1 00:00:00,600 --> 00:00:01,350 Hello. 2 00:00:01,350 --> 00:00:04,000 It's Joe Wheaton, and, we're going 3 00:00:04,000 --> 00:00:07,100 to start in on this design module. 4 00:00:07,100 --> 00:00:09,700 Just getting off on the right foot. 5 00:00:09,700 --> 00:00:11,450 And that is, 6 00:00:11,450 --> 00:00:13,200 taking out of the planning phase, 7 00:00:13,610 --> 00:00:15,060 what we learned, 8 00:00:15,060 --> 00:00:16,585 and leading the design 9 00:00:16,585 --> 00:00:18,110 with recovery potential 10 00:00:18,110 --> 00:00:20,000 from that. 11 00:00:20,900 --> 00:00:22,600 So we're here 12 00:00:22,600 --> 00:00:25,600 in module four talking about design. 13 00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:27,400 In the restoration process, 14 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:29,000 we spent module three 15 00:00:29,000 --> 00:00:30,600 working through the planning. 16 00:00:30,800 --> 00:00:33,300 Okay, and it's easy 17 00:00:33,300 --> 00:00:36,100 To just kind of jump in and, like, you know. 18 00:00:36,100 --> 00:00:37,730 You know, we're eager. Let's just 19 00:00:37,730 --> 00:00:38,950 Let's get a design. 20 00:00:38,950 --> 00:00:41,600 Let's, let's make some structures. 21 00:00:41,600 --> 00:00:43,950 I'm just going to try and convince you of this, 22 00:00:43,950 --> 00:00:46,300 never to start a design without that. 23 00:00:46,300 --> 00:00:49,300 Critical context from the planning phase. 24 00:00:49,800 --> 00:00:52,400 Well, what context explicitly 25 00:00:52,400 --> 00:00:55,400 are we talking about? 26 00:00:56,000 --> 00:00:58,200 Well, we're talking about 27 00:00:58,200 --> 00:00:59,700 getting the conditions 28 00:00:59,700 --> 00:01:01,200 and the recovery potential. 29 00:01:01,200 --> 00:01:03,400 And remember that in the design phase, 30 00:01:04,400 --> 00:01:06,900 our alternatives, our design opportunities 31 00:01:06,900 --> 00:01:08,650 is really defined by the gap 32 00:01:08,650 --> 00:01:10,770 between condition and recovery potential. 33 00:01:10,770 --> 00:01:12,870 And, you know, we've got to make 34 00:01:12,880 --> 00:01:13,930 this judgment call 35 00:01:13,930 --> 00:01:15,300 on how many treatments will. 36 00:01:15,300 --> 00:01:17,700 It take to get to that recovery. Potential. 37 00:01:17,700 --> 00:01:20,500 And then if you and once you get there, 38 00:01:20,550 --> 00:01:22,060 what's it going to take for it 39 00:01:22,190 --> 00:01:23,540 to become self-sustaining? 40 00:01:23,900 --> 00:01:25,500 Okay. 41 00:01:25,500 --> 00:01:28,000 Oh, that's interesting. 42 00:01:28,000 --> 00:01:31,000 not what I wanted. 43 00:01:34,900 --> 00:01:37,900 Okay. 44 00:01:40,300 --> 00:01:44,750 So coming right in, reminding yourself. 45 00:01:45,560 --> 00:01:46,910 Riverscapes principles, 46 00:01:46,910 --> 00:01:48,500 reminding ourselves that streams. 47 00:01:48,500 --> 00:01:49,800 Need space. 48 00:01:49,800 --> 00:01:51,650 We're not going to start our design 49 00:01:51,650 --> 00:01:53,500 without the valley bottom mapped. 50 00:01:53,700 --> 00:01:56,700 Okay. 51 00:01:57,300 --> 00:01:59,360 It's always important to remind yourself 52 00:01:59,360 --> 00:02:01,410 that definition of a valley bottom 53 00:02:01,430 --> 00:02:03,480 and a riverscape valley bottom. 54 00:02:03,900 --> 00:02:06,200 Is the area, 55 00:02:06,200 --> 00:02:09,200 of the landscape that could plausibly flood, 56 00:02:09,900 --> 00:02:12,500 By the rivers and streams in the natural, 57 00:02:13,500 --> 00:02:15,600 contemporary flow regime. 58 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:18,020 The riverscape is just those valley bottoms 59 00:02:18,020 --> 00:02:20,600 throughout the entire drainage network. 60 00:02:20,800 --> 00:02:23,100 Okay. 61 00:02:23,100 --> 00:02:24,600 So this is, this is our. 62 00:02:24,600 --> 00:02:26,300 Our sort of mantra. 63 00:02:26,300 --> 00:02:29,600 So let's go back to what you guys did yesterday. 64 00:02:30,800 --> 00:02:35,570 In module three, you mapped the active channels, you mapped the fans. 65 00:02:35,570 --> 00:02:37,900 You did that to kind of back into what. 66 00:02:37,900 --> 00:02:39,300 The valley bottom was, right? 67 00:02:39,300 --> 00:02:41,000 The rest of the space. 68 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:43,500 And so you mapped these valley bottom margins, 69 00:02:43,500 --> 00:02:45,800 you mapped those fans 70 00:02:45,800 --> 00:02:48,400 so, you knew what protruded out into the valley, 71 00:02:48,400 --> 00:02:49,800 and you mapped the channel. 72 00:02:49,800 --> 00:02:51,500 So you get the confining margin. 73 00:02:51,500 --> 00:02:54,500 Look at the position, on the valley floor. 74 00:02:55,500 --> 00:02:57,000 So the green area. 75 00:02:57,000 --> 00:02:58,500 Is roughly what you derived. Okay. 76 00:02:58,500 --> 00:03:00,800 That's your valley bottom area that could plausibly flood 77 00:03:00,800 --> 00:03:03,300 in the contemporary natural flow regime. 78 00:03:04,500 --> 00:03:05,900 Your design opportunity. 79 00:03:05,900 --> 00:03:06,700 As we said. 80 00:03:06,700 --> 00:03:09,600 Is defined by this gap between condition recovery potential. 81 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:10,400 And so. 82 00:03:10,400 --> 00:03:13,400 What we talked about is, 83 00:03:13,500 --> 00:03:14,500 both Weber and I 84 00:03:14,500 --> 00:03:17,500 talked about this, is to get 85 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:22,700 at least one expression of condition, one indicator of condition. 86 00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:27,400 We're going to split the valley bottom that we have here in yellow into, 87 00:03:28,400 --> 00:03:31,800 these different, components, but they're actually tier one 88 00:03:31,800 --> 00:03:34,800 geomorphic units in the fluvial taxonomy. 89 00:03:35,080 --> 00:03:39,500 So basically, active floodplain, active channel, inactive floodplain. 90 00:03:39,600 --> 00:03:42,600 Okay, so. 91 00:03:45,800 --> 00:03:47,600 we could do this for this whole thing. 92 00:03:47,600 --> 00:03:49,500 But, at this scale, 93 00:03:49,500 --> 00:03:52,500 it's kind of hard to see, so 94 00:03:52,800 --> 00:03:54,100 we're going to zoom in. 95 00:03:54,100 --> 00:03:56,400 We're gonna zoom in here, 96 00:03:56,400 --> 00:03:56,900 and we're going to. 97 00:03:56,900 --> 00:03:59,900 Take you to Pops. 98 00:03:59,900 --> 00:04:01,000 Pops's ranch. 99 00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:03,300 Okay. 100 00:04:03,300 --> 00:04:05,400 So just a reminder, we said 101 00:04:05,400 --> 00:04:09,300 condition can be expressed by mapping the inactive portion of floodplains. 102 00:04:09,300 --> 00:04:11,900 And we have this example here okay. 103 00:04:11,900 --> 00:04:16,800 And so, I've faked, hypothetical property boundaries. 104 00:04:17,300 --> 00:04:21,000 You know, it's kind of looking at, some fence lines and some other stuff. 105 00:04:21,000 --> 00:04:22,200 So there you go. 106 00:04:22,200 --> 00:04:23,500 There's pops's ranch. 107 00:04:23,500 --> 00:04:26,300 Okay, here's pops's house. 108 00:04:26,300 --> 00:04:27,700 There's his barn. 109 00:04:27,700 --> 00:04:31,300 It's got a nice corral down here, some outbuildings, etc.. 110 00:04:33,500 --> 00:04:35,700 And so what I've done is I've gone and just, 111 00:04:35,700 --> 00:04:36,800 you know, because. 112 00:04:36,800 --> 00:04:39,400 I've zoomed in, I can do a little nicer job. 113 00:04:39,400 --> 00:04:41,700 First thing I did was I mapped. 114 00:04:41,700 --> 00:04:43,800 The valley bottom. 115 00:04:43,800 --> 00:04:46,580 I stopped it right here, right at the property line. 116 00:04:47,400 --> 00:04:50,900 And it goes all along, and notice 117 00:04:50,900 --> 00:04:53,100 here how I don't have the valley bottom. 118 00:04:53,100 --> 00:04:55,700 Fall Creek mapped, but the valley bottom, just. 119 00:04:55,700 --> 00:04:57,000 The valley bottom of Coburn Creek, 120 00:04:57,000 --> 00:05:00,200 And so this part that comes out, I think some of you know what this. 121 00:05:00,200 --> 00:05:04,760 Is, it's really low angle, so it might be. A little deceiving. 122 00:05:05,100 --> 00:05:07,100 But this is the fan. 123 00:05:07,100 --> 00:05:09,400 It's the fan of Coburn Creek okay. 124 00:05:09,400 --> 00:05:13,100 Now it doesn't matter that this isn't really active fan right. 125 00:05:13,100 --> 00:05:16,500 Necessarily like active in the sense that this building could still 126 00:05:16,500 --> 00:05:18,200 Be kind of flooding a little bit. 127 00:05:18,200 --> 00:05:20,800 But this is what we're dealing with. Okay. 128 00:05:22,430 --> 00:05:23,630 So this polygon 129 00:05:25,570 --> 00:05:27,380 is 146 acres 130 00:05:27,380 --> 00:05:30,630 and, if you want to go zoom around the map, you can, 131 00:05:31,400 --> 00:05:33,700 This is 82 acres. 132 00:05:33,900 --> 00:05:34,800 So this this link. 133 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:37,900 Is going to take you to this map and these games that I played. 134 00:05:37,900 --> 00:05:42,000 So 82 acres, Of Coburn Creek, Valley bottom. 135 00:05:42,000 --> 00:05:44,130 That's kind of what we're dealing with. 136 00:05:44,130 --> 00:05:47,000 That's going to be, our basis for. 137 00:05:47,000 --> 00:05:50,000 Normalization of everything that we report. 138 00:05:50,250 --> 00:05:51,950 Zoomed in here, you can see that 139 00:05:51,950 --> 00:05:54,050 there is an area that's grazed. 140 00:05:54,050 --> 00:05:57,096 There's also a bunch of little relic channels and stuff in here. 141 00:05:57,096 --> 00:06:00,000 Not a relic, but like high stage channels, I should say. 142 00:06:00,000 --> 00:06:03,900 There's actually some beaver dams, on the floodplain here. 143 00:06:04,200 --> 00:06:08,160 Oddly, over here against the toe of this slope, too. 144 00:06:08,700 --> 00:06:11,700 And there's evidence of run out. 145 00:06:11,700 --> 00:06:15,800 If you zoom in, you will notice that there is a canal. 146 00:06:15,800 --> 00:06:20,100 And that canal comes along here. And, I don't know if these are 147 00:06:20,100 --> 00:06:22,600 just, trailing, by cows, or if this is. 148 00:06:22,600 --> 00:06:24,700 Just kind of getting this water over to here, 149 00:06:24,700 --> 00:06:27,800 And they just irrigate, flood irrigate this meadow. 150 00:06:27,800 --> 00:06:30,000 But, that's. 151 00:06:30,000 --> 00:06:31,340 Some of the infrastructure. 152 00:06:31,340 --> 00:06:33,600 There's also a fence that comes along. 153 00:06:33,600 --> 00:06:37,100 You can basically make out the fence line all along there. 154 00:06:37,700 --> 00:06:40,700 All right. 155 00:06:40,700 --> 00:06:43,700 So, conditions, 156 00:06:44,600 --> 00:06:48,700 I mapped out the inactive part of the floodplain. 157 00:06:48,700 --> 00:06:54,360 Just based off of objective evidence of what It looked like Was... 158 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:57,200 what was flooding. 159 00:06:57,200 --> 00:07:00,760 Now, I used some vegetation indicators. I used what looked like evidence of 160 00:07:00,760 --> 00:07:02,810 flooding on this floodplain. 161 00:07:02,810 --> 00:07:05,400 You can see a little bit when you zoom in on this. 162 00:07:05,400 --> 00:07:07,800 Is this perfect? Eh, 163 00:07:07,800 --> 00:07:09,900 But I think it's reasonably defensible. 164 00:07:09,900 --> 00:07:11,279 What did I come up with? 165 00:07:11,279 --> 00:07:14,700 Well, I came up with when I mapped traced out the active channel in blue. 166 00:07:15,500 --> 00:07:16,800 That's about four acres. 167 00:07:16,800 --> 00:07:20,010 So it's about five percent of the valley bottom. 168 00:07:20,200 --> 00:07:23,100 I mapped the inactive portion, that's 41. 169 00:07:23,100 --> 00:07:27,900 So, 41 plus four is 45. 170 00:07:27,900 --> 00:07:30,300 Subtract that from 82, I get my 37 acres. 171 00:07:31,100 --> 00:07:35,100 So, the proportion of the valley bottom, that's active is 50 percent. 172 00:07:35,100 --> 00:07:37,670 and it puts us kind of dead smack in the middle here. 173 00:07:37,670 --> 00:07:40,200 Right in sort of a moderate condition. 174 00:07:40,200 --> 00:07:43,200 So remember we looked at this, right? 175 00:07:43,600 --> 00:07:46,600 So, you know, we're we're somewhere in, 176 00:07:46,600 --> 00:07:49,600 you know, something, along these lines, 177 00:07:50,570 --> 00:07:55,520 If we were to use the more expanded, which I think is useful here. 178 00:07:57,700 --> 00:08:02,190 Stream evolution model, it's probably in this laterally active. 179 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:04,800 Condition ,right, our geomorphic conditions 180 00:08:04,800 --> 00:08:07,800 It's laterally active. 181 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:09,900 I say that, because the other candidate 182 00:08:09,900 --> 00:08:16,100 might be, Quasi equilibrium or stage one sinuous single thread. 183 00:08:16,100 --> 00:08:18,200 If we go back, 184 00:08:18,250 --> 00:08:22,800 there is this sinuous single thread, but if you start zooming in, 185 00:08:22,800 --> 00:08:25,988 this does have the feel of a channel that's and pushed up against 186 00:08:26,028 --> 00:08:30,200 That valley bottom, our valley margin and valley bottom margin, 187 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:33,623 and it just feels like it's kicking everywhere it can. 188 00:08:33,743 --> 00:08:38,876 There's a lot of active bank erosion, lateral widening, little hints 189 00:08:38,876 --> 00:08:43,606 in a few of these bends, tendencies to build mid-channel bars and islands. 190 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:48,750 but just not multi-Threaded, yet. 191 00:08:49,400 --> 00:08:55,040 It's, so I think it's it's laterally active is the right call. 192 00:08:58,100 --> 00:08:59,300 193 00:08:59,300 --> 00:09:02,700 Remember, we said the answer, you know, is recovery potential 194 00:09:02,700 --> 00:09:05,800 to this question of, how much is in play for restoration? 195 00:09:05,800 --> 00:09:08,500 We're going to map that with pink okay, 196 00:09:08,500 --> 00:09:12,340 So recall, we have this valley bottom land use, 197 00:09:12,530 --> 00:09:16,400 And notice how what we mapped is not a million miles off. 198 00:09:16,400 --> 00:09:22,500 What I was just showing you for the inactive versus active right. 199 00:09:22,500 --> 00:09:25,000 These are reasonably close. 200 00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:29,500 Not bad considering we're doing it off of a pretty coarse resolution. 201 00:09:29,500 --> 00:09:34,600 Well, we asked pops about recovery potential. 202 00:09:34,600 --> 00:09:41,600 Okay, so remember, recovery potential is, the valley bottom, 203 00:09:41,600 --> 00:09:48,500 minus what the landowner or the land manager is willing to accept. 204 00:09:49,580 --> 00:09:52,900 This is an interesting exercise with good old pops. 205 00:09:52,900 --> 00:09:57,100 By the way, there is no such thing as pops. 206 00:09:57,100 --> 00:09:59,200 I just made this guy up. 207 00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:04,700 coming into this, the yellow area with 50%, 208 00:10:04,700 --> 00:10:12,300 that qualifies as active, 50% qualifies as inactive. 209 00:10:12,300 --> 00:10:16,300 Okay, so the active is the active floodplain and active channel. 210 00:10:16,300 --> 00:10:18,300 Notice where pops put the pink line. 211 00:10:18,300 --> 00:10:21,600 Okay. Tracks right here. Pretty good. Pretty good. 212 00:10:21,600 --> 00:10:23,000 213 00:10:23,000 --> 00:10:26,000 Then there's this, These real straight lines. Why? 214 00:10:26,100 --> 00:10:28,900 Well, that's where his fences are. 215 00:10:28,900 --> 00:10:32,600 Notice the fence goes right across this active, meander bend 216 00:10:32,600 --> 00:10:36,000 that's, laterally eroded into the fence, It's gone. 217 00:10:36,000 --> 00:10:40,200 There's another spot. Here where the road or a little trail is gone. 218 00:10:40,200 --> 00:10:48,790 So in this space right here, Pops isn't really admitting that it's active, 219 00:10:48,790 --> 00:10:52,400 He doesn't really see it as that, and that kind of makes sense. 220 00:10:52,400 --> 00:10:54,800 He doesn't have his cows out here in the winter. 221 00:10:54,800 --> 00:11:01,775 And his cows, use this in the spring, and as a summer pasture. 222 00:11:01,950 --> 00:11:05,198 He's actually pushing them up to higher ground in the summer. 223 00:11:05,200 --> 00:11:09,700 So it's really kind of the spring and the fall, and then the cows are taken somewhere else. 224 00:11:09,700 --> 00:11:12,100 I'm making that up, too. 225 00:11:12,100 --> 00:11:17,900 But this is an interesting sort of gap because, what he's saying is that 226 00:11:17,900 --> 00:11:21,400 what he's saying is that you. Could have 35%. 227 00:11:21,400 --> 00:11:24,300 of this for the river to, you know, do better with. 228 00:11:24,300 --> 00:11:27,000 So the uplift if we use this indicator, 229 00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:32,150 or we we were to use proportion active as an indicator of overall health 230 00:11:34,000 --> 00:11:40,600 there's actually no uplift, right? So what do we do in a situation like that? 231 00:11:40,600 --> 00:11:44,200 Well, one conclusion is, if the reason you're funding, 232 00:11:44,200 --> 00:11:46,730 if the reason you're interested in this You really do care 233 00:11:46,730 --> 00:11:51,100 about increasing the amount of valley bottom that could be active 234 00:11:51,100 --> 00:11:54,100 Maybe this isn't the right project. 235 00:11:54,800 --> 00:11:57,900 What he's come up with is logical. It's following the fence line. 236 00:11:57,900 --> 00:11:59,600 We can dig in a little deeper here. 237 00:11:59,600 --> 00:12:04,100 So how do you feel, pops, about channel change and floodplain reconnection? 238 00:12:04,100 --> 00:12:06,960 Well, he's able to give the stream some space to adjust 239 00:12:06,960 --> 00:12:09,370 and push into the valley bottom, but not all of it. Okay? 240 00:12:10,800 --> 00:12:12,200 Yeah, there's beaver there. 241 00:12:12,210 --> 00:12:15,490 He's got no problem with them. They're kind of interesting. 242 00:12:15,490 --> 00:12:17,190 So he's willing to allow that. Yeah. And he's fine to deal With adaptive management. 243 00:12:17,300 --> 00:12:21,200 So. Okay, I mean maybe 244 00:12:21,200 --> 00:12:24,200 Maybe there's still some room to talk about this. 245 00:12:24,600 --> 00:12:28,500 Maybe, a better indicator might be, instead of one relating to 246 00:12:28,500 --> 00:12:32,200 riverscape principle one, streams need space. 247 00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:34,800 Maybe for this project with Pops, a better indicator might be 248 00:12:34,800 --> 00:12:43,100 the proportion of the valley bottom, or the inundation extent at low flow. 249 00:12:43,100 --> 00:12:44,300 Right. 250 00:12:44,300 --> 00:12:47,300 So if we were to look at this, this reach, 251 00:12:47,300 --> 00:12:53,500 this is actually a high flow that we're looking at, sort of a bankful flow. 252 00:12:53,580 --> 00:13:00,340 And if we were to look at it, you could have some more structural forcing in here 253 00:13:00,340 --> 00:13:06,210 that would lead to, more connectivity. 254 00:13:06,300 --> 00:13:09,300 So, pretty much that whole thing's free flowing right now. 255 00:13:09,400 --> 00:13:11,300 Could we get some structure in there. 256 00:13:11,300 --> 00:13:14,200 that increases some of the inundation extent 257 00:13:14,200 --> 00:13:15,300 at low flows? 258 00:13:15,300 --> 00:13:15,600 Yeah. 259 00:13:15,600 --> 00:13:18,600 That's that that could be something worth exploring. 260 00:13:18,700 --> 00:13:22,400 So what could pops, reach of Coburn. 261 00:13:22,500 --> 00:13:24,500 Coburn be? 262 00:13:24,500 --> 00:13:25,200 Well. 263 00:13:25,200 --> 00:13:26,700 Even if it's. 264 00:13:26,700 --> 00:13:29,700 Just in this recovery potential that he's willing to concede, 265 00:13:31,700 --> 00:13:34,800 we might be able to get some more inundation area, and we might be able. 266 00:13:34,800 --> 00:13:37,600 To shift it to, this stage 8, sort of a 267 00:13:37,600 --> 00:13:39,300 weekly and asked opposing system. 268 00:13:41,100 --> 00:13:43,800 by the way, we call that wandering. 269 00:13:43,800 --> 00:13:45,800 Maybe. 270 00:13:45,800 --> 00:13:48,200 We could get a. Little bit of a wandering system in those few. 271 00:13:48,200 --> 00:13:49,400 Places where there's space 272 00:13:49,400 --> 00:13:51,200 and, he's willing to allow it. 273 00:13:51,200 --> 00:13:52,600 This sort of it's tendency. 274 00:13:52,600 --> 00:13:55,000 Anyway, 275 00:13:55,000 --> 00:13:58,000 and again, recovery potential can change over time. 276 00:13:58,400 --> 00:14:02,200 Well, pops has a hypothetical daughter. 277 00:14:03,100 --> 00:14:06,100 And, pops isn't going to be around forever. 278 00:14:07,100 --> 00:14:10,000 And he likes his daughter a lot. 279 00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:11,700 this daughter, 280 00:14:11,700 --> 00:14:14,300 You know, just loves the river. She grew up here. 281 00:14:14,300 --> 00:14:15,700 loves the ranch, 282 00:14:15,700 --> 00:14:18,500 And, yes, I'm making all this up. 283 00:14:18,500 --> 00:14:21,500 And, she saw the the map. 284 00:14:21,700 --> 00:14:23,700 And she kind of got upset with pops. 285 00:14:23,700 --> 00:14:26,400 And so, What she said is, 286 00:14:26,400 --> 00:14:28,200 oh, come on. Really? 287 00:14:28,200 --> 00:14:29,950 I mean, we're just putting the cows out, 288 00:14:29,950 --> 00:14:31,700 and, you know, whether or not it's us 289 00:14:31,800 --> 00:14:34,400 irrigating the pasture or, Whether or not it's, 290 00:14:34,400 --> 00:14:36,700 you know, the river spreading. 291 00:14:36,700 --> 00:14:38,500 Out and doing this stuff, the cows can get in there. 292 00:14:38,500 --> 00:14:39,100 They can use. 293 00:14:39,100 --> 00:14:42,000 That for the little bit that we use. It in the spring, in the summer, 294 00:14:42,000 --> 00:14:44,000 but we do have this irrigation canal 295 00:14:45,000 --> 00:14:46,000 right along here. 296 00:14:46,000 --> 00:14:47,600 Okay. 297 00:14:47,600 --> 00:14:53,100 And what she suggested is, yeah. 298 00:14:53,100 --> 00:14:55,700 Let's, let's just go right off the irrigation canal. 299 00:14:55,700 --> 00:14:56,800 This is. Gravity fed. 300 00:14:56,800 --> 00:14:59,200 So it wouldn't be a very easy thing to move. 301 00:14:59,200 --> 00:15:01,100 It'd be expensive, etc.. 302 00:15:01,100 --> 00:15:03,200 They want to keep that operational. 303 00:15:03,200 --> 00:15:06,200 And so, this is her recurring potential. 304 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:07,800 The same as pops up here. 305 00:15:07,800 --> 00:15:10,200 But then she's conceding, 306 00:15:10,200 --> 00:15:14,200 not just, I mean, pops is line was way back down here, right? 307 00:15:14,500 --> 00:15:16,500 So she's. She's conceding not. 308 00:15:16,500 --> 00:15:17,700 Just that gap between that 309 00:15:17,700 --> 00:15:20,900 and the inactive floodplain boundary, 310 00:15:20,900 --> 00:15:24,200 but saying, hey, you could go all the way up to the canal. 311 00:15:24,200 --> 00:15:27,300 And then, you know, once you get past the barn, hey 312 00:15:27,300 --> 00:15:29,100 and there's these few little beaver dams here 313 00:15:29,100 --> 00:15:31,100 and all the way down onto the fan of this thing. 314 00:15:31,100 --> 00:15:32,800 I mean, this could. Really just spread out. 315 00:15:34,400 --> 00:15:35,400 So by contrast, you know, 316 00:15:35,400 --> 00:15:39,700 she's got 63 acres of recovery potential, 317 00:15:39,700 --> 00:15:42,000 76% of the valley bottom, 318 00:15:42,000 --> 00:15:43,700 319 00:15:43,700 --> 00:15:44,950 that, you know, that could 320 00:15:44,950 --> 00:15:46,200 could come back 321 00:15:46,200 --> 00:15:47,800 322 00:15:47,800 --> 00:15:52,000 So. The uplift potential is 22 acres or 53%. 323 00:15:52,600 --> 00:15:55,200 So. That's pretty that's pretty. Exciting. 324 00:15:55,200 --> 00:15:56,600 And so. 325 00:15:56,600 --> 00:15:59,050 You know, pops, pops may, 326 00:15:59,050 --> 00:16:01,500 you know, Carol is the future, 327 00:16:01,500 --> 00:16:03,600 so he let's see, 328 00:16:03,600 --> 00:16:05,500 he lets her run the show. 329 00:16:05,500 --> 00:16:08,300 So what could Carol's reach of Coburn be? 330 00:16:08,300 --> 00:16:10,600 Well, up at the top there? 331 00:16:10,600 --> 00:16:11,700 Right in here. 332 00:16:11,700 --> 00:16:12,600 Maybe stage eight. 333 00:16:12,600 --> 00:16:15,600 Still right. 334 00:16:15,900 --> 00:16:19,200 However, towards the bottom, right, 335 00:16:20,100 --> 00:16:21,150 where we could spread out, 336 00:16:21,150 --> 00:16:22,200 get across this whole thing, 337 00:16:22,200 --> 00:16:25,000 really spread out into this fan, you know, maybe. 338 00:16:25,000 --> 00:16:27,500 Stage zero effectively. 339 00:16:27,500 --> 00:16:28,800 Eventually. 340 00:16:28,800 --> 00:16:32,100 So, this is just 341 00:16:32,100 --> 00:16:34,500 reinforcement, of what we did in planning. 342 00:16:34,500 --> 00:16:36,400 Right? This is so fundamental. 343 00:16:36,400 --> 00:16:38,000 Because this sets. 344 00:16:38,000 --> 00:16:40,200 The boundary conditions for your design. 345 00:16:40,200 --> 00:16:41,000 This sets, 346 00:16:41,000 --> 00:16:42,900 you know, how I'm going to approach this. 347 00:16:42,900 --> 00:16:45,000 What's the target I'm shooting for? 348 00:16:45,000 --> 00:16:48,500 Not necessarily that you're going to get there in your first design, 349 00:16:49,500 --> 00:16:50,600 but It's, 350 00:16:50,600 --> 00:16:53,600 it's it's a really, really helpful way to queue you up, 351 00:16:54,100 --> 00:16:55,300 successfully. 352 00:16:55,300 --> 00:16:59,800 So in conclusion, never start a design 353 00:16:59,800 --> 00:17:01,600 without that critical context from planning. 354 00:17:01,600 --> 00:17:03,350 The design opportunity i 355 00:17:03,350 --> 00:17:04,225 s defined by that gap 356 00:17:04,225 --> 00:17:05,100 between condition recovery potential, 357 00:17:05,100 --> 00:17:08,500 and that's going to walk you through, 358 00:17:09,100 --> 00:17:11,900 the design process, focusing at the complex. 359 00:17:11,900 --> 00:17:12,700 Scale. 360 00:17:12,700 --> 00:17:13,600 And inheriting 361 00:17:13,600 --> 00:17:16,200 these sorts of, objectives, 362 00:17:16,200 --> 00:17:18,200 design objectives. 363 00:17:18,200 --> 00:17:21,200 Out of what this planning process, reveals. 364 00:17:21,800 --> 00:17:22,500 Thank you very much.