Where the Water Once Flowed -- A Review
A REVIEW OF “MYRIAD UNNAMED STREAMS”
During all the recent record rains, some of the analysts, while wringing their hands, tell us that most of the rain that’s falling just flows to the ocean. And though we generally think of Los Angeles as a land that gets all its water afar, such wasn’t always the case.
Once, the entire Northeast L.A. – though described as “coastal desert plain,” was a land where streams and rivers flowed, and where water could be readily obtained. The story of why so much water now goes to the ocean is not a simple story, but to get a full understanding, it’s helpful to turn back the clock 150 years or so, and look at the water stories of the Northeast.
“Myriad Unnamed Streams” is a series of historical vignettes by local environmentalist Jane Tsong to show where the water once flowed throughout the Northeast. You can read them
at: http://www.watercalifornia.org/projects/janetsong.html.
Tsong explains what happened to the free-flowing water, as the decades rolled by. The totality of her research makes us look again at our familiar landscape, and realize that lots of water once flowed through the region.
Tsong is an artist who took an interest in the waters of Los Angeles after her family first moved to West Los Angeles in 1997. They hear rumors of a freshwater spring by the high school sports field next door. When she visited the site, she was mystified by how the water flowed naturally through a well-groomed miniature landscape,” before unceremoniously disappearing into a drainage grating.” She later learned that this was the historically significant Kuruvungna Springs, since been revived by the Tongva people.
She moved to Highland Park in 2003, and discovered many of the stories of local springs, and past streams, that were found all over the Northeast. Tsong was surprised. After all, weren’t we told that this is a desert, and that all our water came from afar?
Finding that most of these springs and seeps and streams were never named, and largely unknown today (if they still exist), she began to research these. Along with standard research, she interviewed many people from 2006 through 20098, receiving answers and guidance from Eric Warren and Jessica Hall. Eventually, she catalogued her information on a web site media book, called Water, CA, and presented it as a tour that one could actually take by bicycle. At the very least, pull out a large map now, click on to her website, and re-discover some of the hidden water history of the Northeast.
Her tour begins with the intersection of Figueroa Street and the westbound onramp for the 134, once the site of Eagle Rock Creek, now mostly cement. In the 1880s, visitors could have walked in the stream, and found wild roses, blackberries, and tiger lilies, like so many of the mountain streams. With the purchase of much of Eagle Rock Canyon by Henry Huntington, the development swallowed this up so that most residents are barely aware that a stream still flows along the entrance to the Scholl Canyon dump, and is mostly underground near the iconic “eagle rock.”
Back in the 1880s, the Eagle Rock Creek continued to flow roughly in the proximity of Lanark Street and turned west toward Yosemite Drive. This temporary stream flowed eventually along Yosemite, causing flooding until the 1930s when the large underground drainage pipe was installed.
Springs and creeks flowed from the Verdugo Mountains to the north, irrigating many early orchards and providing water for local residents. These were gradually sealed over, cemented shut, or routed into underground pipes.
Today, at least 75% of the area’s potable water comes from one of three aqueducts – two bringing water from Northern California and one bringing water from the Colorado River. And an increased population using ever-more water has resulted in lowering water tables. Additionally, in these modern times, with small yards and no way to process one’s own water, water from baths and dishes and household use no longer goes into the land, to soak into the water table, but rather simply flows into the sewers and out to the oceans.
There are many little solutions to our growing need for water, and they can be implemented by individuals and cities. But it’s important to see how the growth of the population of Northeast L.A., and the many choices that were made all along the way, are responsible for our water landscape being largely invisible today, and for so much of the water which unceremoniously flows out to the ocean.
I strongly encourage you to check out Tsong’s web site, and then actually travel from site to site to experience the not-that-distant past water history of our Northeast area.
[Nyerges is the author of "How to Survive Anywhere," "Self-Sufficient Home," "Extreme Simplicity," and other books. He can be reached at www.SchoolofSelf-Reliance.com.]
Source: http://christophernyerges.blogspot.com/2019/04/where-water-once-flowed-review.html
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pasadena is the only local water user-gets its water from eaton canyon and uses settling ponds to store water underground–not on the LA water system-my ex father in law was inyo county adminstrator for 33 years–he fought LADWP many times in court to keep them from taking every drop of water from inyo,mono countys where socal gets most of its water,not northern cal but eastern central cal–inyo county argued in court that LA does not use local water enough–the LA river sends a monster amount to the ocean each year–they could have ponds and store,pump it later but dont, like pasadena does-finally inyo,mono counties won some court cases LADWP started to work with the counties to preserve water–been a long hard fight-san berndino and las vegas were settled by the mormons in the 1800s because they had huge springs that still exist but some years barely-the mormons wanted a trade route but then called everybody back to slc to fight the goooovermint–it was all about water in the west and the owens valley water wars were part of that–some day a earthquake will take out LA and they wont need the water anymore….