Water resources are affected by much more than what happens at the shoreline. Pollution, runoff, overuse, land development, aging infrastructure, and changing weather patterns can all place stress on rivers, lakes, wetlands, aquifers, and drinking water supplies. Understanding these threats is the first step toward protecting local water before small problems become long-term damage. Water…
Homeowners have more influence on local water quality than most people realize. Rain that falls on roofs, driveways, lawns, gardens, and patios often drains toward storm sewers, ditches, streams, wetlands, and lakes. What that water picks up along the way can affect the health of the entire watershed. Protecting clean water starts with small choices…
Watersheds are the natural connection between land, water, plants, animals, and people. A watershed collects rainfall and snowmelt, moves water through soil, wetlands, streams, and rivers, and supports the habitats that many species depend on. When a watershed is healthy, it helps filter pollutants, reduce flooding, recharge groundwater, and keep ecosystems more stable. A healthy…