Posted Sep 11, 2009, 6:23 AM
|
|
Meh
|
|
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Austin <------------> Birmingham?
Posts: 57,337
|
|
River trek 70 years ago recalls a different waterway
Neat story.
Quote:
River trek 70 years ago recalls a different waterway
By Brian Chasnoff - Express-News
Seventy summers ago, a 16-year-old boy named C.P. Autrey climbed into a homemade canoe with a rifle, sparse provisions, a close friend and little else.
Escaping the Great Depression, the boys discovered a world of abundance as they paddled hundreds of miles down the San Antonio River to San Antonio Bay.
The journey brought hazards, including an upset hornets' nest, canoe-smashing rocks and one angry farmer with a shotgun. But Autrey said he and friend Fred Burkett Jr. thrived in clean, clear waters, shooting squirrels along the banks and capturing plenty of catfish.
Today, Autrey, 87, lives alone on the North Side. Years after Burkett's death, he's been thinking a lot about their trek to the coast, not to mention worrying about how the river and bay have changed.
He's not the only one.
This summer, the San Antonio River Authority, together with state agencies, began fieldwork on a four-year study of the river, a process that state lawmakers mandated for all rivers in Texas.
Now scientists are working to determine how much water is needed in the river to support the sort of healthy ecosystem that Autrey conjures in his memory with such bittersweet clarity.
“Oh, God, gorgeous,” he says, reflecting on the more pristine San Antonio River and its coastal estuary of more than half a century ago.
Populations have since swelled, degrading the water system with pollution and pumping. Worsened by the drought, a scarcity of freshwater flowing to the bay system has wreaked havoc on its ecosystem, experts say.
|
Continue reading
__________________
My girlfriend has a dog named Kevin.
|