Miller & Walker Creeks Need Your Help Sept. 24th

Posted by admin on September 5th, 2008
September 24, 2008
7:00 pmto8:30 pm
Stream basin steward Dennis Clark prepares to cut invasive weeds from Miller Creek. Photo Courtesy King County Parks.

Dennis Clark prepares to cut invasive weeds from Miller Creek. Photo Courtesy King Co. Parks.

Both Miller Creek and Walker Creek flow through the area, and both creeks are in need of your help.

An ad-hoc committee aimed at monitoring and studying both creeks is forming, and its inaugural workshop is scheduled for Wed., Sept. 24, from 7pm – 8:30pm at the Burien Community Center, Classroom 5, located at 425 S.W. 144th Street (map below).

At this workshop, participants will learn the answers to some of the following questions, and help provide answers to some other questions:

  • How do we know about water quality, water quantity, and habitat conditions in Miller and Walker Creeks?
  • What monitoring has been done in recent years?
  • What monitoring is necessary to allow for analysis of trends?
  • Can we better coordinate existing monitoring?
  • What additional monitoring would we like to do in the future?
  • And how are we going to use all the data that have been and will be collected? Five years from now, will monitoring give us the information we need to evaluate the health of these stream basins and make good decisions about future projects, programs, and policies?

Improving monitoring of water quality, water quantity, and habitat conditions is recommended in the Executive Proposed Miller and Walker Creeks Basin Plan. This workshop is intended to kick off an ad hoc committee effort to answer the questions listed above. Answering these questions will help everyone take better care of the land and water in the Miller and Walker Creek basins (basin boundary map).

The monitoring discussion is intended to produce recommendations on how local partners can conduct voluntary monitoring in the future. The outcome of this process will not affect the current monitoring for Seattle-Tacoma International Airport as required by the Department of Ecology. The monitoring that has been and is being done by the Port of Seattle will be discussed, however, because it provides information on those portions of the creeks that flow through the airport property.

For more information, or to RSVP, please contact Dennis Clark, King County Public Outreach/Stewardship Coordinator, 206-296-1909.


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Normandy Park Boy Suffers Tick Paralysis

Posted by admin on June 8th, 2008

NORMANDY PARK – Last Tuesday morning, after his Dad told him to get up for school, 13-year-old Daniel Smith couldn’t move his body to get down from his bunk bed.

He also couldn’t lift his legs or even swallow.

Daniel, who had been shooting hoops near his Normandy Park home a few days earlier, was temporarily paralyzed, his doctor later determined.

The cause: a tick found along his hairline at the nape of his neck.

Tick paralysis, though relatively rare, occurs most often in the Western states, the Rocky Mountains and Western Canada, said Rebecca Baer, epidemiologist for the Washington State Department of Health.

Paralysis of the sort Daniel experienced is likely caused by a toxin secreted in the tick’s saliva; the paralysis goes away fairly quickly once the tick is removed, typically within 24 hours. But if the tick is not removed in time, about 10 percent of victims die from respiratory paralysis, health officials said. Other symptoms of tick-borne illness include flulike symptoms — muscle aches, nausea, joint pains, fatigue.

Liz Dykstra, entomologist for the Washington State Department of Health, said the Rocky Mountain wood tick and American dog tick — the two species often associated with tick paralysis, are found here. In Western Washington, people aren’t accustomed to finding ticks, and they and their health-care providers may not suspect ticks when symptoms start, Dykstra said.

“If you live in the Southeast, you’re trained to check yourself over,” she said. “People here don’t expect to find ticks. But they are more common than you’d think.”

In Daniel’s case, the tick came from the Teanaway River area, near Cle Elum, where the Smith family was camping with friends during Memorial Day weekend. Another father on the trip found a tick on his son’s head and called the Smiths to suggest they check for ticks.

Stu Smith said he checked his son throughly the day after they camped but saw no ticks.

The first noticeable symptom came a week later, on Monday morning, when Daniel felt his back go slightly numb. After school, his left leg was so weak, a neighbor had to help him get into his house.

Because Daniel had started wearing a back brace for a medical condition, his parents consulted with their doctor’s office; they suspected his body was adjusting to the brace.

But the next morning, Daniel could barely squeeze his mother’s hand, and he had no feeling in his lower body.

His father checked his head again and found a dark-tan tick the size of a raisin.

Ticks can be hard to detect at first, but within days, they can ingest enough blood to grow to the size of an M&M.

Daniel was treated at Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center and could stand with some assistance about 6 ½ hours after the tick was removed. He was back in class by Thursday.

Although two cases of tick paralysis were reported in Washington last year, doctors aren’t required to report cases of it, said Baer, the epidemiologist.

From the mid-1940s to the mid-1990s, when reporting was required, only 33 cases occurred. Those included two children, both of whom died. Most people picked up the ticks in Eastern Washington between mid-March and late June.

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