Blog
The Story of the Salmon Pole
Posted by webbie in Other on June 7, 2021The Salmon Pole started as an idea of an archway across the entrance of the Horsefly Spawning Channel in 2015. Because of the high cost of engineering the new idea of a Salmon Pole was born in 2019.
Chainsaw carver Ken Sheen from Quesnel put our ideas onto the cedar pole and the result is now standing by the entrance of the spawning channel.
The pole symbolizes the special salmon habitat we have here in Horsefly, to honor and bring awareness out to the public of the importance regarding spawning salmon habitat and our watershed.
The Salmon Pole shows the important life cycle and connection Salmon have to our eco system.
The Horsefly River Roundtable would like to thank Imperial Metal Corp, West Fraser Mills, West Fraser Trucking Association and Gibralter Mines for their generous financial donations.
Thank you to United Concrete & Gravel, Williams Lake for the donation and delivery of the concrete.
Thank you to
- Artist Ken Sheen, Equipment operators
- Hugh Barrett – Horsefly, base construction excavation
- Pat Aldridge -Bedrock Gravel Horsefly, pole erection
- Blair Erickson – Horsefly, Rock Solid fabrication/welding, knife blades
Horsefly River Salmon Festival 2015
Posted by webbie in Salmon Festival on August 9, 2015Mark your calendars for the last weekend in September (Saturday, Sept 26 and Sunday, Sept. 27) for the annual Horsefly River Salmon Festival! Events include, but are not limited to:
• DFO information booths and fish dissection
• Gyotaku (Japanese fish painting)
• Riparian trail guided tours
• Fishy arts and crafts for kids and fun, educational activities
• Yummy bannock!
• Local river interpreters answering questions
AND MORE!
Horsefly River Roundtable Statement Mount Polley Mine Tailings Dam Failure
Posted by webbie in Other on August 6, 2014Horsefly River Roundtable Statement
Mount Polley Mine Tailings Dam Failure
The Horsefly River Roundtable is deeply disturbed and concerned by the Mount Polley Mine tailings pond breach and subsequent downstream impacts that occurred in the early hours of Monday, August 4, 2014 near Likely BC.
Our hearts go out to all community members now struggling to come to terms with this event and its aftermath. We are also extremely concerned about the impacts on the downstream ecosystem, including the sockeye salmon headed for Quesnel Lake and the Horsefly River watershed. The forecast for the return of sockeye salmon in the Quesnel system is 845,000 to 2.95 million.
The Quesnel Watershed, of which the Horsefly River is part, includes all of the creeks, rivers and lakes directly impacted by the failure of the dam and supports at least seven species of fish including rainbow trout, Dolly Varden char, sockeye salmon, chinook salmon, coho salmon, and mountain whitefish. While the Horsefly River itself is upstream from the devastation the river is a critical part of the sockeye salmon run which passes through the Fraser River, Quesnel River and through Quesnel Lake itself before reaching the mouth of the Horsefly on their return to spawn. Quesnel Lake also is a nursery for the Horsefly sockeye fingerlings that spend a year in the lake after hatching in the river, before beginning their journey to the Pacific Ocean.
We will be watching this issue closely in the coming days and week.
All use of the watershed must be done with utmost care and commitment to maintaining its health for all life. Our hope is that real lessons about the necessity of stringent and vigilant inspection of mines and other industrial sites are learned and actions taken to fix problems before there are failings.
For the most current information on the situation, residents are reminded to contact the Cariboo Regional District Emergency Operations Centre:
Website: http://www.cariboord.bc.ca
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CRDEmergencyOperations
Telephone: 1-800-665-1636
Sincerely, Horsefly River Roundtable
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