Ron Harrison, an avid Manhattan fisherman, remembers a time when Tuttle Creek Lake stretched several miles north of the Randolph Bridge and the fishing, especially catfishing, was good. “Now, there’s only a few times a year, when there’s been a lot of rain and the water is really rolling in, that there’s any water at all north of the Randolph Bridge,” he said. “The whole north end is just a mess — a big, muddy mess.” That “mess” is the most visible sign of sedimentation that threatens the life of the reservoir — as well as the lives of many other lakes — built decades ago mainly to stop devastating flooding. Tuttle Creek also provides water supplies for downstream users, recreation and barge traffic on the Missouri River. Originally called Tuttle Creek Reservoir, it had a surface area of about 16,000 acres and 100 miles of shoreline. It supplies drinking water to more than 40% of Kansas residents, including residents of Manhattan, Topeka, Lawrence, and Kansas City. But it’s shrinking.
Read more: KLC Journal