[env-trinity] Fw: River Restoration Website and Shortcourse Update
Tom Stokely
tstokely at trinityalps.net
Thu Apr 26 11:03:00 PDT 2007
----- Original Message -----
From: "Matt Kondolf" <kondolf at berkeley.edu>
To: "Matt Kondolf" <kondolf at berkeley.edu>
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 4:06 AM
Subject: River Restoration Website and Shortcourse Update
>
> We are pleased to announce the launch of a new website hosting
> river-restoration research occurring at UCB and beyond –
>
> restoration.ced.berkeley.edu
>
> The website includes links to:
>
> • current restoration symposiums and conferences,
> • independent research and dissertations related to river restoration,
> • results of the California node’s research in the National River
> Restoration Science Synthesis (NRSSS),
> • recently published papers on restoration science,
> • courses on and off-campus in watershed science and planning, and
> • jobs, grants, and post-doctoral opportunities in the field
>
>
> Some spots are still available for the shortcourse:
> GEOMORPHIC AND ECOLOGICAL FUNDAMENTALS FOR RIVER AND STREAM RESTORATION
>
> August 13-17, 2007
> Sagehen Creek Field Station near Lake Tahoe, California
>
> For more information and registration form:
> restoration.ced.berkeley.edu/shortcourse or
> http://landscape.ced.berkeley.edu/~kondolf/shortcourse/
>
> For questions, please contact restoration_shortcourse at yahoo.com.
>
> This course consists of organized lectures, backed by lecture notes, a
> reference text on measurement and analysis methods in fluvial
> geomorphology, spreadsheets, and other relevant reading, field trips,
> exercises, and discussions. The course includes several field trips to
> rivers and streams in the Lake Tahoe Basin, the nearby Sierra Nevada
> range, and Truckee River with their spectacular mountain scenery, diverse
> fluvial environments, and range of human impacts (and their often very
> visible consequences). The course includes workshops on geomorphic river
> restoration problems faced by participants, who briefly present the
> problem for discussion by instructors and colleagues in a workshop format,
> for discussion and ideas on analytical approaches and resources. The
> overall content of the course will be similar to the successful offerings
> of previous years, with adaptations to the new environment that will be
> updated on the website and in course information as it develops.
>
> Course instructors: Peter Wilcock, Johns Hopkins Univ; Matt Kondolf, Univ.
> California Berkeley; Mary Power, Univ. California Berkeley; Jack Schmidt,
> Utah State Univ,
> Mitch Swanson, Swanson Hydrology/Geomorphology; Scott McBain, McBain &
> Trush;
> Chad Gourley, Otis Bay LLC; Mark Tompkins, CH2M HILL; Shannah Anderson,
> Univ California Berkeley; Matt Kiesse, River Run Consulting; Jim
> Litchfield, Truckee River Foundation; Tom Taylor, ENTRIX, Inc.; Ken Adams,
> Desert Research Institute
>
> The course is ideal for anyone responsible for managing and restoring
> rivers and streams, including those who have previously taken shortcourses
> in the field, as this course offers insights and approaches unlike those
> typically taken in many restoration projects today. Practitioners and
> agency staff responsible for reviewing restoration proposals will benefit
> from the high caliber of instruction and direct link to current research.
> This course is a good choice for those seeking an understanding of
> process-based river restoration in contrast to the form-based projects
> commonly implemented. And this course is unique in offering the
> opportunity to learn from such an extensive and growing data set of
> post-project appraisals of restoration projects, and to learn how to
> conduct effective post-project monitoring. The number of participants is
> limited to 28 to provide opportunities for one-on-one instruction.
>
> Course details
> The course fee of $1,980 includes tuition, continuing education credits
> through UC Riverside Extension, field trip transportation, and course
> materials, including printed copies of lecture notes, CD with PDF files of
> additional papers and spreadsheets, and a copy of the reference work Tools
> in Fluvial Geomorphology. The course fee also includes three meals per day
> for five days, beginning Sunday dinner through Friday lunch, 12-17 August.
>
> LODGING FOR THE COURSE
> Participants can make their own lodging arrangements among a choice of
> hotels in Truckee (about 10 mi south of Sagehen, near Hwy I-80) or can
> take advantage of comfortable, inexpensive accommodations on the beautiful
> grounds of the research station. Lodging at the field station is $20/night
> per person, which entitles you to a bunk bed in a cabin with 6-8 beds, and
> clean, updated bathroom facilities. You can stay in the bunk bed in the
> cabin or pitch your tent outside on the station grounds (and use the bunk
> to store gear if you wish).
>
> OTHER SHORTCOURSES AVAILABLE
> Most of the material presented in the 5-day shortcourse is presented by
> some of the same instructors in two comparable shortcourses, offered in
> Logan, Utah, and Baltimore, Maryland. Like the 5-day Sagehen (Tahoe)
> course, these assume a basic understanding of stream reach
> characterization.
>
> Ecological and Geomorphic Principles of Stream Restoration
> June 4-8, 2007 Cromwell Valley Park, Baltimore
> http://www.palmerlab.umd.edu/
> (please note - website update coming soon)
>
> Principles and Practice of Stream Restoration
> July 16-20, 2007 Utah State University, Logan
> http://uwrl.usu.edu/streamrestoration/
>
> An advanced class is offered in Logan in August.
> Principles and Practice of Stream Restoration, Part II (Design Problem)
> August 20-24, 2007 Utah State University, Logan, UT
> http://uwrl.usu.edu/streamrestoration/
>
> How These Courses Relate
> The 5-day "principles" shortcourses (Ecological and Geomorphic
> Fundamentals, Principles of Stream Restoration, and Geomorphic and
> Ecological Fundamentals) share many of the same instructors, and are
> designed to cover much the same material, although adapted to the specific
> environments in which the courses are offered.
>
> The advanced 4-day course in sediment transport calculations and channel
> design includes a full design problem, including hydraulic and sediment
> transport modeling, site layout, and riparian planting. It is open to
> students who have completed any of the 5-day shortcourses (in MD, UT, or
> CA).
>
>
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