Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections
Personal tools
You are here: Home

Search results

50 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type


















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Informational resources to help protect rivers and creeks from rain runoff in Western North Carolina.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Rhode Island conservation funding and technical assistance
A collection of links and information about cost-share programs, grants, technical assistance, and other resources for protecting and improving watersheds and in stream habitat in Rhode Island.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
A species list for riparian vegetation plantings in the North Carolina mountains.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
A guide for landowners to restore healthy streamside vegetation on their land.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Information to help landowners that are losing land during or after rain events.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Listing of SC Conservation Districts
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
South Carolina conservation funding and technical assistance
A collection of links and information about cost-share programs, grants, technical assistance, and other resources for protecting and improving watersheds and in stream habitat in South Carolina.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Clemson’s Stream Bank Repair program addresses unhealthy stream banks that are suffering from erosion and instability. Workshops will provide insight on how watersheds function and will identify steps needed to stabilize and revegetate stream banks.  The 2021 Stream Bank Repair manual will help homeowners and professionals choose practices that will prevent property loss, stabilize stream banks, and protect water quality. Actions include establishing a 3:1 or 4:1 bank slope and installing native vegetation in the riparian area , with the overall purpose of protecting water quality. Clemson’s Stream Bank Repair program works with homeowners, land managers, park staff, and landscape professionals to address unhealthy stream banks that are suffering from erosion and instability. Stream Bank Repair works above what is called the Ordinary High Water Mark.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
An important part of a healthy stream is a stable stream bank. In this manual, you will learn techniques to help stabilize your stream bank to protect property, habitat, and water quality. From Clemson University Extension.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
The Cooperative Agreement for Stream Bank Restoration Program assists landowners through public-private partnerships by offering advice and funding for habitat projects on private lands that restore and protect wetlands and other wildlife habitat that might otherwise go unprotected. The funding for this cost-share initiative is provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Program to GSWCC and provides incentives to install practices that improve riparian buffers and repair and protect stream banks. Project applications are prioritized in order to address priority watersheds and to provide maximum benefit to the 63 species on Georgia’s Threatened & Endangered Species List.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources