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Fiske Mill Dam The Fiske Mill Dam sits in the Ashuelot River in downtown Hinsdale, New Hampshire. © Jerry Monkman/EcoPhotography
An overhead view of a dam in river meandering through a mill town.
Fiske Mill Dam The Fiske Mill Dam sits in the Ashuelot River in downtown Hinsdale, New Hampshire. © ©Jerry and Marcy Monkman/EcoPhotography

Stories in New Hampshire

Four Ways to Conserve New Hampshire’s Waters for People and Nature

New Hampshire’s rivers and streams once flowed freely, uninterrupted, to the edge of the sea. Today these waterways are choked by more than 2,600 aging dams and 15,000 culverts. River herring and shad no longer return home to spawn, and brook trout struggle to reach cool headwaters. Every storm generates polluted run-off that spills into our waterways. Habitat degradation threatens intact floodplains and the drinking water vital to community health and sustainability. The recent droughts are ominous reminders—we can’t take our freshwater for granted. 

A school of fish.
Every spring, millions of these fish return to the rivers of New England.

The water we depend on depends on us. That's why New Hampshire's Freshwater Program is designed to meet these challenges head-on, ramping up efforts to restore and reconnect our rivers and streams, conserve our critical floodplains, and protect our precious drinking water. Together with our partners, we are currently working across the Granite State to chart a course for healthy waterways using science-based plans for on-the-ground work that benefits people and nature.

1: Restoring River Flows

Did you know that removing a dam can create better recreational opportunities, enhance the ability of fish to move freely up and down stream, improve water quality, and help reduce flood risks? Removing dams also benefits coldwater species like brook trout. Our changing climate is causing warming waters and more frequent droughts, but reconnecting our rivers and streams will help them survive, reproduce and thrive into the future.

There are nearly 3,000 of these manmade barriers disconnecting our waterways across the Granite State. Many are relics of a bygone era, serving no useful purpose except to create undesirable impacts such as blocked fish passage, warming our waters, habitat loss and safety hazards.

We are working to unlock the funding and technical expertise to make dam removal accessible to any individual or community ready to re-connect its waters. Oftentimes, dam removal is generally cheaper than repairing and maintaining old dams indefinitely, and restoration projects can have a positive economic and social impacts.

Water flows over a dam into a river.
Fiske Mill Dam The Fiske Mill Dam sits just above where the Ashuelot River meets the mighty Connecticut River in Hinsdale, New Hampshire. © Charles DeCurtis/TNC

Happening Now

Fiske Mill Dam in Hinsdale

We recently became the owners of the Fiske Mill Dam, which sits 15 miles southwest of Keene on the Ashuelot River just above where it meets the mighty Connecticut River, and we have big plans to remove it. Building upon the successful removal of three other dams on the Ashuelot, the removal of Fiske Mill Dam—coupled with the installation of fish passage at two dams immediately upstream—will reconnect 154 miles of river and stream habitat for migratory fish, resident fish and freshwater mussels.

This project benefits people too, because who doesn't love going canoeing or kayaking on a river? We'll work together with the community to reimagine the space surrounding the dam site to enhance recreational access and quality of life for those who live, work and play in town.

Quote: Dr. Charles DeCurtis

Dam removal can be an important tool in freshwater conservation. With a free-flowing river, we’re going to see improved water quality for people and native biodiversity survival.

Freshwater Manager in New Hampshire

2: Ensuring Healthy Waterways for All

The water we use is directly dependent on the landscapes it flows through. By conserving watersheds—the lands around rivers, lakes and streams—we protect the services that these systems provide. Removing restrictions and upgrading road-stream crossings will enhance public safety while also improving water quality, wildlife habitat, fish passage and coastal resilience. Meanwhile, we must work with our policy makers to advance effective freshwater policy that is informed by the best science available today. Only public policy combined with private and public conservation will effectively address the sustainability of our freshwater future.

Together with communities and partners, TNC’s vision is to conserve New Hampshire’s iconic watersheds so that we can improve water security, enhance communities’ ability to adapt to climate change, promote equitable, inclusive development and restore ecosystems into the future.

Floodwaters flow over a washed out road.
Washed Out The failure of the culvert under Topaz Drive in Barrington, New Hampshire in 2007 trapped residents of the Emerald Acres Cooperative for three days. © Lori Wingate/Emerald Acres Cooperative

Happening Now

Creating Safe Passage Along Topaz Drive in Barrington

Located in Barrington, Topaz Drive is the only road in and out of Emerald Acres Cooperative, a residential community of about 100 homes. The road crosses over the Oyster River using an undersized culvert that is prone to flooding. During the Patriot's Day storm in 2007 the road washed out completely, isolating the community for three days. Protecting this neighborhood from future flooding events like this is why we are working together with the community, town and state to redesign and replace the culvert with a 32-foot bridge.

This new bridge, which will be installed by early October 2023, will reduce the flood vulnerability along Topaz Drive, ensuring the road remains safe and reliable for people as our climate changes and more severe storms occur. Meanwhile, it will also restore free flow to the stream beneath. Currently, most fish can’t move upstream pass the culvert, including American brook trout and American eel. New Hampshire Fish and Game has identified Topaz Drive as the #1 culvert in need of replacement in the entire watershed, noting that the Oyster River watershed has the only known occurrence of American brook lamprey in New Hampshire—a state endangered, critically imperiled species. Improving under-road passage will enhance fish passage by allowing fish like the lamprey to move freely above and below the new structure.

Replacing the culvert is also great for wildlife connectivity. Various wildlife species, including Blanding’s and spotted turtles, will benefit from the increased access to move freely under the road—making this project a triple win!

The importance of this project is underscored by the critical funding it is receiving from a variety of supporters including the Aquatic Resource Mitigation Fund, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Service's Critical Flood Risk Infrastructure Fund, a NHDES Watershed Assistance Grant, the New Hampshire Moose Plate Program and a matching grant made by Emerald Acres Cooperative.

An aerial view of flooded saltmarsh with houses nearby.
Like syrup on a waffle Looking down upon Philbrick Pond and its extensive saltmarsh system: Man-made ditches and berms in the saltmarsh trap water, creating the look of syrup on a waffle. © NH Geospatial Portal

Happening Now

Building Coastal Resilience in North Hampton

We are working with the Town of North Hampton to retrofit a priority tidal crossing to restore more natural tidal flows to Philbrick Pond. Situated on the western side of Ocean Boulevard (Route 1A), the pond is just a stone’s throw from the Atlantic Ocean, connected by Chapel Brook, a tidal waterway that runs under the road through an old stone box culvert. The area is prone to extensive flooding during severe storm events. During the Mother’s Day floods in 2006, more than 40 homes were cut off from evacuation routes and emergency services for more than three days.

The installation of the new, properly sized culvert has allowed for the return of the natural highs and lows as water flows in and out of the pond with the tides. The tidal crossing can also better mitigate flooding during storm events, providing safer passage for people traveling the roadway.

We are also launching a salt marsh restoration planning effort at Philbrick Pond that will incorporate innovative and promising restoration approaches that have yet to be attempted in New Hampshire. This exciting work will address historic ditching and agricultural practices that result in the collapse (die-off) of the salt marsh habitat. “The Philbrick Pond salt marsh is essentially drowning as a result of all the manipulations that occurred there over the last 300 years," says Pete Steckler, formerly of The Nature Conservancy and principal and professional lead for Northeast Conservation Services. "It’s like syrup on a waffle—the salt marsh is the waffle, and the water is the syrup with nowhere to go.”

Due to these past agricultural practices, Philbrick Pond is among the most severely impacted salt marsh systems in the Northeast and offers an amazing opportunity to trial—and potentially scale up—these new restoration approaches. A pilot of the restoration plan is set to begin in spring 2023.

The many funders of this work are a testament to its importance: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NHDES (through both its Coastal Program and a Watershed Assistance Grant), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the NH State Conservation Committee Conservation Moose Plate Grant Program, the Lafferty Family Charitable Foundation and The Nature Conservancy all contributed much-needed dollars to finance the project.

Quote: Rachel Rouillard

Upgrading New Hampshire's culverts and restoring our road-stream crossings benefit nature, people, and cost-effectiveness. There’s a triple bottom line.

Rachel Rouillard State Director in New Hampshire

3: Reviving River Corridors with People, for People (and Nature Too!)

We don’t often think of the land around a river as part of the river itself, but these corridors or “meander zones” are a critical piece of the river’s dynamic system. Historically, we have developed in these river routes and oftentimes the most vulnerable Granite Staters reside in these high-risk river corridors.

Protecting river corridors reduces flood damage by helping rivers reconnect to their floodplains, thereby storing more water during flood events, and decreasing damage to flood-vulnerable structures, our transportation networks and other investments.

As we adapt to the severity of weather events, we need to act to protect those most at risk to flooding while working with nature to increase flood and climate resilience. Protected river corridors would slow the corrosive energy of flood events and minimize impacts downstream, better safeguarding people and our communities as our climate changes.

Four people around a bench next to a river.
Riverside Gathering Visitors explore a trail in the woods along the Merrimack River in Manchester, New Hampshire. © Robert Nua Toy-Gile

Happening Now

Community-Focused Conservation Mapping along the Merrimack River

Together with the Merrimack Conservation Partnership, we are in the early stages of updating the Merrimack Valley Strategic Conservation Plan, last updated in 2014.

This plan will identify opportunities in communities located along the Merrimack River corridor to improve water quality, climate resilience and green spaces. To do this, we are bringing together the best available science and centering community input and feedback.

We’re just getting started and will be talking with community-based organizations and leaders from across the watershed. These will include places like Manchester and Nashua in New Hampshire, as well as Lowell and Lawrence in Massachusetts, to learn directly from the communities we want to include in this mapping process through a strategic and realistic high-level, bi-state engagement process.

Quote: Sheila Vargas Torres

Through listening to, and learning directly from, communities about the ways they view nature and how we can support them in preserving it, we can provide true community-centric, climate-resilient solutions to protect nature.

Community Partnerships Manager

4: Focusing on the Future of Floodplains

Floodplains, the low-lying areas adjacent to our rivers, are one of nature’s secret weapons, acting as sponges to slow, filter, and clean our waters. This “nature-based solution” is the key solution to some of our freshwater challenges.

Because our rivers have been straightened and divorced from their floodplains, New Hampshire’s rivers carry more nutrients and sediments and flow faster and more forcefully, contributing to more serious flooding and poor water quality—an accelerating issue due to climate change.

Investments in nature are cost-effective and have multiple benefits. Not only does floodplain protection and restoration improve flood resiliency and water quality, it increases carbon storage and conserves critical fish and wildlife habitats.

An aerial view of a river flooding over its banks.
Maidstone Bends With Spring comes the rush of snowmelt, flooding the banks of the Upper Connecticut River and inundating the floodplains of Maidstone Bends in New Hampshire and Vermont. © Jeff Lougee/TNC

Happening Now

Re-planting Floodplains in Northern New Hampshire

Thanks to the recent addition of 760 acres of woods, farmland and wetlands, the newly expanded Maidstone Bends Preserve—located along the twisting curves of the Upper Connecticut River in Groveton, New Hampshire—protects drinking water for nearby communities. It also helps link a network of conserved lands across the Northern Appalachians.

Now we're working to restore more than 200 acres of floodplain forest habitat at the preserve. Over the next five to 10 years, TNC will partner with nurseries to grow thousands of native trees and shrubs, which staff and volunteers will plant in the areas most vulnerable to flooding. If the project is successful, it will be the largest active floodplain restoration project in the history of New England.

Quote: Jeff Lougee

Most active floodplains have been converted to other land uses, but we know these places protect water quality, help attenuate floods and provide important wildlife habitat.

Director of Land Management in New Hampshire