The Gruendyke
Removal is Complete Site Restoration is underway.
Read More About the Gruendyke
The Gruendyke Dam removal is complete and riparian
restoration has begun. The photo on the left shows the Gruendyke
Dam in the Fall of 2007. Dams and the pools behind them
may make a pretty scene to the casual observer with geese floating
about amid lovely purple loosestrife flowers and the phragmites that
look like feathered cattails. However, that lovely scene reveals a
local environmental mess. When the dams were built they created an
artificial pool that changed the local landscape. Native plant, fish
and bird species lost their natural home. The pool of standing water
created by the dam replaced wetlands, river banks and marshes that
could no longer support the flora and fauna that formerly thrived
there. Removing the dam is the first step in restoring the natural
environment. The photo on the right shows the Gruendyke site in September
2008; the dam has been remove and a two-year restoration effort has
begun.
In March 2008 the first notch was cut
in the Gruendyke Dam. On June 16, 2008 removal of the Gruendyke Dam
began. You can page down for photos showing the first notch and the
dam as it existed originally.
Read about the Restoration Effort
The photo on the left shows the dam in May 2008, after about 2 months
of de-watering through the notch cut on March 11th, 2008. You can
see a considerable drop in the dam pool.
In the photo on the right you see the dam on June 5, 2008. Note the
riffle that has appeared above the dam, it is visible behind
MWA President Bill Leavens and National Park Service representative
Paul Kenney. (A riffle is a small rapid caused by rocks extending
across a stream bed. Riffles provide excellent habitat for aquatic
insects and good hunting grounds for fish - and in turn for the animals
that come to hunt fish. The Musconetcong River is a National Wild
and Scenic River, hence the Park Service interest in the project.
First notch is cut March 13, 2008.
American Rivers Website
June 26, 2008
Old
dam leaves a mess in its wake June 26, 2008 by Tehani Schneider
(Lots of pictures!)
The June 16, 2008 removal of half of the dam revealed something that
we never could have guessed. For the most part, the consequences of
damming our rivers are invisible. High temperature, concentrated pollutants
and lower oxygen degrade aquatic habitat. But removal of the Gruendyke
Dam reveled something that we could not have imagined - have a look
at the river bed behind the dam! Yes, you are looking at the Musky!
An Emergency Clean Up coordinated by Brian Cowden, Trout Unlimited
Musconetcong Home Rivers Initiative Coordinator was held on June 25th
to remove the tires and other debris that was revealed under the former
Gruendyke Mill Dam pool. Trout Unlimited members came out in force
from several chapters to help. MWA Trustees and members, NJ hatchery
workers, family of dam owners Rodger and Eileen Cornell and many others
came out to help. Lunch for the volunteers was provided by the Pump
House Restaurant. By the way, the entire project is in full view of
the outside eating area at the Pump House Restaurant, 2 Highway 46
Hackettstown, NJ 07840.

For an informative video developed by the Hydropower
Reform Coalition on the environmental and social impacts of dams on
our waterways go to www.dameffects.org
For information about dam removals across the county check out Clearinghouse
for Dam Removal Information
Older articles about the Gruendyke
Mill Dam removal -
A
Dam Irritation by Fred
J. Aun Star-Ledger, Sunday October 26, 2007
Aiming to take down dam
Hackettstown officials considering Seber Dam's
demise. By LYNN OLANOFF The Express-Times , Saturday,
July 14, 2007
Conservation
group says: Remove obsolete dams
by John Monteith Hunterdon County Democrat Thursday, July
12, 2007
River's
future looks rocky without help by Fred J. Aun Star-Ledger
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Group
after dam-free river, by Lynn Olanoff Express
Times Monday, July 02, 2007
Putting
the Wild Back Into the River by Kevin Coyne Sunday New
York Times June 17, 2007 New Jersey Section Page 1
The
saviors of the dammed Returning a river to a wild state by
Brendan Berls Star-Ledger, Thursday, April 12, 2007
MWA is leading the effort to remove the badly deteriorated Gruendyke
Mill dam that partially blocks the Musconetcong immediately upstream
from the Route 46 bridge at the border of Hackettstown and Mount Olive
Township. The Gruendyke Mill dam is one of many obsolete dams blocking
the river. The removal of this dam is the first step in a long-term
effort to restore the river's natural flow, improve water quality
and enhance fish migration.