BayBlog Question of the Week: Do I Live in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed?
Welcome to the third installment of our newest feature, the
BayBlog Question of the Week. Each week we'll take a question submitted through
the Chesapeake Bay Program
website and answer it here for all to read.
This week's question comes from Sacha:
“My husband and I just recently bought a house in Gainesville, Virginia,
and were told that the creek that runs on our property is part of the
watershed. I’d like to know how I can find out if that is true and if it is,
where I can get more information on what that means for us as property owners.”
Your creek is, in fact, part of the Chesapeake
Bay watershed. As you can see in this
map, Gainesville, Virginia,
lies within the Potomac River watershed, and the Potomac River flows to the Chesapeake Bay.
The Chesapeake Bay watershed covers more than 64,000 square
miles in the states of Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia
and West Virginia, as well as the District of Columbia, and contains thousands of creeks,
streams and rivers that all eventually drain to the Chesapeake
Bay. But no matter where you are, every creek or stream is a part
of a watershed -- it’s just a matter of finding out which one.
If you want to find out which watershed you live in, start
off by going to the Environmental
Protection Agency’s “Surf Your Watershed” site and plug in your zip code,
city, or even the name of the stream itself. The site will then generate
information for you about your specific watershed, including:
- The
name of the watershed
- The
congressional districts within the watershed
- The
names of citizen-based groups working in the watershed
- Water
quality monitoring data
- Links
to environmental websites dealing with that watershed
- A link
to the National Watershed Network
- An
assessment of the watershed’s health
- Information
from the United States Geological Survey including stream flow, science in
that area and water use data
- A list
of places included in the watershed (counties, cities, states and other
watersheds upstream and downstream)
As property owners, it is important to learn about this
information so you are aware of the health of the water near where you live.
You also might want to look into the citizen groups
that work in your watershed to help improve or maintain the health of your local
waterway. Volunteering with your local watershed group is a great way to help
the environment and the Chesapeake Bay.
With that information, check out our Help the Bay
section, which details dozens of ways you can make a difference around your
home and backyard to help the Chesapeake Bay and
your local stream.
The health of the Chesapeake Bay
begins with the health of every creek or stream that flows into it. So treat
your local waterways well, and the Chesapeake
will one day follow!
Do you have a question about the Chesapeake Bay? Please send it to us through our web comment form. Your question might be chosen for our next BayBlog Question of the Week!