Mission Creek


Mission Creek is another small stream mouth with a long history. The old road cut across the mouth of the estuary on a small causeway but in the last couple of years, local groups have worked together to remove the armor and the fill and the creek now flows freely.

AERIAL VIEW

This site is at the south end of Olympia's Priest Point Park and within sight of the Capitol Building and the city's Port Peninsula. There's not much wave energy here on Budd Inlet. The shoreline in the park north of this site consists of a small promontory of Pleistocene gravel that would probably be long gone if the waves were bigger and a salt marsh that has formed without the need for a protective spit.

One the challenges of restoring these small stream mouths - besides the occasional railroad (see previous post) - is their cultural history. These places were probably always important Native American sites. They were low-lying areas with fresh water and easy access to the Sound. And later they were the obvious places for settlers to homestead or to build fishing camps and shingle mills. That means that although restoration may sound good to everyone, it is very difficult to do it without disturbing something of importance to someone.






Related Posts :

  • Deschutes EstuaryI probably should have titled this post "Capitol Lake," just to avoid controversy, but after all, it… Read More...
  • Nisqually DeltaThe Nisqually Delta might have become a deep-water industrial port had it not been for a groundswell… Read More...
  • Nisqually ReachWe took the class back to Tolmie this year. It's a good beach walk - especially on a nice June day.… Read More...
  • Frye CoveI walked in from the gate, since the park was still a couple of hours from opening. An early morning… Read More...
  • North Point The Port of Olympia sits on a promontory of fill at the southern end of Budd Inlet, at the mouth of… Read More...

0 Response to "Mission Creek"

Posting Komentar

wdcfawqafwef