top of page

LakeSmart IDs feasible actions for controlling erosion


A North Pond camp owner proudly displays a LakeSmart award on this shoreline property.

7 Lakes Alliance’s lead scientist is convinced climate change is impacting water quality in the Belgrade Lakes watershed. Larger and more violent rainstorms wash dirt into lakes and streams; dirt contains phosphorous upon which algae feeds. Also, warmer temperatures seem to arrive earlier, linger longer and run hotter than many lifelong Mainers recall from years past. A warmer, longer growing season gives algae a greater chance to bloom.


The impact of climate change underscores the urgent need for each of us to take simple, feasible actions that can stabilize water quality in the region’s streams and lakes. One imminently doable action shorefront property owners can take is determining whether their properties are “LakeSmart.”


LakeSmart is an education and outreach program of the conservation group Maine Lakes. Administered in the Belgrade Lakes watershed by 7 Lakes, the program recognizes lakefront property owners who manage their land to protect water quality. The program is free, voluntary and non-regulatory. Participating property owners receive individualized suggestions for keeping dirt from being swept into lakes and streams by weather events.


The program begins with an assessment of a property, performed either by a 7 Lakes Alliance staff member or a trained volunteer. To request a free survey, email 7 Lakes Erosion Control Project Coordinator Stuart Cole at stuart.cole@7lakesalliance.org.


Surveys identify what property owners can do to mitigate or minimize runoff. Common recommendations include planting vegetative buffers and/or installing riprap along shorelines, defining parking areas and walking paths with rock aggregate or erosion-control mulch, installing driplines beneath eaves, blocking erosion from roads and driveways with rubber razor, and building infiltration steps and rain gardens.

Blueberry sod is an excellent vegetative buffer. But it is expensive - about $6.25 per square foot.

7 Lakes can also help make recommendations a reality.


Property owners who have undergone a LakeSmart assessment often enlist 7 Lakes’ Youth Conservation Corps to provide the labor to implement the suggestions. YCC work projects are also coordinated through Stuart, who seeks state permits that may be needed and can help secure materials such as mulch and riprap. Property owners pay for the materials; the YCC provides the labor at a minimal cost.


7 Lakes' Youth Conservation Corps installed this rubber razor at a Little North Pond property to prevent stormwater from carrying dirt into the lake.

Properties that meet the program’s standards earn the LakeSmart designation, along with a sign indicating the owner’s conservation mindset. The hope is this visible recognition will encourage neighbors to also make their properties LakeSmart.


Preserving water quality is one way lakefront property owners can protect the often-substantial financial investments they make in their properties. Beyond that, preserving water quality in the Belgrade Lakes watershed ensures the lakefront legacies that many families enjoy will endure for years to come.

52 views

Comentários


bottom of page