Upper Etowah River Alliance

Upper Etowah River Alliance Protecting the Etowah through Education! Education organization managed by a Board of Directors representing the 5 counties of the watershed.

One paid staff, the Director, and dedicated volunteers work to educate others throughout the wateshed.

06/11/2026

Every rock is a home.

Come see us at the Georgia Outdoor Festival and Expo on Father's Day weekend. We are excited to announce the inaugural G...
06/11/2026

Come see us at the Georgia Outdoor Festival and Expo on Father's Day weekend.

We are excited to announce the inaugural Georgia Outdoor Festival & Expo.

This isn’t just another festival. This is a full weekend celebrating everything that makes Georgia an outdoor paradise.

🏕 Camping
🎯 Hunting & Fishing
🚵‍♂️ Hiking & Mountain Biking
🎨 Outdoor & Wildlife Art Show
🛍 Retail Vendors & Exhibitors
📚 Seminars from the pros
🔥 And so much more…

We’re on a mission to make this Georgia’s premier outdoor festival and expo....a can’t-miss event for outdoor lovers across the South.

📅 Father’s Day Weekend 2026
📍 Cherokee Veterans Park, Canton GA

👉 For vendor apps, sponsor apps, exhibitor apps, and non-profit apps go to www.georgiaoutdoorfestival.com

Macroinvertebrate fun yesterday at the History Cherokee! There are another great camp in July!
06/11/2026

Macroinvertebrate fun yesterday at the History Cherokee! There are another great camp in July!

06/09/2026

Team Work!

06/05/2026
Pretty pests.
06/02/2026

Pretty pests.

Mimosa (Albizia julibrissin) or Silk Tree is blooming along roadsides, forest margins, and streams. Their fragrant, pompom-like flowers make them easy to spot in late May and June. Mimosa is native to China and has been widely planted as an ornamental. Unfortunately, it readily escapes yards and invades natural habitats far away from where they were planted. For instance, I photographed this Mimosa at a land conservation park in my area.

Mimosa is listed as an invasive tree in several southeastern states (SC, GA, KY, VA, and TN are a few examples). Much of its spread is into sunny disturbed areas, woodland edges, streambanks, and rights-of-way. Once established, Mimosa re-sprouts from its roots, making it difficult to eradicate. The fruits and seeds are dispersed by the wind and also float on water, sending seeds from neighborhoods into street gutters and down storm drains where Mimosa then spreads downstream. Unfortunately, Mimosa has become a common, and sometimes dominant, tree in many woodland edges and streambanks across the Piedmont. Because most native insect are specialists of native plants, the more Mimosa spreads, the less habitat there is for our native insects. You will occasionally find caterpillars feeding on Mimosa, but they’re often mimosa webworms (Homadaula anisocentra), which are also introduced from China.

While the Mimosa flowers do provide nectar for a short time for some pollinating insects and ruby-throated hummingbirds, there are many native plants that fulfill this role without causing degradation to our southeastern woodlands (our native wildlife survived here long before mimosas were introduced). As with other introduced plants from China and elsewhere, Mimosa has little benefit to our natural food webs as few caterpillars consume the leaves. This means that natural areas invaded by Mimosa have less food available for songbirds and other wildlife native adapted to the southeastern United States. Mimosas simply contribute to a “food desert” for our native wildlife.

06/01/2026

We have about four hundred teeny tiny little lives in one of our currently unoccupied turtle ponds. A mom less than a mile away from us went to empty out her kids’ little pool, which was full of mosquito larvae, to prepare it for use this summer, and realized it was actually teeming with hundreds of tadpoles.

There are a lot of people who encounter this and simply dispose of the tadpoles without a second thought, which is a tragedy. Amphibians are facing an extinction crisis, with over 40% of amphibians currently threatened with extinction. Every little pinhead-sized tadpole is precious. And, since they have a brain and a central nervous system, we know that they can experience pain and fear just like us. We’re thankful she thought twice and called us!

It’s important to be aware that amphibians should never ever be relocated more than a mile or two, and ideally even less than that. Amphibians spend their entire lives in small areas, where the natural bacteria and fungi on their skin are unique to each individual neighborhood. Moving a frog or tadpole even a few miles can introduce pathogens to a new population that can’t tolerate them. Luckily, these little dudes are our neighbors and could be relocated— or rehabilitated— or relocabilitated. We’re not counting them as individual patients but we’ll be keeping them fed and protected while they finish growing.

If you’ve got tadpoles in your kiddie pool— it happens this time of year— please consider simply letting them be if you can. You can control the mosquito larvae with Mosquito Dunks, which are nontoxic to amphibians. Your kids can experience the joy of watching baby frogs grow up! But if you absolutely must empty the pool, please relocate the tadpoles to a safe body of water less than half a mile away and contact a rehabilitator if that is unavailable.

Let’s all work together to keep our tiniest and most helpless neighbors safe. 🐸

Wow!
05/28/2026

Wow!

URGENT: AN ABSOLUTE ENVIRONMENTAL CRITICAL POINT ON THE CHATTAHOOCHEE 🛑🐟
I’ve been watching the data and reading your messages all morning, and what is unfolding right now on the Chattahoochee River is nothing short of an ecological nightmare. This isn't just a minor run-of-the-mill runoff issue—water safety teams are calling this the single worst fish kill our region has seen in over two decades.
We are looking at a 20-mile stretch of total devastation. Thousands of dead fish—ranging from massive, 30-pound trophy striped bass to spotted bass, catfish, and carp—are completely blanketing the riverbanks and log jams.
Worse yet, this has officially crossed from an environmental disaster into a severe public health hazard. E. coli levels have just exploded to over 4,000. To put that in perspective, federal health guidelines flag anything over 235 as high-risk. We are currently sitting at 17 times the safe limit.
If you, your kids, or your pets have any plans to get near the water downstream of Atlanta this week, cancel them immediately.
📍 WHERE IS THE DAMAGE?
The epicenter of the kill begins precisely where Peachtree Creek empties into the river in northwest Atlanta, and the toxic plume has pushed all the way down toward West Point Lake.
(Note: If you are headed UPSTREAM of Peachtree Creek into the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area, the water there is clean and completely unaffected).
🌪️ HOW DID THIS HAPPEN? (THE PERFECT STORM)
It took a precise, disastrous combination of weather extremes and urban infrastructure failure to cause a collapse of this scale:
1 The Extended Drought: Because we’ve been locked in a prolonged dry spell, the Chattahoochee's water levels were running exceptionally low. The river simply didn't have the volume or the cool temperature needed to buffer a sudden influx of pollution.
2 Thermal Shock: When last Wednesday's nearly stationary storm dumped up to 3.5 inches of blinding rain in under an hour, (the normal amount of rain that would fall in the entire month of May) that water hit sizzling urban asphalt and concrete. It rushed into the river as a super-heated wave. Warm water physically cannot hold oxygen, instantly shocking the aquatic environment.
3 The Sewage Infrastructure Failure: The sheer volume of the flash flood completely overwhelmed Atlanta's 8.5-mile West Area Tunnel. The system filled to maximum capacity and overflowed, sending a massive mix of raw sewage, wet wipes, and toxic urban street grime directly into Peachtree Creek and the river.
💔 THE MECHANISM OF DEATH
The fish didn't actually poison to death from the sewage. Instead, they suffocated.
When that massive wave of organic waste hit the warm, low river, it triggered an immediate explosion of bacteria. As those microbes rushed to decompose the waste, they rapidly sucked every single drop of dissolved oxygen right out of the water. The river was essentially choked dry, leaving the largest apex predators with high oxygen demands completely helpless. River crews are currently reporting a foul-smelling black muck coating the entire river ecosystem downriver.
❓ WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?
A major joint investigation is actively underway involving the Georgia EPD, the Riverkeeper, and Atlanta’s Department of Watershed Management. While city officials claim the containment tunnels operated exactly as they were permitted to during a historic weather event, the data on the banks tells a much different story. Full laboratory analysis is expected later this week.
This is a heartbreaking, catastrophic blow to a magnificent fishery that will take years to recover. Please spread the word, keep your families out of the water, and stay safe.
I am monitoring the testing stations closely and will post the official lab results the second l see new information Photo WABE

05/24/2026
09/08/2025

Great info from Tracy Aviary. Migrating birds need our help - please turn off unnecessary lights during peak migration season! If you find an injured bird, use Animal Help Now to find the nearest assistance.

Address

180 McClure Street
Canton, GA
30114

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