Lake Naticook Milfoil Update

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Lake Naticook Milfoil Update Park & Rec: June 19, 2013 Town Council: June 29, 2013

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Lake Naticook Milfoil Update. Park & Rec : June 19, 2013 Town Council: June 29, 2013. Variable Milfoil. The Threat to Lake Usage. File photo: Milfoil with seed pods, being chopped and dispersed. Grows an inch a day to 6-8 feet tall. Grows under ice. Survives winter exposure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Lake Naticook Milfoil Update

Page 1: Lake Naticook Milfoil Update

Lake Naticook Milfoil Update

Park & Rec: June 19, 2013Town Council: June 29, 2013

Page 2: Lake Naticook Milfoil Update

Variable Milfoil

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The Threat to Lake Usage

File photo: Milfoil with seed pods, being chopped and dispersed.Grows an inch a day to 6-8 feet tall. Grows under ice. Survives winter exposure.Spreads by fragments introduced by boats/trailers, or floating fragments

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Lake Naticook 2012 History• Discovered July 2, 2012• State Survey July 9 showed 5 acres of milfoil

• Sept 22 survey showed 20 acres of milfoil• Oct 11: Town Council authorizes P&R to close

the town boat ramp to slow the disturbance & spread of milfoil until successful eradication.

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July 9, 20125 Acres

Sept 17, 201220 Acres

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Treatment June 4, 2013• 24 acres Treated with

Renovate Max G Herbicide

• Initial survey shows improvement but not total eradication

• Hand harvesting by State divers planned as practical

• Fall chemical treatment may be needed

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Funding Implications

• First year of treatment is funded by NH DES– Three diver trips in 2012– 25 acre treatment June 2013– 2-3 diver trips in 2013– Fall treatment if necessary

• Follow-on treatments subject to grant funding of up to 50%

Approx $20K to date

Successful treatment help mitigate future local costs

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Treatment Challenges• Significant use of Veterans Park boat ramp from ice-

out to June 3 caused lots of milfoil fragments to disperse around the lake– One resident pulled 20 floating fragments on a Sunday

afternoon and probably missed many more• Usage included:– Canoe/kayak activity– Carry-in motor boat activity– Swimming– Dogs swimming to retrieve balls in the milfoil area

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Treatment Positives• Excellent coordination with State DES, YMCA, and

treatment contractor to coordinate:– As late as possible treatment (for best effectiveness)– 2 weeks before Camp Sargent opens for swimming– Delay of Camp Sargent Triathlon from June 2 to June 23

• Large resident turnout for milfoil education & weed watcher training.– Lake is divided into 7 zones with 14 groups of people

volunteering to monitor, mark and report milfoil.

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This is an ongoing process

Source: Long Term Variable Milfoil Management Plan forLake Naticook, NH Dept. of Environmental Services February 2013

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2013 Path Forward• Maintain vigilance– Lake Naticook Conservation Association members are

trained and working to identify remaining milfoil– NH DES validates finding and schedules treatment

• Maintain preventative measures– Keep boat launch closed to motor boats until the NH

DES milfoil survey documents eradication in the area of the boat launch

– Improve communication at boat launch with signage if closure is maintained

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Longer Term

• Apply for grant for 2014 treatment if needed– Up to 50% available from NH DES

• Budget matching funds for 2014 treatment• Consider NH Lakes Association Lake Host

Grants– Funds available for P&R or Town to staff a lake host

at the boat ramp to inspect & educate boaters

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Interesting boat ramp usage observations

• On an average spring two day weekend:– 15 transient motor boats (2012 observation) – 15 transient non-motor boats (canoes, kayaks,

sailboats)– 18 long distance swimmers– 20 people & 4 dogs at the water’s edge

Truly a town / regional resource that gets used and enjoyed