Monday, July 25, 2011
Friday, July 8, 2011
Episode 71 (July 11, 2011): "Rappahannock Running Free" by Bob Gramann
Click to listen to episode (2:25)
Please see below (after the transcript and show notes) for links to news and upcoming events.TRANSCRIPT:
From the Cumberland Gap to the Atlantic Ocean, this is Virginia Water Radio for the week of July 11, 2011.
This week we feature a song about one of Virginia’s major rivers and about a major part of that river’s history. Have a listen for about 35 seconds.
You’ve been listening to part of “Rappahannock Running Free,” by Bob Gramann on his 2008 CD, “Mostly Live.” The complete song relates some of the history of human changes to the Rappahannock River, from a short-lived canal system in the 1800s, to construction of Embrey Dam in 1910 for power generation, and finally to the historic breaching of Embrey Dam in 2004. Following Embrey’s removal, the Rappahannock now flows unobstructed for over 180 miles from its Blue Ridge headwaters to the Chesapeake Bay, making it the longest free-flowing river on the East Coast. The years-long effort to open the Rappahannock parallels removals nationwide of over 800 dams—and counting—that are obsolete or unsafe and whose removal enhances aquatic systems or recreation. According to the organization American Rivers, 60 dams in 14 states were removed in 2010, including Riverton Dam on the North Fork Shenandoah River in Warren County, Virginia. Thanks to Mr. Gramann for permission to use this week’s music.
Show notes:
“Rappahannock Running Free,” from the 2008 album, “Mostly
Live,” is copyright by Bob Gramann, used with permission. More information about Bob Gramann is
available online at http://www.bobgramann.com/.
Information on removal of Embrey Dam was taken from A Tale of Two Dams: From Salem Church Dam to
the Embrey Dam, by Hal Wiggins (King George, Va.: Black Cat Press, 2006).
Information on the Rappahannock Rivers was taken from Mr.
Wiggins’ A Tale of Two Dams, from
“The Rappahannock River,” Virginia
Explorer (Summer 1999), Virginia Museum of
Natural History, Martinsville, and from the National Park Service and
Chesapeake Conservancy “Find Your Chesapeake/Rappahannock River Water Trail”
Web site at https://www.findyourchesapeake.com/places/trails/rappahannock-river-water-trail.
Various videos of the breaching of Embrey Dam on February
23, 2004, are available on You Tube at https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Embrey+Dam+removal.
More information on dam removals is available from the
American Rivers, “Dam Removal Database,” online at https://figshare.com/articles/_/5234068;
the University of California Clearinghouse for Dam Removal Information, online
at https://calisphere.org/collections/26143/;
and the U.S. Geological Survey, “National Dam Removal Database,” online at https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/552448fce4b027f0aee3d3d4.
For another musical tribute to the Rappahannock River, have
a listen to an excerpt from “Rappahannock Rapids,” by Morey A. Stanton, in Virginia
Water Radio Episode 89, 11-21-11.
Recent Virginia Water News
For news relevant to Virginia's water resources, please visit the Virginia Water Central News Grouper, available online at http://vawatercentralnewsgrouper.wordpress.com/.
Water Meetings and Other Events
For events related to Virginia's water resources, please visit the Quick Guide to Virginia Water–related Conferences, Workshops, and Other Events, online at http://vwrrc.vt.edu/VAConfQuickGuide.html. The site includes a list of Virginia government policy and regulatory meetings occurring in the coming week.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Episode 70 (July 4, 2011): Diamondback Terrapins and a Terrapin Rap
Click to listen to episode (2:20)
Please see below (after the transcript) for links to news and upcoming events.TRANSCRIPT: From the Cumberland Gap to the Atlantic Ocean, this is Virginia Water Radio for the week of June 20, 2011.
This week we feature a song by Connecticut kids who have a soft spot for a hard-shelled animal that’s well known around the Chesapeake Bay. Have a listen for about 30 seconds.
You’ve been listening to Terrapin Rap #1, by two Stamford, Connecticut, middle-schoolers participating in a project on Diamondback Terrapins. Since 2008, Stamford students have been learning about these turtles and documenting their work through photos, video, and music. Here in Virginia, also, people are interested in Diamondback Terrapins, which range from Massachusetts to Texas and were once abundant in the Chesapeake Bay, but whose populations appear to have been significantly reduced by harvests for food and by accidental capture in crab pots. This summer the Virginia Herpetological Society and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science are using trained volunteers to conduct the Commonwealth’s first-ever statewide Diamondback Terrapin survey around the coastal marshes, bays, and lagoons where these animals live. The survey will fill in gaps in our knowledge of terrapin populations and help focus actions to protect this popular reptile.
Thanks to Jim Forde of Scofield Magnet School in Stamford for permission to use this week's music.
For other water sounds and music, and for more Virginia water information, visit our Web site at virginiawaterradio.org, or call us at (540) 231-5463. From the Virginia Water Resources Research Center in Blacksburg, I’m Alan Raflo, thanking you for listening wishing you health, wisdom, and good water.
Show notes: The Diamondback Terrapin activities by Stamford, Conn., students are documented at http://terrapinkids.blogspot.com/. The source for this episode’s information on Diamondback Terrapins was the Virginia Institute of Marine Science’s Sea Turtles Web site and the Maryland Sea Grant Web site. The 2011 Virginia survey dates and locations were June 11-12 in Northampton County, June 18-19 in Norfolk and Virginia Beach, June 24-25 in Newport News and York County, July 9-10 in Gloucester and Mathews counties, and July 16-17 in Lancaster and Northumberland counties.
Note added 5-26-22: Diamondback Terrapins are the subject of the feature story in the Fall/Winter 2021 issue of Coastal Heritage, from the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium. The magazine is available online at https://www.scseagrant.org/coastal-heritage/.
Note added 5-26-22: Diamondback Terrapins are the subject of the feature story in the Fall/Winter 2021 issue of Coastal Heritage, from the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium. The magazine is available online at https://www.scseagrant.org/coastal-heritage/.
Recent Virginia Water News
For news relevant to Virginia's water resources, please visit the Virginia Water Central News Grouper, available online at http://vawatercentralnewsgrouper.wordpress.com/.
Water Meetings and Other Events
For events related to Virginia's water resources, please visit the Quick Guide to Virginia Water–related Conferences, Workshops, and Other Events, online at http://vwrrc.vt.edu/VAConfQuickGuide.html. The site includes a list of Virginia government policy and regulatory meetings occurring in the coming week.
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