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It's amazing to me to imagine that this was all underwater, and it will be underwater again soon. TEAL LEHTO: Honestly, I'm kind of speechless, which is really funny for me 'cause I always have something to say. She goes by the name WesternWaterGirl on TikTok, where she makes short videos about the Colorado River. HAGER: Later, a short hike along a muddy creek takes us through a few patches of quicksand before we ultimately arrive at Cathedral in the Desert. NECEFER: Bottom of the ninth and - you know, end of a baseball game, nature is at bat and basically has the final say in what happens. HAGER: As we start to turn the boat away from shallow ground, Necefer says it's a great reminder - as much as humans try to control the natural world around them, even on a huge scale, nature bats last. I think that's the - you know, in a few weeks you'll be able to motor around and go up to, you know, Willow Canyon and all that, but right now it's - yeah, in this, like, sort of crazy zone of transition. He's looking at the messy, muddy delta where the Escalante River meets the reservoir. Len Necefer, founder of the advocacy group Natives Outdoors and a member of the Navajo Nation, is another member of our expedition. HAGER: Stauss is piloting our boat around the blackened tips of cottonwood trees just poking out from under water. STAUSS: Every time you come down here, it's sort of a different game of steering the boat through stuff - kind of exciting, actually, like a little puzzle. But at the same time, when the water draws back, people like Stauss are celebrating what gets revealed, and you can see that change in real time. Now less than a quarter full, it's a harrowing visual reminder that we built a system for watering the West, and that system is on the ropes. HAGER: In the 1960s, engineers flooded Glen Canyon to store water from the Colorado River. You start to see stuff come back on a really unprecedented scale. STAUSS: There are ecosystems that thrive in these side canyons, even when they've been dewatered for just, like, four years. He's leading a hike through a narrow canyon with towering red rock walls. HAGER: Jack Stauss with the Glen Canyon Institute invited this group to come see Lake Powell at the lowest it's been since 1968. JACK STAUSS: I call this the moon zone 'cause it's kind of like going to the moon every time. So before the spring rise, KUNC's Alex Hager met up with a crew of adventurers to document the historic moment.ĪLEX HAGER, BYLINE: When it comes to Lake Powell lately, it's like the old saying goes - the only constant is change. Earlier this year, it was at a record low. The nation's second-largest reservoir on the Colorado River needs the water. This year, Lake Powell is going to get a big boost from melting snow.
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