As many Pagans understand, nature can recover when given the chance. Across the globe, rewilding projects are restoring rivers, forests, wetlands, and wildlife, while efforts in California, Florida, Canada, Italy, and Scotland demonstrate success. Illinois has taken a further step, becoming the first U.S. state to enshrine rewilding into law.

https://wildhunt.org/2026/03/a-wilder-world-global-rewilding-efforts-and-a-landmark-law-in-illinois.html

#pagan #nature #worldrewildingday #conservation #rewilding #illinois #klamathriver #picayunestrand

A Wilder World: Global Rewilding Efforts and a Landmark Law in Illinois

As many Pagans understand, nature can recover when given the chance. Across the globe, rewilding projects are restoring rivers, forests, wetlands, and wildlife, while efforts in California, Florida, Canada, Italy, and Scotland demonstrate success. Illinois has taken a further step, becoming the first U.S. state to enshrine rewilding into law.

The Wild Hunt

Mill pond. Klamath River beyond. Log rafts and log chute to the mill. Keno, Klamath County, Oregon. General caption number 61

#KlamathRiver #KlamathCounty #Oregon #DorotheaLange #undefined #photography #DorotheaLange

https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2017773352/

"Indigenous teen Keeya Wiki kayaked the entire Klamath River. It’s just the beginning"

gift link = https://www.oregonlive.com/native-american-news/2026/02/indigenous-teen-keeya-wiki-kayaked-the-entire-klamath-river-its-just-the-beginning.html?gift=7bb68a3d-aaea-4970-9170-7d85368602c2

"Ashland High School student Keeya Wiki kayaked 310 miles on the Klamath River last summer ...

The historic first descent of the newly undammed Klamath River by Indigenous teens captured the world’s attention and launched Keeya into the spotlight."

#Oregon #California #KlamathRiver #Outdoors #Kayaking #Indigenous

Indigenous teen Keeya Wiki kayaked the entire Klamath River. It’s just the beginning

Keeya Wiki, 17, of Ashland paddled the newly undammed Klamath from Oregon to the Pacific, becoming one of the youth voices advocating for the environment.

oregonlive
A #River Restoration in #Oregon Gets Fast Results: The #Salmon Swam Right Back
The #fish had been missing from the headwaters of the #KlamathRiver for more than a century. Just a year after the removal of a final #dam, they’ve returned.
Oregon #wildlife officials said the fish had made it past a key milestone, a long lake, and had reached the tributary streams that make up the river’s headwaters.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/29/climate/klamath-salmon-recovery.html
https://archive.ph/CiNVg
A River Restoration in Oregon Gets Fast Results: The Salmon Swam Right Back

The fish had been missing from the headwaters of the Klamath River for more than a century. Just a year after the removal of a final dam, they’ve returned.

The New York Times

‘Salmon Everywhere’ One Year After Klamath Dam Removal

“There are salmon everywhere on the landscape right now”

by The Source Staff November 25, 2025

"A little more than a year after the historic removal of four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River, California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) scientists are seeing salmon reoccupying just about every corner of their historic habitat.

" 'The speed at which salmon are repopulating every nook and cranny of suitable habitat upstream of the dams in the Klamath Basin is both remarkable and thrilling,' said Michael Harris, Environmental Program Manager of CDFW’s Klamath Watershed Program. 'There are salmon everywhere on the landscape right now, and it’s invigorating our work.'

"While adult returns of salmon are ongoing and final estimates won’t be available until January, initial reports indicate a stronger fall-run Chinook salmon return than last year with widespread dispersal of the fish. Recent signs of salmon recovery throughout the Klamath Basin include:

- The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and Klamath Tribes report seeing widespread salmon spawning within the Oregon portion of the Klamath River, including within multiple tributaries upstream of Klamath Lake where salmon haven’t been seen in more than century.

- Fish-counting stations on newly accessible tributaries within the former reservoir footprints in California have recorded 208 adult Chinook salmon in Jenny Creek and 260 adult Chinook salmon in Shovel Creek to date. While multiple state and federal agencies,Tribes and non-governmental organizations are monitoring salmon throughout the Klamath Basin, CDFW is particularly focused on monitoring these newly accessible tributaries. CDFW field crews are surveying regularly for salmon nests and adult fish.

- CDFW snorkel crews this summer documented juvenile salmon and/or steelhead occupying nearly all of the newly accessible tributaries in the reservoir footprints. In Fall Creek, one of the newly accessible tributaries upstream of the former Iron Gate Dam location, approximately 65,000 wild juvenile Chinook salmon were counted.

- CDFW’s Fall Creek Fish Hatchery, a $35 million state-of-the-art facility in its second year of operation, began spawning returning fall-run Chinook salmon in mid-October. To date, the hatchery has spawned 416 female fish and collected roughly 1.27 million eggs – four times the number of salmon spawned this time last year. More than 1,200 Chinook salmon have entered the hatchery so far.

- Temperature monitoring in 2024 and 2025 along the mainstem Klamath River following the removal of the four dams reveals the return of natural, seasonal fluctuations of water temperatures benefiting salmon. Post-dam removal water temperatures are cooling sooner in the fall when adult fall-run Chinook salmon are returning and need that cool water most followed by warming temperatures in the spring when juvenile salmon are rearing and out-migrating to the ocean.

- Scientists are seeing a lower prevalence of Ceratonova shasta – or C. shasta – a parasite that plagued juvenile salmon prior to dam removal. Harmful algal blooms in the Klamath River are smaller now and less frequent since dam removal.

A primary goal of Klamath River dam removal was the reestablishment of viable, wild, self-sustaining populations of salmon and other anadromous fish species for conservation, for their ecological benefits, and to enhance Tribal, commercial and recreational fisheries."

Read more:
https://www.bendsource.com/business/businessnews/salmon-everywhere-one-year-after-klamath-dam-removal/

#KlamathRiver #KarukNation #KlamathDamRemoval #KlamathRiverRestoration #Salmon #YurokNation #KlamathRiverTribes #DamRemoval #KlamathRiverBasin #Rewilding #Restoration #Nature #SolarPunkSunday

‘Salmon Everywhere’ One Year After Klamath Dam Removal

A little more than a year after the historic removal of four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River, California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) scientists are seeing salmon reoccupying just about every corner of their historic habitat. “The speed at which salmon are repopulating every nook and cranny of suitable habitat upstream of the […]

The Source - Bend, Oregon

From June, 2025... #California’s #YurokTribe gets back ancestral lands that were taken over 120 years ago

By Associated Press
PUBLISHED: June 5, 2025 at 9:34 AM PDT

ON THE KLAMATH RIVER, Calif. (AP) — "As a youngster, Barry McCovey Jr. would sneak through metal gates and hide from security guards just to catch a steelhead trout in #BlueCreek amid northwestern California redwoods.

"Since time immemorial, his ancestors from the Yurok Tribe had fished, hunted and gathered in this watershed flanked by coastal forests. But for more than 100 years, these lands were owned and managed by #TimberCompanies, severing the tribe’s access to its homelands.

"When McCovey started working as a fisheries technician, the company would let him go there to do his job.

" 'Snorkeling Blue Creek … I felt the significance of that place to myself and to our people, and I knew then that we had to do whatever we could to try and get that back,' McCovey said.

"After a 23-year effort and $56 million, that became reality.

"Roughly 73 square miles (189 square kilometers) of homelands have been returned to the Yurok, more than doubling the tribe’s land holdings, according to a deal announced Thursday. Completion of the land-back conservation deal along the lower #KlamathRiver — a partnership with #WesternRiversConservancy and other #EnvironmentalGroups — is being called the largest in California history.

"The Yurok Tribe had 90% of its territory taken during the #CaliforniaGoldRush in the mid-1800s, suffering massacres and disease from settlers.

" 'To go from when I was a kid and 20 years ago even, from being afraid to go out there to having it be back in tribal hands … is incredible,' said McCovey, director of the Yurok Tribal Fisheries Department."

Read more / listen:
https://www.pressdemocrat.com/2025/06/05/californias-yurok-tribe-gets-back-ancestral-lands-that-were-taken-over-120-years-ago/

#NativeAmericans #LandBack #YurokNation #IndigenousNews #KlamathRiver #KlamathRiverRestoration #TraditionalFoods #WaterIsLife #IndigenousFoodways #Genocide #SettlerColonialism #AncestralLands

California’s Yurok Tribe gets back ancestral lands that were taken over 120 years ago

ON THE KLAMATH RIVER, Calif. (AP) — As a youngster, Barry McCovey Jr. would sneak through metal gates and hide from security guards just to catch a steelhead trout in Blue Creek amid northwes…

The Press Democrat

#GatherTheFilm - "Gather is an intimate portrait of the growing movement amongst #NativeAmericans to reclaim their spiritual, political and cultural identities through #FoodSovereignty, while battling the trauma of centuries of genocide.

"Gather follows #NephiCraig, a chef from the #WhiteMountainApacheNation (#Arizona), opening an #IndigenousCafé as a nutritional recovery clinic; Elsie Dubray, a young scientist from the #CheyenneRiverSiouxNation (#SouthDakota), conducting landmark studies on #bison; and the #AncestralGuard, a group of #EnvironmentalActivists from the #YurokNation (Northern #California), trying to save the #KlamathRiver.

Gather is coming to Netflix in the US on November 1, 2021! Gather is now available to stream on iTunes (US/UK/Canada), Amazon (US/UK) and Vimeo-on-Demand (rest of the world)."

FMI (includes preview):
https://gather.film/

#AnimalProducts #SolarPunkSunday
#TraditionalFoods #Bison #Salmon #CulturalSurvival #EnvironmentalActivism #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth #SiouxNation #ApacheNation

Home | Gather Film

Gather documents the growing movement among Native Americans to reclaim their spiritual, political and cultural identities through food sovereignty.

Gather Film
@andrewabernathy OPB film "First Descent" has the authentic voices of young people. They learned to paddle whitewater! #DamRemoval #KlamathRiver
Mayor Mamadani names Lina Khan to transition team and indigenous youth kayak down the Klamath River for the first time in a century.
#goodnews #KlamathRiver #LinaKhan
https://w ww.levernews.com/you-love-to-see-it-an-antimonopolist-takes-manhattan/
Salmon are back in the Klamath River. Now farmers want to keep them off their land

Salmon are once again making their way up the Klamath River following a massive dam removal project. But some are now worried about keeping the fish off agricultural land.

JPR - Jefferson Public Radio (KSOR)