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Old Christmas trees overboard for fish habitat

By JAYNE HANSON
Today's News-Herald
Published Thursday, January 7, 2010 11:19 PM MST

There were about 375 recycled Christmas trees picked clean of tinsel, adorned with a sandbag and tossed into the lake Thursday. The trees are a gift to the native and game fish that populate Lake Havasu — a practical gift.


Jayne Hanson/News-Herald Photo A crew of four take off Thursday morning at Partmer’s Point to head downriver 11 miles south to dump about 45 recycled Christmas trees into Burro Bay.

The trees will be used to create the necessary but constantly dwindling fish habitat under the lake’s surface.

“It makes a really good habitat for fish. Better habitat, better fish,” said six-year program volunteer Coy Aton, of Havasu. Aton worked assembly-line-style alongside one-year program volunteer George Pasos to fill sandbags.

Each tree is weighted with a biodegradable sand bag that will disintegrate over time, leaving a berm behind, according to Bureau of Land Management Project Manager Kirk Koch. Koch oversees the Lake Havasu Fisheries Improvement Project that is headed by BLM and said the program is about 20 years old.

There are seven partner agencies that work together in order for the project to be successful, he said. The participating agencies also include Anglers United of Lake Havasu, Bureau of Reclamation, United States Geological Survey, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Arizona Game and Fish Department and California Fish and Game Department.

Koch said in years past, there were as many as 500 trees donated to the program for the cause.

About four of five loads of trees will be transported by large, flat barge-type boats and dumped in some of the 42 coves off the shores of Lake Havsu that are linked to the project, according to earlier reports.

You may contact the reporter at jhanson@havasunews.com.

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Comments (1 comment(s))

    Captainron wrote on Jan 9, 2010 7:45 AM:

    " Sorry i think this is bad idea. There is so much junk now on the lake bottom i can't see why people think the fish need more. Even fisherman are against this because the lures get caught in the trees and then they have to cut or break the lines. If you went scubba diving in this lake you get tangled in the lines and have to cut your way out. If you think its hard to cut a fishing line with a knife above water try it below, not only that they are almost impossible to see. This article says "constantly dwindling fish habitat under the lake’s surface", how is that possible when they made most of them out of plastic? Another thing what happens when biodegradable sand bag that will disintegrate over time breaks and some of the trees decide to float? I will print a copy of this article so i know who to send the damage bill to for hull and drive repair. "

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