#99 Restoration on the North Fork
August 21, 2008
Landowners along the North Fork take advantage of VDGIF’s Landowner Incentive Program to restore a section of stream bank and habitat for the James Spineymussel.
This show originally aired in August 21, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net
On a still, hot morning, I head out of town to visit some friends who are transforming their own corner of heaven in northern Albemarle County. Vickie and Mark Gottlob live in a house they finished building four years along the North Fork of the Rivanna. It sits on a wooded slope of Buffalo Ridge, named for the mammals that once roamed these parts. The Gottlobs are working with Louise Finger of the Virginia Department of Inland Game and Fisheries to help restore habitat in the river for another species rarely seen here: the Jamesriver Spineymussel.
This is my third visit to the site. Before Louise and her team of heavy equipment operators arrived earlier this week, I had come up to visit the river “before” so I could better appreciate the changes “after”. I had donned appropriate river wading gear and dropped down into one of the deeper holes. With cooling water up to my waist, I could see the bank slumping steeply into the stream and showing the signs of instability even an untrained eye could see. The Gottlob’s small floodplain pasture was being eaten away by storm flows and gravity, and all this dirt was settling in the river and clogging the very life out of it. But there were solid gravel bars, mounded here and there with piles of small cobble left by chub and other nest-building species. It had the potential to be good habitat for the spineymussel if it could be stabilized.
The Jamesriver Spineymussel is a rarely seen mollusk in our parts – but its influence has been felt for years
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