THE BIG STORY Sunday, October 23, 2016 | magicvalley.com | SECTION B
PART 1 The Perrine Coulee snakes through the College of Southern Idaho campus Oct. 6 on its way to a dramatic plunge into the Snake River Canyon. COURTESY OF CHANCE MUNNS, COLLEGE OF SOUTHERN IDAHO
COULEE COURSE Exploring the Perrine Coulee’s hidden route through Twin Falls VIRGINIA HUTCHINS
Perrine Coulee in Twin Falls
About this project Today’s stories are the first in a three-part project by Enterprise Editor Virginia Hutchins and reporters Heather Kennison and Tetona Dunlap, exploring many of the ways the Perrine Coulee affects Twin Falls life as it Hutchins flows through the city.
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On Magicvalley.com, explore the Perrine Coulee’s route through Twin Falls with Digital Editor Matthew Gooch’s interactive tour, featuring videos and 360-degree images.
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Watch for the second installment Oct. 30, as the reporting moves downstream. Among other topics that day, the reporting team will describe memorable floods, development regulation and some of the people who live, work or play along the coulee.
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WIN FALLS — That trashy T ditch behind a shopping center. That stream along a college walking path. That gorgeous waterfall over the canyon rim. Connect the dots and you have the Perrine Coulee, a natural stream put to work more than a century ago as a farmland irrigation channel for the Twin Falls Canal Co. Throughout much of the growing city that engulfed it, the Perrine Coulee is easy to overlook until flooding or tragedy demands attention. But the coulee dictates the shape of neighborhoods, enhances parks, irrigates school lawns and attracts wildlife. It complicates commercial development and contributes sediments to the Snake River’s pollution problem. And its dramatic plunge into the Snake River Canyon has been the backdrop for a classic photo setting since the tourists rode horses. This is no ordinary ditch. Before the irrigators transformed the sagebrush desert, this small stream had headwaters on the Hansen Butte between Hansen and Murtaugh. It ran just a few months of the year,
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Kat Wagner, Lee Enterprises
carrying runoff across the basalt plain’s gentle slope toward the Snake River. “It was so insignificant that most early explorers and inhabitants either missed it or ignored it, yet it drained some 22,000 acres of sagebrush grassland,” Niels Sparre Nokkentved writes in “A Forest of Wormwood,” his history of the Twin Falls Canal Co. The company incorporated the Perrine Coulee by building a
check dam on the Low Line Canal south of Hansen, where the Low Line intersects the coulee. Now the coulee delivers water from the Low Line to laterals that irrigate farmland between Kimberly and Twin Falls and to pressurized irrigation customers in Twin Falls. The coulee also catches return flows from those irrigators, using the water two or three times as it passes through. Please see COULEE, Page B2
PAT SUTPHIN PHOTOS, TIMES-NEWS
Sally Carlson, right, and her husband, Bobby Carlson, cross the Perrine Coulee Oct. 1 on the Snake River Canyon rim trail. RIGHT: This fence on the north side of Fourth Avenue East, pictured Aug. 18, was one of Laura Baxter’s projects to keep children away from the Perrine Coulee after her 2-year-old daughter drowned in 1992. Now the fence is in disrepair.
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MORE INSIDE: Fencing grew from tragedy, B2 | How clean is that water? B4 | Remembering Harmon Park fishing derbies, B3