Belgrade Lakes Association
Belgrades Lakes, Maine
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To protect and improve the watershed of Great Pond and Long Pond through preservation, education and action |
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Join today!
Help us preserve water quality, protect the watershed and ensure future generations can enjoy the lakes as we all do now.
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The Belgrade Lakes Association in celebration of its Centennial year has commissioned a limited edition map "A View of the Belgrade Lakes (as seen by a fish in the talons of an osprey)" by renowned artist and calligrapher Pier Gustafson of Boston. Pier's extraordinary and often whimsical work has graced collections across the country including The Museum of Fine Arts, Minneapolis ...
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Camp Roads Impact On Water Quality
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Pollution from storm-water runoff and soil erosion is one of the most
significant contributors to the decline of water quality in our lakes. Soil
erosion is the single largest pollutant (by volume) to our surface waters, and
up to 85% of all erosion and sedimentation problems in lake watersheds originate
from improper construction and maintenance of camp roads. Proper camp road
construction and maintenance is one of the biggest contributions you can make to
the quality of your lake's waters.
Camp roads affect our lakes and streams by changing the natural storm-water
drainage patterns. Most of these changes increase the potential for soil
erosion. These changes include:
- stripping away the protective vegetative cover
- creating a pathway that erodes and exposes soils in the watershed
- collecting drainage in ditches, which increases the overall volume and
speed of surface water runoff
The most obvious effect of erosion is the brown color that results from
suspended soil particles in the water. Less obvious is the fact that these
suspended solids irritate the gills of fish, making them prone to disease. Soil
particles can smother spawning and feeding grounds a well. Other effects
include:
- gradual filling and the resulting loss of desirable shoreline (due to
encroaching weeds, for instance)
- obnoxious algae blooms, which result from excess phosphorus in the
suspended soil particles flushed into the lake
- depleted levels of dissolved oxygen resulting in fewer cold-water fish
(i.e. salmon and trout)
- diminished recreational and aesthetic values of the lake due to the
decline in water quality
- decreased property values resulting from poor water quality
Although there is no single cause for all camp road problems, poor management
of surface or groundwater is the most common cause. These problems include:
- washouts
- tire rutting
- potholes
- soil erosion
Many camp roads were not properly constructed and are not properly maintained
or both. As a result the surface and groundwater is not properly diverted away
from the road and the road is not withstanding the wear and tear of the erosion
and traffic. Poor identification of the cause of a particular problem requires
a careful evaluation of conditions specific to your road. If the cause is
different,what works for one road, may not necessarily work for another!
This information was taken from the "Camp Road Maintenance Manual... A Guide
for Landowners, which is a publication of the Kennebec County Soil and Water
Conservation District and the Department Of Environmental Protection Bureau of
Land & Water Quality. For additional information on camp road maintenance visit
their web-sites at www.kcswcd.org and
informe.org
for the camp road manual.
LakeSmart Program
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Links
Camp Roads
What is a Buffer?
Return to Water Quality
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