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well i hate to say it....but i am going to anyways...I TOLD YA SO !!....fish spawning up above dams now....chinook rocking it now....only will get better and better....look at water quality...nice....spawn baby spawn....!!!



 
TOLD YA SO AGAIN....fish are past all 4 dams now...fish up creeks spawning and more fish in river above dams ready to enter creeks....SPAWN BABY SPAWN....this is only the beginning of something beautiful !


 
OVER 100 SALMON SPAWNING NOW....with some steelhead....


 
told ya....10 days after dams finished 290 salmon and steelhead were counted in 24 hour period passing by sonar counter....now its been a few weeks and 100's of fish are spawning above the dams......this is going to return to best fisheries in very short time...spawn baby spawn !!


https://www.instagram.com/shaneandersonfilm/reel/DB2DG6SPZnJ/
 
...trying o get link from gram to show...more software glitches i guess....dont make sense you can see other links above just fine...or i can...then bam...wont show....copy and pasted text from post above link and video.

he Klamath River was once the third-largest salmon river in the United States, but over the last century, salmon populations have declined by more than 90%. The construction of dams severely impacted salmon stocks, extirpating them from half of the river’s basin. The reservoirs led to toxic algae blooms in summer and fall, with some years reporting levels over 4,000 times the World Health Organization’s safety limits. Warmer water released during salmon migration also contributed to disease outbreaks that caused significant mortality among adult salmon and steelhead. Furthermore, the dams trapped sediment, enabling the spread of Ceratonova shasta disease, which decimated juvenile salmon each spring.

For over a century, these dams have been the main barrier to the recovery of wild salmon and steelhead, with climate change worsening the effects.

The Indigenous-led campaign to un-dam the Klamath took about 25 years, and the deconstruction of all four dams was completed in roughly 18 months. Remarkably, just three days after the removal was finalized, salmon began swimming past the former dam sites. Within ten days, sonar detected 290 salmon and steelhead moving upstream in a single day, and soon after, they were observed spawning in Oregon for the first time in a century.

In the weeks that followed, hundreds of chinook were documented spawning in all the tributaries and mainstem river along the 50-mile hydro reach. As reports of salmon continuing to enter the ocean emerge, it’s likely that these numbers will grow into the thousands. These returning salmon are remarkably healthy, vibrant, and disease-free—clear indicators of improved river conditions following the removal of the dams and a testament to the resilience of nature. Our feature documentary Undamming Klamath will debut in 2026.​

 
Pronghorn herds dying by the dozen on eastern Colorado roads after snowstorm

tribune news service via msn

www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/pronghorn-herds-dying-by-the-dozen-on-eastern-colorado-roads-after-snowstorm/ar-AA1tY5jx?ocid=mailsignout


Pronghorn are being hit by drivers in droves as they seek refuge from snow-covered fields, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials. The southeast state wildlife office said more than 100 of the animals had been killed on roads this week and the northeast office said 52 had been killed Tuesday morning alone.

The wildlife office for northeastern Colorado said all 52 pronghorn were killed at once. Mass killings can happen when a herd is hit while bunched together on the road after snow, officials said.

Drivers need to slow down and watch for pronghorn standing or sleeping in the road, especially at night, state wildlife officials said.
 
Pronghorn herds dying by the dozen on eastern Colorado roads after snowstorm

tribune news service via msn

www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/pronghorn-herds-dying-by-the-dozen-on-eastern-colorado-roads-after-snowstorm/ar-AA1tY5jx?ocid=mailsignout

Pronghorn are being hit by drivers in droves as they seek refuge from snow-covered fields, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials. The southeast state wildlife office said more than 100 of the animals had been killed on roads this week and the northeast office said 52 had been killed Tuesday morning alone.

The wildlife office for northeastern Colorado said all 52 pronghorn were killed at once. Mass killings can happen when a herd is hit while bunched together on the road after snow, officials said.

Drivers need to slow down and watch for pronghorn standing or sleeping in the road, especially at night, state wildlife officials said.
It does happen when there is blowing snow. There were nine vehicles involved in an accident in North Dakota many years ago with a group of pronghorn crossing a busy highway in the Bakken Basin while there was blowing snow, impacting visibility for both pronghorn and drivers. I don't know how many pronghorn were involved.

There was a record set in Colorado as far as snow fall from that storm last week. https://www.cpr.org/2024/11/11/colorado-snowfall-set-records-around-the-state-this-weekend/
"Though the season has just begun, Denver received approximately 20 inches of snow last week. And if another solid storm comes through before December, it could make history.

“So if the month ended right now — which obviously it isn't — but right now the 20 inches we have on the month, that would actually be the 10th snowiest November in Denver's history,” said Zach Hiris, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. “To get to the top two or three, we’ve got to get about eight or nine more inches of snow.”

Southeast Denver received an unusually large amount of snow compared to other areas along the Front Range. And according to Hiris, this was simply due to “the way the winds worked out.”

Further south, snowfall records for the date were broken in both Pueblo and Colorado Springs.

On Friday, Nov. 8, both cities received record breaking amounts of snowfall. Pueblo received almost 5 inches of snow — breaking the previous daily record set in 1890. Similarly in Colorado Springs, the southern Colorado city received 8 inches of snow breaking the previous record of 2.6 inches set in 1975.

To the west, the mountains are also off to a snowy start, giving the state’s early snowpack a boost. Front Range cities and agriculture all depend on a deep snowpack.

“Across the state, we're doing pretty darn good for the most part. We're running above average to well above average to start,” Hiris said of the snowpack in the various mountain basins — particularly those south of I-70. “But obviously it's a long ways to go until we get to the peak of the snowpack season.”

At the height of the storm, more than 75,300 people lost power across the state, most of them in the Denver metro area. As of noon Monday, more than 1,000 homes in metro Denver are without power, according to Xcel’s power outage map, but according to Michelle Aguayo, a spokesperson for the utility, none of these outages are related to the storm.

“Everybody whose power was impacted by the storm has been restored,” Aguayo told CPR News."
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I stayed inside during the storm and honestly couldn't tell that it was that bad. I have flagstone walks and they tend to heat up and melt snow faster than cement walkways. A neighbor did shovel for me, as often happens in our area, snow angels take care of other's walkways. I've participated in that myself.

Once we were driving in North Dakota. Daughter was behind the wheel and we had driven from Colorado that day. It was dark and there was blowing snow, making it difficult to see, but we were close to our destination. A deer hit the car. The damage was not bad, but it could have been. I just needed to replace the front passenger side panel on the car. It was bent and it was tricky to get the door open until that panel was replaced.

I don't know about other places, but deer can also be a big problem for drivers. Truck drivers and others know that night time driving is worse. I had a deer hit a rental car one time driving from Crater Lake in Oregon. It's the only accident that I have had with an animal when I was driving.
 
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