
today
8:30 a.m. Audubon Society Field Trip See Event Description
read >9 a.m. Arcata Farmers' Market Arcata Plaza
read >9:30 a.m. Discovery Walk: Unknown Waterfront See Event Description
read >9:30 a.m. Manila Dunes Restoration Manila Community Center
read >10 a.m. Manila Dunes Guided Walk Manila Community Center
read >10 a.m. Library Book Sale Humboldt County Library
read >10 a.m. Dia de los Muertos and Mexican Folk Art Sale Private Eureka home
read >10 a.m. Final Arcata Farmer's Market Arcata Farmers' Market (off the plaza)
read >11 a.m. Donlin Foreman Dance Workshop Dell'Arte
read >2 p.m. Humboldt Coastal Nature Center Draft Trails Plan Walk Stamps House
read >5 p.m. Bati Zado and Show Redwood Raks World Dance Studio
read >6 p.m. The Tumbleweeds Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Ali Chaudhary (jazz duo) Libation
read >6:30 p.m. Not Evil, Just Wrong Humboldt Area Foundation
read >7 p.m. Guitar Stan (country) Old Town Coffee & Chocolates
read >8 p.m. Guitar Orchestra of Barcelona Arkley Center for the Performing Arts
read >8 p.m. Stones in His Pockets Arcata Playhouse
read >8 p.m. A Christmas Carol North Coast Repertory Theater
read >8 p.m. Donna Landry Swing Dance Moose Lodge
read >8 p.m. North Coast Wind Ensemble Fulkerson Recital Hall at HSU
read >8:30 p.m. The Last Minute Men (international) Cafe Mokka
read >9 p.m. Ian McFeron Band (folk rock) Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. The Michael Paul Band WAVE @ blue lake casino
read >9 p.m. The Generatorz (classic rock) Central Station Cocktail Lounge
read >9 p.m. Taxi Bear River Casino
read >9 p.m. VJ Itchie Fingaz Pearl Lounge
read >9 p.m. Jack Ruby Presents + Blue Street + Acufunkture (DIY rock) Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. 2nd Annual Scorpio Bash The Red Fox Tavern
read >10 p.m. Music by DJ Sidelines
read >10 p.m. DJ Icy Hot Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >10 p.m. Jemimah Puddleduck (rock) Humboldt Brews
read >10 p.m. White Manna + Midday Veil + The King Salmon Duo (rock) Jambalaya
read >11 p.m. Radio Moscow (psychadelic blues) + Mosquito Bandito (one-man surf/garage) The Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
April 16, 2009
Gravity 101
I happened to walk into the middle of a conversation ...
read >April 9, 2009
Lactose-tolerance: Evolution in Action
Next time you're standing in front of the dairy section ...
read >April 2, 2009
Hummie, Monster of the Bay
I was about to send off this week's column (an ...
read >Photos
The Mad River Canal
By Barry Evans
A few weeks ago in this column, I mentioned that, contrary to local lore, the Mad River Slough was never an outlet for the Mad River. The Mad has always flowed west into the Pacific, not south via the slough into Humboldt Bay. However, from 1855 to 1888, the Mad River and Humboldt Bay were joined, artificially, by a canal which allowed early European settlers to float old-growth redwoods from the Mad River to the newly built sawmills on Humboldt Bay, for transport by ship to San Francisco and beyond.
Ten years after it was dug, a canal is shown on the "Official Township Map" of Humboldt County -- you can make out "CANAL 710 YDS." on the original (outlined in white). Note also where the Mad River is shown entering the Pacific, over a mile south from its present mouth. (It varies depending on the season and the intensity of winter storms). The mouth of the Mad originally delineated the southern border of Klamath County, which extended to the Oregon border from 1851 to 1874. The white area at the top of the map indicates the north and south boundaries of Humboldt and Klamath counties respectively.
The photograph shows the boom built across the Mad River to divert logs from their westerly course to a southerly route into the canal and bay. It was rebuilt many times. The same winter high-flow conditions which allowed the huge redwood trunks to float down the river also caused the massive logs to regularly pound the boom into smithereens.
There was another problem: the canal carried silt from freshly logged areas on the Mad River into the bay. According to Ray Raphael and Freeman House's fascinating (and often tragic) local history Two Peoples, One Place, * "from 1881 to 1930, the Arcata channel had to be dredged to eliminate the sediment that had flowed into the bay from logging operations on the Mad River ... Concern over the impact of logging on the flow of water, so controversial to this day, has historical roots dating back more than a century." Two years after an article dissing the canal had appeared in the Arcata Union in 1886 ("that cursed canal ... is a nuisance, and has been for the past 30 years"), the Harbor Commission ordered the canal closed.
Next time you visit the Mad River County Park, note the line of willows and the ditch which takes off to the left a quarter mile west of the Hammond Trail bridge (adjacent to a private driveway), and spare a thought for the old-timers who believed they could tame nature. They were wrong.
Writing Humboldt History Project, January 2007
Barry Evans (barryevans9@yahoo.com) regularly paddles his kayak up and down the Mad River Slough. He lives in Old Town Eureka.
CAPTIONS
Humboldt County Official Township Map, courtesy Derek Hayes' Historical Atlas of California
Boom across the Mad River about 1880. Humboldt Historical Society




















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