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2011 July | The Mono-logue - Part 2

Archive for July, 2011

Patagonia volunteers help restore Old Marina

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 by Julia, Mono Lake Intern

On Thursday, July 14, a group of employees from Patagonia’s Reno outlet visited us in the Mono Basin. In the morning we treated our visitors to a canoe tour on the lake. The weather was beautiful and we saw hundreds of gulls and phalaropes and trillions of brine shrimp.

Patagonia visitors enjoying a morning paddle on the lake.

In the afternoon we headed down to Old Marina, where the Patagonia team put in an hour’s work pulling invasive (more…)

Mono Lake gets rave reviews

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 by Elin, Communications Coordinator


Anyone who has been to Mono Lake knows it: this place is unique, breathtaking, inspiring, and worth fighting for. In the last few days visitors to Mono Lake have posted a few reviews online that corroborate that opinion!

Canoe tours are one of the very best ways to experience Mono Lake. Weekend Sherpa, an outdoor lifestyle publication, published a trip report from one of our canoe tours.

And California-based photographer Matt Ludin published a post on his website that sums up how we feel about Mono Lake too. Check out his beautiful shots of the lakeshore.

Thank you!

Any early-bird paddlers out there?

Sunday, July 17th, 2011 by Sarah, Mono Lake Intern

Canoeing Mono Lake is an incredible way to see the lake, whether it’s for the first time or the twentieth. Even for those who have done walking tours at the lake, being out on the water allows you to see everything from an up-close-and-personal point of view.


We offer one-hour, naturalist-guided canoe tours on Saturdays and Sundays at 8:00, 9:30, and 11:00am. Aside from learning (more…)

The Mono Lake Committee gets trees

Thursday, July 14th, 2011 by Elin, Communications Coordinator

Trees are going up all over Lee Vining in a long-awaited, much-anticipated project to improve the atmosphere around town.


The young red maples will provide a welcoming feel along sidewalks, encouraging visitors to linger in the shade. The Mono Lake Committee’s three trees arrived this morning! (more…)

Book signing with author David Gilligan

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011 by Elin, Communications Coordinator

Join the Mono Lake Committee tomorrow evening, Thursday, July 14 to meet author David Gilligan. The book signing will kick off at 5:00pm in the Information Center & Bookstore in Lee Vining, and we’ll have light refreshments for everyone to enjoy. You can purchase your copies of Rise of the Ranges of Light and The Secret Sierra here at the bookstore, and have David sign them right away!

Mono Lake is rising fast!

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011 by Greg, Information & Restoration Specialist

As of late last week, Mono Lake’s elevation was 6383.48 feet above sea level. It has risen 1.2 feet since April 1st, and 2 feet since its winter low point in December. It rose 0.3 feet just in the last week!

Mono Lake has risen 8.6 feet since the September 1994 State Water Resources Control Board decision ordering the lake to rise to 6392 feet above sea level.

Mono Lake has risen 8.6 feet since the September 1994 State Water Resources Control Board decision ordering the lake to rise to 6392 feet above sea level.

The 0.7-foot rise in June was the largest rise during a single calendar month since June 2006 and before that July 1995, and then three times in 1983: February, June, and December.

Mono Lake is now the highest it has been since September 2007. That year it dropped two feet during the second-driest year on record.

Mono Lake Tufa State Natural Reserve staff and volunteers are moving signs and boardwalk sections out of the way as the shoreline moves uphill. It is about a foot-and-a-half away from 6385.1, the high point it reached in 2006 and 1999 and the highest levels since 1972.

Lee Vining Creek Trail washes out

Friday, July 8th, 2011 by Greg, Information & Restoration Specialist

Lee Vining Creek continued to flow Thursday at exceptional levels following a July 5th peak at 535 cubic feet per second (cfs), resulting in a ten-foot section of the Lee Vining Creek Trail being washed out. It is on a steep hillside with a big drop from the trail to the creek. There is a short but steep detour above the washed out section.

(more…)

Mill Creek experiencing record flows

Thursday, July 7th, 2011 by Sarah, Mono Lake Intern

Mill Creek, Mono Lake’s third largest tributary stream, is literally running wild! Currently in the midst of its second-highest peak since 1986, the amount of water running down this channel is more than jaw-dropping. At Lundy Lake Reservoir, the water gushing over the dam spillway travels under the road through a culvert to meet the creek on the other side. Currently, this culvert is in danger of being washed out completely due to the incredible amount of water spilling over the dam. If the culvert were to wash out, it could (more…)

Restoration Wednesdays

Thursday, July 7th, 2011 by Mila, Mono Lake Intern
A group of volunteers armed with buckets braved the heat this past Wednesday to water young Jeffrey pine saplings along Lee Vining Creek. With only a 50% survival rate, these small trees need all the help they can get!

Volunteers fill buckets with water from Lee Vining Creek in preparation for watering young trees. Photo by Mila Re.

This event was part of ongoing stream restoration efforts that include the removal of invasive plants and the watering of native Jeffrey pines along the fragile streams that flow into Mono Lake. Last summer volunteer work parties succeeded in removing over (more…)

Extraordinary runoff from a large, late snowpack

Friday, July 1st, 2011 by Greg, Information & Restoration Specialist

Last week, Lee Vining Creek peaked on Thursday night, June 23, at approximately 536 cubic feet per second (cfs), according to preliminary data from the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (DWP). Southern California Edison is releasing additional water from Saddlebag Lake Reservoir and almost theĀ  entire natural flow from Tioga Lake Reservoir, which resulted in a very high peak flow on Lee Vining Creek. This peak flow was about the same as last year’s average daily peak flow, which had only been exceeded (more…)

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