Stunning history. I love the approach to conservation that has been taken, it is not about excluding people, it is about caring reasonably. I do not live anywhere near Utah, but I will do my best to keep this in mind wherever I go. I hope there has been some positive growth in the June Sucker population and next time I am driving up the freeway heading north, I will be sure to stop through. Mistakes were made in history, I am grateful that people are working to correct those the best they can. Amazing state, I always love traveling through and never seem to stay long enough.
This lake is gross though... Also when it rains the neighbors' lands flood. It needs to be deeper and more clean. Probably making it deeper and removing its algae would help a ton with some of the problems
This lake is a cesspool. I'm blown away people will set foot in it. It's utterly destroyed now. I spent many days on that lake in the 80s and it was nasty then. It's 10x worse now.
@@utahlakeauthority I do hope it can somewhat recover, I just see nothing but growth around the lake, and the fact it's so warm and shallow with toxic algae blooms I don't see anything improving, but I hope I'm proven wrong. Thank you for your hard work either way.
@@hunternielson4187 yes, it is what's left of Bonneville, but so is every natural lake in the basin. When the native Americans were in that area, it was still pristine, with trout and other fish. Man has destroyed many a gem on this planet.
Every lake when it were just the natives was prestine! Nevermind utah lake is probably more shallow then any other left behind. I've been fishing that lake since the 80s only thing wrong with me is my belly glows at night. Keeps me from stubbing my pinky toe... Regardless there's only 2 types of people in this world... The ones who can't and the ones that will. We all play apart in the lakes future, which kinda person are you?
This was a great gem to find. I'll be heading to the lake more often 😃
Stunning history. I love the approach to conservation that has been taken, it is not about excluding people, it is about caring reasonably. I do not live anywhere near Utah, but I will do my best to keep this in mind wherever I go. I hope there has been some positive growth in the June Sucker population and next time I am driving up the freeway heading north, I will be sure to stop through. Mistakes were made in history, I am grateful that people are working to correct those the best they can. Amazing state, I always love traveling through and never seem to stay long enough.
Such an awesome lake and area!!
This lake is gross though... Also when it rains the neighbors' lands flood. It needs to be deeper and more clean. Probably making it deeper and removing its algae would help a ton with some of the problems
Such a shame its such a cesspool today. Granted its better than it was 40 years ago, but its still nasty.
Wish we could have more enforcement with trash left behind.
Agreed! And they don't put trash bins around the picnic areas, so people just leave their trash!
Building codes need to get rid of mow strips for lawns. I think the overspray of fertilizer has a huge impact to the lake and the algae problem now.
Such a shame Utah allowed Geneva to trash it
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When will Utah valley make enough money that it will decide to fix its lake?
No, no, they pray to God, so they won't have to do anything.
That’s where our sewage goes!
Install a few huge filters, then ppl might use it
Why not dredge the whole lake ? It is a proven fact that dredging is good for fish
The ignorance behind this comment...
This lake is a cesspool. I'm blown away people will set foot in it. It's utterly destroyed now. I spent many days on that lake in the 80s and it was nasty then. It's 10x worse now.
@@utahlakeauthority I do hope it can somewhat recover, I just see nothing but growth around the lake, and the fact it's so warm and shallow with toxic algae blooms I don't see anything improving, but I hope I'm proven wrong. Thank you for your hard work either way.
@@utahlakeauthority thanks, I hope it yields results. Thank you again for your work with this. Take care.
Basically it's what left of a giant lake... Ya basically a cesspool. But takes all of us to do our part in making better!
@@hunternielson4187 yes, it is what's left of Bonneville, but so is every natural lake in the basin. When the native Americans were in that area, it was still pristine, with trout and other fish. Man has destroyed many a gem on this planet.
Every lake when it were just the natives was prestine! Nevermind utah lake is probably more shallow then any other left behind. I've been fishing that lake since the 80s only thing wrong with me is my belly glows at night. Keeps me from stubbing my pinky toe... Regardless there's only 2 types of people in this world... The ones who can't and the ones that will. We all play apart in the lakes future, which kinda person are you?
The Mormons introduced carp into the lake which destroyed a lot of the fishing in the lake.
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Those in Provo prayed to God, so they would not have to take care of Utah Lake. That worked out well.