Day

May 26, 2023
American Avocet on managed, former salt ponds in the South Bay. Photo: Roopak Bhatt, USGS
26
May

One-of-a-Kind Stories

Our magazine’s media motto for many years has been “Where there’s an estuary, there’s a crowd.” The San Francisco Estuary is a place where people, wildlife, and commerce congregate, and where watersheds, rivers and the ocean meet and mix, creating a place of unusual diversity. In choosing to tell the Story of the Estuary in just nine major topics and a few browsing categories, so many unique stories from our archives have been missed. Like tales about the region’s various research vessels that collect data on conditions in the water or trawl for fish of management concern. Or the stories bringing to life the experiences of people swimming or fishing or boating on the water, or walking the trails and...
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dam spillway oroville
26
May

Supplying Water

Ever since the state and federal water projects were built in the 1930s and 1940s, California has captured snowmelt in foothill reservoirs, and moved the fresh water from dam releases and river outflows to parched parts of the state via aqueducts hundreds of miles long. A convoluted system of ancient water rights and newer mandates governs who gets what water and how much. An equally complex infrastructure – including gates, pumps, screens, curtains and barriers – is deployed to deliver the fresh water to farms, cities, and industries, sometimes far from headwater sources. The state’s infamous war over water continues, whether it’s over fish versus farms, a peripheral canal or twin tunnels, or the perception that flows out to the...
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