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Stormwater Monitoring Season is Here! 

 

Autumn 2022 starts our second two-year stormwater sampling campaign. This time with a twist: new citizen scientists in three more cities will be monitoring city stormwater outfalls in addition to continuing our work in Anacortes. Oak Harbor, Mukilteo, and Edmonds are now part of the expanded monitoring work that Friends of Skagit Beaches is leading in the North Sound. 

20221008 104425 1000226 1K smThis work is funded by a grant from the National Fish & Wildlife Foundations’ Southern Resident Killer Whale Conservation Program for the purpose of improving habitat, food sources, and conducting research to support recovery of the Southern Resident Orca population within our region. The grant covers the costs for volunteer coordination, recruiting, training, equipping, and managing the data captured by our volunteers.

During the summer of 2022 Friends established a partnership with the Snohomish County Beach Watcher program and the Sound Waters Stewards on Whidbey Island to connect to eager citizen science volunteers in their programs.  We recruited, trained, and equipped volunteers in Oak Harbor, Mukilteo, and Edmonds, as well as new volunteers for Anacortes. All three groups of eager volunteers are ready to get down to the beach and sometimes even in the water (photo left) to sample and take monitoring measurements. 20211115 102742 1022691 1Kpix

This volunteer effort addresses a shortcoming in our federal Clean Water Act: no required periodic monitoring of stormwater outfall pipes. Local towns would have difficulty in financially supporting the manpower and equipment costs for this activity. That’s where Friends of Skagit Beaches and our citizen science volunteers come to the rescue . . .

[Click Here to Read More]

Coastal Processes Shape our Coastline

A Dance of waves and sediments

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Photo by Chris Willis

Shaped by repeated glaciation, the shoreline of the Salish Sea boasts a rocky, irregular profile of steep coastal bluffs, banks, beaches, and spits.

A continual process of erosion and sediment transport shapes this dramatic junction of land and sea: Water moves soil and rocks down coastal slopes toward the shore. There, incessant waves erode vulnerable shorelines, washing soils from bluffs and rivers to replenish adjacent beaches and build spits.

Manmade shoreline modifications—such as unchecked stormwater runoff and improper shoreline armoring—interfere with nature’s erosion-and-deposition balancing act.

Maintaining functioning sediment pathways for shoreline sediments is essential to conserve beaches, fish spawning habitats, wildlife foraging, and coastal wetlands.

Coastal Processes

Our shorelines change - from season to season - and year to year.

Littoral drift

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Illustration courtesy King County, Washington

Waves hit the shoreline at an angle, transporting sediment in a process called littoral drift. Sediments wash away from vulnerable areas—such as bluffs and stream deltas—and accumulate in calmer areas, replenishing beaches and forming marshes, spits, and barrier beaches.

Waves and sediment movement

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Photo by Hugh Shipman

Wind-driven waves and storm surge move beach sediment up and down the shore. Strong winter storm waves create gravelly, steeper beaches; gradual summer waves often result in sandier, broader beaches.

Feeder bluffs

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Photo by Hugh Shipman

Constant wave action gradually erodes beaches and the bases of coastal bluffs. This natural coastal process provides the sediment that renews adjacent shorelines.

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Photo by Hugh Shipman

Can you see it? See the large log on the beach? It's chained to an anchor deep in the sand, part of a natural beach restoration project by the Samish Indian Nation.

In Friends Notes

Autumn 2022 starts our second two-year stormwater sampling campaign. This t...
UPDATE: Grant for Fidalgo Bay and City of Anacortes stormwater monitoring. ...
Compiled by Chris Wood with contributions from Ellen Anderson, Betty Carter...

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