Healthy Hayden Creek
About the May 3rd Healthy Hayden Creek Initiative – Information and Registration
Volunteers are needed on Saturday, May 3rd, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. for a day of activities aimed at restoring a patch of land that has negatively impacted water quality in Hayden Creek. Volunteers will plant, stake and protect up to 250 Larch seedlings. Families are invited to participate in related educational activities for children. All participants will be treated to refreshments provided by the Watershed Association. To register, click here.
The event, titled “Healthy Hayden Creek,” marks the culmination of a year-long collaboration between the Hayden Lake Watershed Association (HLWA), the Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District (HLWID), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and the Idaho Dept of Environmental Quality (IDEQ).
The collaboration will result in the recycling rather than the disposal of the large cedar float-logs – full of bolts and nails from abandoned docks - that become navigational hazards across Hayden Lake each year. Traditionally, the HLWID removes and disposes of the logs as part of their annual debris removal program. For the first time, these float logs will be repurposed in a reclamation project. They will serve as protective barriers against erosion and vehicular damage for the seedlings planted during the May 3rd Healthy Hayden Creek event.
The event is the brainchild of Geoff Harvey, the President Emeritus of the Hayden Lake Watershed Association, and Lake Manager Todd Walker. They envisioned the unique recycling program as a pilot project that other lakes and waterways could adopt. The two approached the DEQ to secure a Clean Water Act Section 319 Grant to help defray the costs of excavation, soil preparation and log placement. The grant was approved in Fall 2024.
Hydrologist Chris Robinson worked on behalf of the third collaborator, the United States Forest Service. Robinson worked with the Hayden Lake Watershed Association to obtain necessary permits and identify the planting area. The district management at USFS recognized the importance of Hayden Creek for the lake’s overall health and joined the project to help mitigate the effects of both soil erosion and sedimentation. The seedlings for the planting event were sourced from the USFS’s Coeur d’Alene Nursery.
“We’re hoping this event becomes a pilot program that will work with the forest service to help re-vegetate and reclaim areas that flow into waterways, both here and elsewhere in the forest and across the county,” says Harvey. “This is an opportunity to engage with our community – our friends and neighbors, kids and adults - to enhance the quality of water flowing into Hayden Lake and to learn why this work is so important to the environment we all share.”
The planting event will take place at the confluence of Ohio Match Rd. and FSR 437. It is recommended that volunteers go north on Rimrock Rd. to Ohio Match Rd. and turn east (right). Access via FSR 437 is discouraged due to adverse road conditions.
Volunteers are urged to wear sturdy shoes, work gloves, insect repellent, and sunscreen, and bring a reusable water bottle and a flat-blade spade if they have one. It’s important to register so that we can provide the planting tools and refreshments needed.
“We are so pleased to bring so many partners together for the health of the watershed,” says Harvey. “We all benefit from a healthy Hayden Lake.”
