| Note: All photo dates
are incorrect due to malfunction of FERC's digital camera. Click
on thumbnail for larger image. |

Photo 28. The white line at the base of the hills is
the concrete-sack seawalls used for shoreline stabilization. Seawall
construction should generally not be permitted under
the current license. |

Photo 29. Tri-County (Central) Supply Canal at SR 47
(Hiles Canyon Road), milemarker 41.1 on the Tri-County Supply
Canal. Licensee
is considering constructing a dike and culverts which
would close off the heavily silted-in cove area for
construction access from one side of the water to the
other. (Photo 1 of 4 of left-to-right panorama.) |
Panorama photo 2 of 4 (left-to-right). |
Photo 3 of 4 of left-to-right panorama. |
Photo 4 of 4 of left-to-right panorama. |
Photo 30. Johnson Lake public
education display. |

Photo 31. Shore stations, boats, trailers, gardens
and vehicles are unpermitted on project lands designated
as open space. This
example is from the Johnson Lake area. |

Photo 32. Gardens, purple loosestrife in flowerbeds,
sheds, dump piles, abandoned vehicles and equipment, plastic
containers, and makeshift structures are all examples
of unpermitted encroachments on project lands designated
as open space. This
example comes from the Johnson Lake area. |

Photo 33. Example of unpermitted large woodpiles, boat
trailers, storage structures, and gardens on project lands
designated as open space. This example comes from the
Johnson Lake area. |

Photo 34. Cantilevered house (new construction) extends
over the side lot setback (middle of photo). Small,
existing cabin is on left. |

Photo 35. Permit slips displayed on the side of this
building, as required by licensee's permitting procedures,
show what construction work is being done. Small, existing
cabin is on the left. |

Photo 36. Example of mowing, decorations, lighting,
and shoreline encroachments. The
actual lots for these homes end approximately at the back patios. This
example is from the Merriweather subdivision at Johnson Lake. |

Photo 37. The private roadway to the five cabins on
project lands at Midway (west) at the siphonic spillway. The
landowners charge rent for access across their land to
the five cabins. |

Photo 38. Discovered during the Land and Shoreline
Management Plan's Project Boundary Survey, these five cabins
are on project lands, within the Midway Recreation and Wildlife
Club, which holds a lease with the licensee. At
this time, the cabin renters are trespassers. |

Photo 39. Wetland area at Jeffrey Island. False
indigo is being eradicated by goats. |

Photo 40. Jeffrey Island. |

Photo 41. This area of Jeffrey Island has very little
musk thistle now, and grasses are beginning to grow. |

Photo 42. View of the nature of the open grazing area
at Jeffrey Island. |

Photo 43. More than 1,800 goats are being used for
vegetation management on Jeffrey Island. Two Great
Pyrenees dogs guard the herd from predators. |

Photo 44. Cattle, more than 300, are being used for
musk thistle and other vegetative management on Jeffrey
Island. The
cows and calves are moved quickly and efficiently
using an electric fence corral system. They
were on the western side of the island at the time
of the inspection. |
|