The Haw River Assembly's annual cleanup will be held Saturday, March 16, 2019.

Depending on the number of CCC boaters who sign up for the cleanup, we'll collect trash on the Upper, Middle and Lower sections in Chatham County. If you want to coordinate a cleanup trip, contact Bob Brueckner at rjbrueckner@gmail.com.

We'll have bags, gloves and trash grabbers for everyone.

The cleanup is designed for all paddlers regardless of skill level. Bring your canoes, kayaks and energy!

I'm coordinating three cleanup trips in February and March on the Haw River. This is a great opportunity to support one of the most popular rivers in the Triangle.

The trips are being done in conjunction with the Haw River Assembly's annual cleanup in March.

So far, Carolina Canoe Club members have collected 29 bags of trash for this effort. Unfortunately, there is still plenty of trash  on the river.

CCC member Larry Ausley reported recently that the dock at the Robeson Creek access on Jordan Lake has been damaged by recent high water levels.

I left an email and phone messge for the range who is evaluating the damage. He's in training this week, so I may not hear from him unitl next week.

I'll report back to the club when I learn more.

By Bob Brueckner

CCC Conservation Chair

Don't forget to thank those club members who collect trash at the Bynum access area on the Haw. And don't forget Steve Bruno, who lines up volunteers every January.

These are the volunteers who helped in 2015: Nancy Guthrie, Larry Ausley, Bobby Simpson, Jan Bolen, Dave Adcock, Wes Dodson and Bob Brueckner.

If you'd like to help contact Steve Bruno at stevebruno@earthlink.net.

By Bob Brueckner

CCC Conservation Chair

Larry Ausley seems to enjoy filling his canoe up with trash.

Thanks to Larry, there were 1,000 fewer bottles floating around rivers and streams in 2015. It's something he has done for the last five years. 

On a day that Larry cut two trees out of eddies on the Lower Haw, he topped his eddy-clearing efforts by collecting more bottles on the way to the take out. 

Click here to see a photo of Larry's bottle-filled boat: bit.ly/1IZvkc6

By Bob Brueckner

Let us give special thanks to CCC member Maurice Blackburn  who served as the club's representative during the Catawba-Wateree relicensing negotiations with Duke Energy and many, many stakeholders. This required years of effort. 

The 40-year license went into effect Nov. 1, 2015 and will expire in 2055, although Duke wants the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to make this a 50-year license.

The access on Old Greensboro Highway, which will be called the Union Bridge Paddle Access, is in the final stages of construction before being open to the public, according to Haw River Trail coordinator Guil Johnson.

The staircase and sign installation will be done in January.

This access will complete the Alamance County portion of the Haw River Paddle Trail.

There are seven public access areas for paddlers from Alamance County to Jordan Lake in Chatham County.

Alamance Parks has received an $84,000 grant from the NC Recreational Trails Program to develop Saxapahaw Island Park on the Haw River Trail. The grant will support construction of the park's trails and trailhead, as well as the surrounding Haw River Trail/Mountains-to-Sea Trail.

The county has scheduled a waterfront design session in January.

An access on the island could be used as a take-out for the slalom section upstream in the tailrace of the Saxapahaw Dam or as a put-in for a section of the the Haw that ends at Old Greensboro Highway.

Where else can you find a weed whacker, hula hoop, 18 paddling buddies and a river bank made of old cars? Try the Tuckasegee River in Bryson City.

Eighteen canoeists and kayakers descended on the Town Tuck section of the river and removed 650 pounds of trash June 30 during Week of Rivers. The trash included glass liquor bottles, an umbrella, fishing net, soggy carpets (complete with growing plants), plenty of beer cans, a seat cushion and tarps.