whoDEANie
Active VIP Member
Without a working machine to ride last weekend, I thought I'd spend the holiday Monday sipping on cold ones while tubing down the Pembina River. As you'd expect with all the rain lately, the water was extremely high and extremely muddy. In fact the water was almost completely opaque and everything under water was covered with a fairly thick layer of mud and silt.
Forgive me if this seems like an ignorant question, but how does this affect the river's echo system in comparison to a couple of quads washing their bikes in a stream? True, the quadders muddy the water, but it clears up after a short time (or so it seems) whereas the storm muddied rivers can be that way for days or even weeks. ...relax now, I'm not talking about the extreme cases where guys are dumping oil or ripping up endless kilometers of creek bed, I'm just talking about the guy (not me, of course ) who's having a little fun or trying to save himself $40 in the car wash. Is it really as hamful as it has been made out to be? If so, I wouldn't mind a little education on the subject.
Forgive me if this seems like an ignorant question, but how does this affect the river's echo system in comparison to a couple of quads washing their bikes in a stream? True, the quadders muddy the water, but it clears up after a short time (or so it seems) whereas the storm muddied rivers can be that way for days or even weeks. ...relax now, I'm not talking about the extreme cases where guys are dumping oil or ripping up endless kilometers of creek bed, I'm just talking about the guy (not me, of course ) who's having a little fun or trying to save himself $40 in the car wash. Is it really as hamful as it has been made out to be? If so, I wouldn't mind a little education on the subject.