The day's agenda was made possible by a Grant from the Nature Fund that is managed by the Tahoe Truckee Community Foundation. Before we continue with our report we want to thank both organizations for their dedicated involvement and environmental support of Lake Tahoe and for giving us this opportunity to share what is happening underwater around the lake.
To begin, the culmination of this days 4 dives and some 7 hours on the lake is most aptly shown in this photo collage:
This photo collage shows all three Nature Fund sponsored stations in the Northern Tahoe area. Set and ready for data collection. |
In July, NMDE submitted a Grant proposal as mentioned to the Tahoe Truckee Community Foundation for the Nature Fund. In late August we were notified that we were successful and in September we received our Grant Funds. We immediately went to work; winter is coming and we wanted these stations in place. This Grant focused upon Sand Harbor, Tahoe City (New) and Hurricane Bay. In order to accomplish this task, we had three new depth/temperature board constructed, purchased the digital depth/temperature sensors, built the underwater containers for the digital sensors...well, a picture is better:
This is the compliment of "stuff" we had to make for this weekends diving - enough said! |
The three Onset digital sensors and the Shuttle that launches them from the PC. |
Not very high-tech but workable and "affordable" for a Non-Profit organization |
OLD |
NEW |
Stop two was just up the road and into Tahoe City where Tahoe used to flow into the Truckee River - it presently does not as the lake is easily 2 feet below its natural rim of 6223 feet above sea level and down almost 8 feet from its high water mark of 6229 feet above sea level last seen on 28 June 2006. Here we will establish a completely new Project Baseline: Lake Tahoe monitoring station. As we approached the area we thought we would place the new station, we were astounded as the depth was only 4 feet. We then traveled due east (090) for about 3/4 of a mile where we got to a depth of about 20 feet and decided this is where we would place the station. We really wanted the station to be closer to Commons Beach so that divers from the shore could visit and monitor but it simply was too shallow. We again assembled all our station materials and lowered them over the side, geared up and entered.
Once on the bottom, boy were we in for a workout! The bottom here was rock, all rock! Just driving the auger into the bottom took 30 minutes, half our remaining gas, and at that, we were only able to drive the 48" auger about 16" into this bottom:
The "milky" cloud came after about 8 inches in depth to a new layer of probably clay. |
Today's benchmark readings for Tahoe City were 17 feet of depth with about 30 feet of visibility at a temperature of 64F.
Next stop was up to Carnelian Bay where we were going to remove all our existing station equipment. The reason we established Carnelian Bay in 2012 was because there was a 25 foot long concrete fish placed there in the early 2000's. This made a great dive feature and we put a line along the bottom leading out to it so divers could easily visit this site and help us record and monitor the changes in the lakes depth, temperature and visibility. Well...I guess those that placed it there, decided that they no longer wanted the potential attention our station was bringing to it and I guess the potential negative impacts they might incur should there be an illegal dumping investigation so they replaced it. They did not remove it from the lake however, as we saw the drag marks along the bottom they left when they moved it to deeper water. We have not found its new location yet but we will - unless they put it in water deeper than 300 feet. But for fun, here is a now "historical" photo of the Carnelian Bay Fish:
Fish located by divers in 2003 and removed in 2014 - too bad, it was a fun dive. |
Once at Sand Harbor, its depth/temperature board already removed (we wanted to maintain consistency of analog gauges at this site - Hurricane Bay's was broken and Tahoe City...new) we simply dropped down, put in the new board and gauges along with the instruction placard (which we hope will increase participation by the sport diving community),cleaned the visibility markers and our dive day was complete. Surfaced, exited, geared down and relaxed while having some lunch and beverages. A truly great day. We had to navigate some rough water from the Whittell Mansion south to Cave Rock but managed to get off the lake by 3 without incident.
Summary for this day: 4 dives, 3.5 hours of runtime on the NMDE research boat, 3 stations completely established and upgraded ready for monitoring and recording and 18 man hours of volunteer time added to our log. What a great day!
We are presently in the process of applying for two more Grants as we still have 5 more stations to upgrade and or install - upgrades at Bliss (yes we just installed but did not have the funding for the digital sensor) and Glenbrook and then new stations at Camp Richardson, Tahoe Keys (that should be informative) and Nevada Beach. Presently we are trying to raise another $650 to purchase two more sensors so we can do Glenbrook and Bliss before winter. We welcome donations, they are completely IRS tax deductible [NMDE tax ID - 88-0481587] so if the opportunity presents itself, please let us know - nmde@att.net.
In closing, as one of the 5 remaining Founding members of NMDE, I want to thank my most relied upon member, Marc B. for having always been there in support of our expeditions and research. Without him, this weekend would not have been possible. Thank You Marc!
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Some additional photos, Enjoy...
The instructional placard on all stations |
Heading back to Cave Rock |
Marc supervising my work at Hurricane Bay - The Alley Cat below him |
A beautiful Fall Tahoe Day |
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