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Our Mission


The mission of the Au Sable Big Water Preservation Association is to conserve and watch over the reach of river from Mio Dam to Alcona Pond and support the best interests of the entire Au Sable River system.


The Dam Page
We are a proud member of the Au Sable River Watershed Restoration Committee (ARWRC). Visit them at:
www.ausablerestoration.org









What you
can do:

The Headwaters Chapter, Michigan Council of Trout Unlimited, and TU-National are in very close contact with the DNR/DEQ folks and supporting their investigation.  We are committed to ensuring this never occurs again.

The Headwaters Chapter have many options which we are reviewing, all of which take money. If you wish to make a contribution to help protect the Pigeon River, we would greatly appreciate you financial support.

Please make your contribution payable and mail to:

Headwaters Chapter
PO Box 1873
Gaylord, NI 49734

If you wish to get more information about this catastrophic event, Google: Gaylord, Pigeon river, Fish Kill.

Huron Pines Dam Summit Was A Success - Read More About It Here SUMMIT

Consumers Agrees to Changes at Foote Dam! Eric Sharp's Articles in the FREEP

Thank you to all the people
and groups that attended the meeting
on the 10th of February in Oscoda.

State Files Lawsuit in
Song-of-the-Morning
Ranch Fiasco

 Dam Failure on Pigeon River Kills Hundreds of Trout - A Grim Reminder
of What Could Happen Below Mio

A discharge from a private dam on the Pigeon River near Vanderbilt was responsible for a potentially significant fish kill downstream, Department of Natural Resources fisheries officials said today.  The discharge, which began Sunday night, flushed sediment from above the dam that is located on the property of Song of the Morning Ranch near Sturgeon Valley Road in Otsego County.  The fish were killed either by the sediment or thermal shock, said DNR fisheries biologist Dave Borgeson.

Fish of numerous species, including brown trout up to 19 inches, were found dead, Borgeson said. Electro-fishing by DNR personnel failed to produce enough live fish to make a population assessment in the water for about two miles downstream from the dam.

"We will be going farther downstream Thursday (6/26) to see how far the fish kill extends,* Borgeson said. *During our initial sampling we are not finding the numbers of trout we knew were there prior to the incident. These populations fluctuate, but they are never this low."

Borgeson added there's a stretch of the river that is almost devoid of trout.

A major fish kill involving the same dam occurred in July 1984, when tons of silt swept down the river after the dam gates were opened for repairs.

Since that time, repeated requests by the DNR that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission regulate the dam have been denied by the federal agency.

Officials from the Department of Environmental Quality's dam safety division also are investigating the incident.

The DNR is committed to the conservation, protection, management, use and enjoyment of the state's natural resources for current and future generations.

(Press Release from Michigan's Department of Natural Resources.)

More on the Pigeon River Dam Pigeon_River_Fish_Kill  or go to:

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080626/SPORTS10/806260394/1058

http://www.record-eagle.com/forums/local_story_187094126.html?keyword=topstory

http://www.record-eagle.com/opinion/local_story_199100233.htm