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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Dear Friends

Late-Breaking Fish News

The Economic Localization Movement Arrives in the Eel River Basin

The Untold Story of the Pikeminnow

Sport Fishermen Can Save the Day for the SRA

9th Annual Coho Confab

Getting from “Bleed it and they will come” to “You are Super(wo)man”

Sonoma County Progress and Problems

City Kids and the River:
Making a Difference

Mendocino Water Notes

Global Warming Notes from the Environmental Defense Fund

Fishery Advocates Seek Share of State Oil Revenue Windfall for Restoration

The Right to Water is the Right to Life

End of April 2006 River Trip

Directory of our Supporters

Grateful Thanks to New and Renewing Members

Events 2006

9th Annual Coho Confab

Salmonid Restoration Federation, Trees Foundation, and Salmon Protection and Watershed Network will host the 9th Annual Coho Confab August 25-27, 2006, at Point Reyes National Seashore in Marin County

Salmonid Restoration Federation, Trees Foundation, and Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (SPAWN) will sponsor the 9th annual Coho Confab August 25-27, 2006, at the Clem Miller Education Facility in the beautiful Point Reyes National Seashore, Marin County. The Confab is a hands-on symposium focused on exploring the restoration of our local watersheds and learning techniques to enhance the recovery of critically endangered salmon and steelhead and their habitats.

The Confab brings together community members, landowners, activists, scientists, students, and restoration ecologists for a weekend of innovative skills-building workshops, hands-on tours of restoration projects, community networking, and fun.

Participants will learn an array of cutting-edge restoration techniques, including road decommissioning, biotechnical streambank stabilization, water quality monitoring, native plant propagation, underwater fish identification, and more. A Friday night orientation will highlight local perspectives on salmon restoration in Marin County, Lagunitas Creek and Point Reyes National Seashore. On Saturday evening Tomales Bay Association will host a salmon feast and we will share music and stories.

Workshops include:

• Underwater fish identification in Lagunitas Creek with Eric Ettlinger, who is an Aquatic Ecologist with Marin Municipal Water District.

• Maureen Roche from the Mattole River offers her popular workshop entitled “Tales from a Hidden World,” where participants will have a chance to snorkel and see coho salmon.

• Jim Harrington, aquatic bioassessment pioneer, will teach how macro-invertebrate sampling can be used as a tool for assessing creek health.

• Native plant collection and propagation with Circuit Riders Productions Inc.

• Fish rescue and relocation with SPAWN.

• Brannon Ketchum from Point Reyes National Seashore will lead a tour of the new Giacommini Wetlands restoration project where participants will learn about and assist with invasive species removal.

• The Confab will also include a Bioengineering workshop where participants will have an opportunity to build organic structures with native materials to help stabilize eroding banks led by the local RCD.

• Jim Locke, a local geology professor from Marin College, will teach “Salmon Population Response to Geologic Factors.”

• David Lewis from UC Cooperative Extension will lead a Tomales Bay Watershed Management workshop and sustainable farm tour that addresses water quality priorities and techniques.

• Bird response to riparian restoration with Point Reyes Bird Observatory.

• Tour of SPAWN’s community-based projects in the San Geronimo Valley including their new Raincatchment Design Project at the Lagunitas School, a new bioengineered bank stabilization site and riparian reforestation, a native plant nursery, and new land trust purchase.

To learn more about this year’s Confab, to inquire about scholarship opportunities, or to register for the Confab, please visit www.calsalmon.org or www.treesfoundation.org or call SRF at (707) 923-7501 or Trees Foundation at (707) 923-4377.