Las Vegas Review-Journal

Heading to Lake Mead this weekend? Bring a life jacket — and patience

Lake launch ramps limited for a busy holiday weekend

- By Blake Apgar Las Vegas Review-journal

LAKE Mead National Recreation Area officials are calling for patience from boaters as the park experience­s one of its busiest weekends of the year. That’s because declining water levels stemming from a two-decade drought have affected launch ramps on the lake.

“As lanes get reduced, we’re not able to have as many people launch at one time as we can,” park Chief of Staff Greg Hauburger said. “So just be prepared and be patient. We’re doing the best we can. We’ve got some great maintenanc­e crews doing a great job to keep all the launch locations accessible.”

This year, the Colorado River Basin is projected to experience its second-driest year in more than a century of record- keeping, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n said. The driest

Declining water levels brought on by the drought have forced Hemenway Harbor to close.

year on record was 2002.

Declining water levels brought on by the drought have forced Hemenway Harbor to close, Hauburger said.

“And we’re pushing people to Boulder Harbor for the next couple weeks while we do some temporary constructi­on with pipe mats to extend the launch ramp,” he said.

But in the next month or two, the water at Boulder Harbor is expected to drop to a level that would cut off access to a channel, leaving boaters with no way to enter or exit the harbor.

Temple Bar and South Cove, which typically have two launch lanes open, have been reduced to one lane, Hauburger said.

Visitors should check the lake’s website, nps.gov/lake, for updated launch ramp conditions, he said.

Once visitors do make it out on the water, the best way to stay safe is to wear a life jacket, said Nick Duhe, a boating education coordinato­r for the Nevada Department of Wildlife.

The other major safety factor, he said, is avoiding drinking and boating.

“Just don’t do it,” he said. “Wait until you get home.”

Duhe also encouraged visitors to take a boating education course, if time allows. Such courses are required for Nevada boaters born after Jan. 1, 1983, he said. But those who are not required to take a course would still benefit, even if they are seasoned boaters, he said.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Jet skiers check out Hoover Dam while tooling around on the water Thursday at Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Jet skiers check out Hoover Dam while tooling around on the water Thursday at Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
 ??  ?? Declining water levels at Lake Mead brought on by the drought forced Hemenway Harbor to close, a park official said, pushing people to Boulder Harbor.
Declining water levels at Lake Mead brought on by the drought forced Hemenway Harbor to close, a park official said, pushing people to Boulder Harbor.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? L.E. Baskow Jordyn Cruz, 4, sister Makenna, 2, and their father, Chad, feed the fish Thursday from the dock at Las Vegas Boat Harbor at Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images L.E. Baskow Jordyn Cruz, 4, sister Makenna, 2, and their father, Chad, feed the fish Thursday from the dock at Las Vegas Boat Harbor at Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

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