Thanks for posting that. "Restoration" appears to be a very flexible concept. Many of those lopped trees seem to have been cut for no good reason. I remember that spot from 15 years ago, and it will take many floods for Nature to restore itself.
Those trees don't look like they were cut down. They look more like dead wood that was cut into sections and driven into the sediment banks. Probably to slow erosion and allow for new plants to gain footholds in the soil to grow.
@@andrewvavala251 I have been to that spot several times in recent years. There were many healthy trees and of course some older growth. Both appear to have been cut.
Thanks for posting that. "Restoration" appears to be a very flexible concept. Many of those lopped trees seem to have been cut for no good reason. I remember that spot from 15 years ago, and it will take many floods for Nature to restore itself.
Now restoration here! They are building the new bridge over the Elwha for the 101. Past due!
Those trees don't look like they were cut down. They look more like dead wood that was cut into sections and driven into the sediment banks. Probably to slow erosion and allow for new plants to gain footholds in the soil to grow.
@@andrewvavala251 I have been to that spot several times in recent years. There were many healthy trees and of course some older growth. Both appear to have been cut.
This video left out the fact that this is the new bridge for the 101 over the Elwha River.
Go peddle your POV on a street corner in Russia
Its out of focus. Thumbs Down