Join the LV Greenways Partnership on September 12, 2024, for a Bushkill Stream Restoration Tour with Wildlands Conservancy.
This tour will highlight the impacts of dam removal on the Bushkill Stream, as well as insights gained from monitoring efforts conducted by Lafayette College.
Tour the Bushkill Stream on September 12 to learn about the restoration efforts led by Wildlands Conservancy along this critical waterway.
9am: Meet at Dam 2
9:15am: Walk to Dam 1 (from Dam 2)
9:30am: Water Quality Insights presented at Dam 1 by Megan Rothenberger, Ph.D. Professor of Environmental Science and Studies, Lafayette College
9:45am: Walk back to Dam 2 / Drive to Dam 3
10am: Meet at Dam 3
10:20am drive to Binney and Smith Site
10:30am: Meet at Binney and Smith Dam Site
11am: Program End
*Times Approximate
About
The Bushkill Creek begins at the foot of Blue Mountain in Bushkill Township and flows approximately 16 miles south to its confluence with the Delaware River, surrounded primarily by agricultural and suburban areas before entering the City of Easton. It is a high quality coldwater fishery that supports large populations of wild brown trout. However, stressors from land-use practices, urban development, and stormwater have severely degraded this section over the past 15 years, limiting its recreation value for the community, as well as suitability for native fish and wildlife habitat.
To address the stream’s widening, channelization and shallowness, along with the negative impacts of impacts of erosion and siltation that are impacting habitat and recreation, Wildlands and partners are regrading and stabilizing the streambank, planting and expanding riparian buffers, strips of native trees and shrubs that root the soil and filter runoff before it enters the waterway, and installing in-stream structures to restore fish habitat.
The removal of dams in a three-mile stretch in Easton, is meant to break up aquatic barriers first installed in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, that harnessed water to power Easton’s mills.
Questions? Contact Brit Kondravy, LV Greenways Co-Lead at conservation@delawareandlehigh.org, (484) 215-6227