I think it’s an opportunity to make structural changes and shape that peak like the German Engineers we all know. It will be back better than ever.
It will be fine.
Instream River Training: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instream_River_Training
River engineering: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_engineering
From an email for a company ( https://desertcontrol.com ) that specializes in reducing irrigation needs and fertilizing especially sandy soil with silt and LNC Liquid Natural Clay :
> "Schauberger's Legacy: The Water Technology Revolution Powered by Vortex Force" https://youtube.com/watch?v=N_58gtKlfsI
- [Instream River Training], - Microgroins, - Control the river from the middle of it, not with the banks, - Hyperbolic funnels aerate, - Vacuum kills bacteria, - Chemical free water treatment, - Oxygenating or aerating water makes it more fertilizing
I'm not that good with hydrodynamics, but since they say nothing structural changed during the cleanup, could it be how quickly they brought the flow back up?
[1]: https://www.stern.de/sport/sportwelt/eisbachwelle--so-funkti...
This is classic turbulent/laminar behaviour, driven by Reynolds number - the volume, the flow rate, the shape of the vessel.
I actually did a hydrodynamics project around this 20 odd years ago as a first year undergrad - one thing I noted was that I had to open valves slowly - any sudden acceleration could dramatically alter the threshold at which one would transition from laminar to turbulent flow, and you could only get back to the laminar regime by entirely stopping the flow, and bringing it back up, slowly.
We had to repair our wave every few years. Munich does it similarly. Many good waves are now destroyed, because the repair became troublesome. In Munich they already destroyed their 2nd wave, Flosslände, and the third, the best but deadly one directly in the river is forbidden. In Graz we had 5. Montreal also has more. Boisy is good. Swiss and French also have some.
https://iprpraha.cz/uploads/assets/dokumenty/sharing_experie...