Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

No cookies to display.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

No cookies to display.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

No cookies to display.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

No cookies to display.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

No cookies to display.

From staff reports

Two area state fish hatcheries, one in Wexford County and another in Benzie County, are among five to benefit this year from the installation of new solar arrays, according to Dan Sampson, regional hatchery manager of Michigan Department of Natural Resources’ Fisheries Division.

Other state fish hatcheries receiving solar arrays are located in Emmet, Schoolcraft and Van Buren counties.

Fish hatcheries are facilities where “fish eggs are hatched and fry (baby fish) are raised,” according to information found on the hatcheries’ page of MDNR’s website.  (The Little Manistee River Weir in Manistee County, which blocks the passage of fish in order to harvest their eggs but does not raise the fry, is not a fish hatchery.)

Advertisement for Stapleton Realty. The heading reads Outdoor Enthusiasts. There is a photo of a new-looking pole building with a tall bay door and a regular entry door. There is a cement pad with a picnic table in front of it. The ground is flat and there is a line of evergreen trees behind the building. The description reads: 2 Acres. Minutes to Crystal Mountain. 37-foot by 47-foot pole building on the Benzie Manistee snowmobile and A.T.V. trail. Finished inside. Well and septic and a full camper hook up. Insulated, Paneled and heated 29-foot by 28-foot shop area with an exhaust fan and a new furnace. 12-foot side walls and a 10-foot bay door. 14-foot by 8-foot heated, carpeted office or bunk area and a shower in the bathroom. Also a utility room with a utility sink and washer and dryer hook ups. near the Betsie River and M-115. $189,900. m.l.s. number is 1926929. Contact Christine Stapleton on her mobile phone by text or call. 231-499-2698. Click on this ad to be taken to the website. Equal Housing Opportunity. Designated REALTOR.Advertisement for Gasoline ReFind of Bear Lake reads: Reopening on March 15. Open Saturdays until Memorial Weekend. Open Friday and Saturday from Memorial Day Weekend through Labor Day. Vintage resale shopping. Owners Scott and Lynn Brown. Located on Erdman Road, Bear lake, between Potter and 13 Mile roads. Shop online anytime at gasolinerefind dot com. Click on this ad to be taken to the website. Call us at 231-238-3801. Google us.Advertisement for the Oliver Art Center. Classes, Events and Exhibits. She: Honoring Women in Art. Exhibit runs through March 28. Piece Work: Gee's Bend Quilts, Exhibit runs through March 21. Poets' Houses in Pastels and Ceramics. Exhibit runs March 28 thru April 26. Artifactory Poetry Class and Reading. Class meets March 15. Reading is April 26. Anne-Marie Oomen and Linda Foster Book Presentation: The Lake Huron Mermaid. Free program april 9 at 2 p.m. Annual Regional Student Exhibition. Exhbit runs April 4 thru April 30. Music, Art and Fun on the Shores of Betsie Bay, 132 Coast Guard Road, Frankfort, Michigan. Click here to be taken to the website.

Writing in “Today’s MI Environment”, a publication of Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources, Sampson stated that a sixth state fish hatchery in Marquette is shaded by hills and trees and will not receive one of the six solar arrays slated for installation this year.

Here comes the sun

Sampson explained that advancements in solar technology coincided with bipartisan support from the State of Michigan’s executive and legislative branches. This made the acquisition of solar arrays a timely solution to energy costs at the hatcheries.

“The investment is substantial,” Sampson wrote. “It is expected to produce 652,000 kilowatt hours per year, offsetting 16% of the overall hatchery electrical needs, saving the DNR almost $2.5 million over the next 25 years.”

State hatcheries with solar arrays will remain on their existing electrical grids but rely less on them.

Area state hatcheries receiving solar arrays

Harrietta State Fish Hatchery, located on 30 Road in Wexford County, will receive one of three larger solar arrays. After its installation toward the end of April, the array is expected to produce 189.24 kilowatts and offset 18% of the main hatchery’s electrical power needs for an annual cost savings of $19,700.

The Harrietta hatchery began operating in 1901 and is the state’s oldest operational facility, according to a statement on the state’s tourism (“Pure Michigan”) website. The hatchery rears mainly inland rainbow trout and inland and Lake Michigan brown trout.

Platte River State Fish Hatchery, located at U.S. Highway 31 near County Road 669 in Benzie County, will be given one of the smaller arrays, to be installed by the end of May. The ground-based array is expected to produce 125.5 kilowatts for the main hatchery and offset 12% of its electrical power needs for an approximate savings of $13,000 per year.

According to statements found on the state’s tourism website, the Platte River hatchery was founded in 1928 and since 1972 has been the state’s main rearing facility for chinook, coho and Atlantic salmon.

Other state hatcheries ‘going solar’

Two more arrays (one large, one small) will be installed at Oden State Fish Hatchery, in addition to its existing 6-kilowatt array. The hatchery is located near Alanson in Emmet County. Sampson wrote that “…significant funding for this (existing) array was provided by the Frey Family Fund via the Charlevoix County Community Foundation and Friends of Oden Hatchery.”

Another (a large array) will go to Wolf Lake State Fish Hatchery in Mattawan in Van Buren County. The final installation will take place at the Thompson State Fish Hatchery in Manistique in the Upper Peninsula.

Harvest Solar will install the solar arrays.

More information on the DNR’s fish hatcheries and weirs is found at: Michigan.gov/Hatcheries.  Read the full story by Dan Sampson: “Sunny days ahead: solar power coming to DNR state fish hatcheries”

RELATED STORY:

Falling water, shining sun

 

Write A Comment