Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District

  • Home
  • The District
    • HLWID – District Matters
      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
      • Privacy Policy
    • Board of Directors
    • Lake Managers
    • Communication and Public Outreach
    • Monthly Meetings
  • The Watershed
    • Blue-Green Algae
    • Citizen Science
    • HLWID – District Matters
      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
    • Living on Hayden Lake
      • Rights, Permits, etc.: Who to Contact
      • Lake Debris
    • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
      • Curly-Leaf Pondweed
      • Eurasian Watermilfoil
    • Recreation
    • Water Quality
      • Lake Water Quality Studies
      • Hayden Lake Water Quality
      • Idaho Water Quality Standards & Hayden Lake
      • The Eutrophication of Hayden Lake
    • The Watershed
      • Hayden Lake Watershed
      • Honey Badger Project
      • English Point – a Cherished Resource
  • News
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • The District
    • HLWID – District Matters
      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
      • Privacy Policy
    • Board of Directors
    • Lake Managers
    • Communication and Public Outreach
    • Monthly Meetings
  • The Watershed
    • Blue-Green Algae
    • Citizen Science
    • HLWID – District Matters
      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
    • Living on Hayden Lake
      • Rights, Permits, etc.: Who to Contact
      • Lake Debris
    • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
      • Curly-Leaf Pondweed
      • Eurasian Watermilfoil
    • Recreation
    • Water Quality
      • Lake Water Quality Studies
      • Hayden Lake Water Quality
      • Idaho Water Quality Standards & Hayden Lake
      • The Eutrophication of Hayden Lake
    • The Watershed
      • Hayden Lake Watershed
      • Honey Badger Project
      • English Point – a Cherished Resource
  • News
  • Contact Us
Facebook-f

News from the 'Shed

the most important NEWS of the day in the HAYDEN LAKE WATERSHED

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

Communication Preferences/Opt-out form

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

Treatment Map segment shows notification areas around treatment polygons.

2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted

  • Living on Hayden Lake, Recreation
  • August 27, 2020
  • Living on Hayden Lake, Recreation
  • August 27, 2020

New Navigation Buoy Installation – Completed

One of fourteen new, permitted buoys on Hayden Lake
The permitted buoys are in! The buoys earmarked for removal are out! Thank you to all who extended hands, resources, opinions, influence, time, support, patience, money, expertise, and cooperation. Click here to jump to the latest update.

On Monday morning, Hayden Lake Management, the installation contractor, and yours truly, gathered at the top of the drive leading down to the Hayden Lake Country Club’s private boat launch. We were waiting for the delivery of cement anchors and reviewing strategies for the installation work to come. Why the fuss? How hard can it be to get a few buoys out there on the water? The answer: there’s more to the job than you might know!

Just like the buoy installation, this post will be a work in progress, following the process through the week. Check back daily to see how the job is going.

Monday, Aug 18: Set Up Parts and Equipment at the Launch Point

14 buoys queued up in the trailer await installation
14 navigation Buoys: these are required to be Coastguard-approved buoys with a light assembly on top. When installed, they must stay in place and be theft-proof and weather-proof. The buoy, light-kit, attachment cables, chains, and hardware needed to accomplish those goals don’t come ready-to-install. Thanks to Todd Walker for the many hours of assembly work that he invested in getting them to this point.

Todd Walker, the Hayden Lake Manager, brought 14 assembled buoys, plus ropes, chains, toggles, etc. to the launch point. Then he waited.

The anchor manufacturer was to deliver fourteen 1,600 pound cement blocks, made to withstand the rugged lake-bottom environment and never move. This delivery required 60-ft of conveyance – a truck with a crane and a trailer for hauling from Spokane. How would all of this equipment fit in the Hayden Lake Country Club‘s tiny-by-comparison launch area? Fortunately, the delivery team paused to assess the situation. They pulled off the road at the Super One parking lot and transferred everything to the truck. Then, leaving their trailer behind, they were able to back the truck alone down the drive, neat as you please.

The anchor blocks spent the night stacked smartly off to the side at the boat launch. Todd delivered the buoys and parts to the contractor’s equipment lot for temporary storage.

Buoy anchors are stacked neatly on the beach awaiting installatoin.
Why the unusual collection? When in the process of custom-making the anchors, the vendor offered their stock of pre-made blocks at a reduced price. As a responsible steward of the Improvement District’s funds, accepting the offer was the right way to go. (Image credit: Forrest Walker)
Buoy anchors are stacked on the beach to the side of the boat launch at the Hayden Lake Country Club.
The buoy anchors consist of large, flat blocks of cement with grab-bars embedded for pick-up and placement. Though this group of anchors appears to include a variety of sizes and shapes, each one is sufficient to keep buoys secure. They won’t roll down the steeply-inclined lake bottom, nor will they be easily lifted by would-be thieves.

——————————————————————————–


(Image credit: Ross Wilkins)

Thursday, Aug 20: First Buoys On the Lake

Much to my chagrin, so much happened behind the scenes as I wrung my hands in anticipation. And that meant no stories to tell and no photos to share – until today. This is what we see at the end of Thursday:

  • Massive galvanized chains have been welded onto the anchors and the bottoms of the buoys.
  • Ten buoys wait in a line for their turns on the boat.
  • Four buoys have been installed on the lake. Can you find them?
  • A few illegal buoys targeted by IDL for pick-up remain – five to be exact. If you’re thinking about slipping your illegal buoy out – or back out – onto the lake, resist the temptation, please!

Map of Hayden lake shows 14 buoys distributed around the main body of the lake.

Can you tell which of the 14 buoys these are?
(Image credit: Steve Meyer)

——————————————————————————–

Friday, Aug 21: Another Day, Another Four Buoys

   
Now there are six, where once there were ten!

The day started so fresh, though a little hazy, with a kayak adventure from Honeysuckle over to the Hayden Country Club.  I guess I enjoyed the experience a little too much because, by the time I reached the boat launch, the contractor’s barge had loaded four buoys and anchors and had disappeared into the vast lake horizon.


Leo Notar watched the barge slip past along Evernade Point.
This should give us a hint as to where these two were heading.


Now, on this Friday evening, there are at least eight new, permitted navigation buoys on the lake. This photo is number four from yesterday. If you happen to spy numbers five through eight, please snap a picture or two and send them along with clues as to their identities. The treasure hunt continues.

——————————————————————————–

Monday, Aug 24: Making Great Progress

Four buoys and anchors await installation.Early this morning, four buoys lounged on the decks of the contractor’s two barges, recovering, I think, from the weekend. Saturday and Sunday were busy recreation days on the lake, and these guys might have been made sea-sick by the wakes.  Four in the queue today means that two additional buoys were splashed late on Friday! I wonder where they are anchored?

Buoy #8 - the Chicken Point Sentinel
Also, reporting in late last Friday was Chicken Point. Buoy #8 on the map was in place by dinner time!
(Image credit: Betty Wolf.)

 

This afternoon’s report from the contractor is that they will install the final four on Wednesday.

Please be sure to report any further new-buoy sightings. (Five go un-acknowledged, still.)

——————————————————————————–

Thursday, Aug 27: The Project Wraps Up Today

"On

Visual confirmation came in this morning that all 14 buoys are in place! Woohoo!  I believe the contractor completed the installation on Tuesday, after all.  Today, all hands are on deck, literally, to remove the five illegal buoys earmarked before this adventure began. Buoy owners may retrieve their property by contacting the Lake Manager for Hayden Lake.

Gil Rossner, a Hayden Lake Watershed Association Board Member shared a story from this morning’s turn about the lake, “One guy cruised by me on his pontoon boat. He said, ‘it only took two years,’ and flashed me a thumbs up. When I identified myself as being associated with the Watershed Association, he thanked me for all the work that the Improvement District and we had been doing and said it was making a difference.”

New buoy on Hayden Lake guides boats around no-wake-zone.
Watch this boat cut across Lee’s Point, OUTSIDE the 200-ft no-wake-zone.
(Image credit: Gil Rosner)

Building good, cooperative relationships and working within the parameters of the law does take time. And in the course of this effort, we have accomplished more than anchoring 14 buoys to the bottom of the lake. Awareness and community support have blossomed. And we’ve laid some groundwork for continuous improvement in safeguarding the lake and honoring the rights and responsibilities of all of its stakeholders.

I think we’re finished with this project!

Thank you!

https://haydenlakewid.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/New-Nav-Buoy-on-Hayden-Lake.mp4
PrevPreviousHerbicide and Diver Treatments set for Aug 20-25
NextThank you, Pat Lund. Welcome new Board Member, Kristine BartzNext

2 Responses

  1. Bradford J Scacco says:
    August 20, 2020 at 10:25 am

    There are three illegal buoys at Chicken Point, West side. Further around the bay to the Northwest there are two or three more that have been recently added. Can these placements be stopped and will residents who place them be cited? Thanks

    1. Mary Ann Stoll says:
      August 24, 2020 at 12:21 pm

      The Idaho Department of Lands (IDL) has identified five illegal buoys to be removed that were in place before the new buoy installation began. IDL will take note of any new illegal buoys that go in and will respond to them according to their policy and protocol. As we’ve seen, this can include notification and may lead to a citation. The timing and exact response are in their hands.

      The legal buoys have a yellow blinking beacon on the top. Most illegal buoys do not have the beacon light. If you want to report an illegal buoy, Mike Ahmer at IDL, [email protected]. Please provide IDL with a location description. If possible, approximate lat/long coordinates, which can be read from your cell phone, are even better.

Comments are closed.

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

Treatment Map segment shows notification areas around treatment polygons.

2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

Communication Preferences/Opt-out form

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

Communication Preferences/Opt-out form

  • Related Content: Living on Hayden Lake, Recreation
Receive Hayden Lake Watershed News in Your Inbox

About HLWID

The mission of the Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District is to protect and enhance the water quality and the environmental quality within the watershed.

News from the 'Shed

Recent Posts
  • Hayden Creek Area Closed to Shooting Oct. 21-27 ’24
  • Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!
  • Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?
  • 2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted
  • HLWID at the Wooden Boat Show

More to Explore

Categories
  • Blue-Green Algae
  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality

Home

News From the 'Shed

Hayden Creek Area Closed to Shooting Oct. 21-27 ’24

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

More news ...

The District

  • About the HLWID
  • HLWID – District Matters
  • Board of Directors
  • Lake Managers
  • Communication and Public Outreach
  • Monthly Meetings
  • About the HLWID
  • HLWID – District Matters
  • Board of Directors
  • Lake Managers
  • Communication and Public Outreach
  • Monthly Meetings

The Watershed

  • Blue-Green Algae
  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
    • Rights, Permits, Questions, Concerns: Who to Contact
      • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality
  • Blue-Green Algae
  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
    • Rights, Permits, Questions, Concerns: Who to Contact
      • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality

Let's Stay in Touch!

Facebook-f

Sign up for Email Updates

See Our Privacy Policy

Copyright 2025 © All rights reserved, Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District.

Built using Elementor​​.

Monday 4/16, 7:00 p.m.

HLWID Monthly Meeting

HLWID's Monthly Meetings will move to teleconferencing in order to ensure the health and safety of our constituents. For 4/16's meeting, dial 641-715-0861 and enter code 398963# at the prompt. This is a public meeting; all are welcome.