allowing the water through while trapping the dirt. I’d also like to avoid staking something into the slope, as I think sometimes that just cuts away the part of the slope below the stake.

I’m going to have to start over, not least because of the GPS data not being saved. But that’s part of the fun, I think.

Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.

holyoutlaw: (me meh)

There is a stream that runs through North Beach Park, emerging from just under 24th Ave NW and running through the park, then through private property to the Sound. But there are also a number of broad horizontal seeps that enter the park. My research will ask a lot of questions about them:

  1. How many are there?
  2. Where do they enter the park?
  3. Where do they enter the stream?
  4. How seasonal are they? (Do they dry up in the summer?)
  5. What is their flow rate?
  6. How do they affect the water quality of the main stream?
  7. What IS the water quality of the main stream?
  8. Do the seeps cause erosion?
  9. How can we stabilize them if so?
  10. What grows on or around them?
  11. How can we remove invasives and plant on them without further destabilization?

There will be some data gathering before I can answer all these questions. The first three questions will be pretty easily answered with a couple walks through the park. Seasonality, obviously, will take at least a year. Flow rate will take several samples to get enough data points for a good average.

Here is a link to the set of pictures for the “Fallen Alder” seep, near, guess what, an alder tree that has fallen across the stream. And here is a link to the set of pictures for the 101 tree seep. These sets will grow as the research progresses.

If you have any ideas for research, please feel free to suggest them in comments.

Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.

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June 2017

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