Dropping Water Elevels
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 7:27 am
Been fishing on the lake for about a year now, and watching the water level drop over 12 feet in less than a month, I was concerned. Water gage shows that the level is the same so I inquired, and this is the answer they gave me..
"On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 6:53 AM, Ronald L Rickman wrote:
Good morning,
The USGS operates this gage for the State Department of Land and Natural Resources for flood warning purposes. Our primary water-level sensor is out of water at 68.86 feet. We can't put it lower because there is nothing solid to attach the sensor to and the sensor has to be able to survive a major flood without any movement. We do have a down-looking radar water level sensor we use as a back-up that reads much lower but is prone to reporting large, erroneous spikes if floating debris, boats, etc interfere with the signal. We certainly don't want to show false high values on the web that might trigger an unnecessary evacuation downstream. FYI, the water-level reported from the radar unit this morning at 5:45 a.m. HST was 67.43 feet (provisional data, subject to revision). The 6:00 a.m. water level showed 98.52 feet, a false spike due to interference from debris. The spillway elevation is 80.00 feet so you can see why we don't want to show a false spike 18.52 feet higher than the spillway!
The USGS has no involvement with day to day operation of the reservoir so we're unable to answer your other questions. "
"On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 6:53 AM, Ronald L Rickman wrote:
Good morning,
The USGS operates this gage for the State Department of Land and Natural Resources for flood warning purposes. Our primary water-level sensor is out of water at 68.86 feet. We can't put it lower because there is nothing solid to attach the sensor to and the sensor has to be able to survive a major flood without any movement. We do have a down-looking radar water level sensor we use as a back-up that reads much lower but is prone to reporting large, erroneous spikes if floating debris, boats, etc interfere with the signal. We certainly don't want to show false high values on the web that might trigger an unnecessary evacuation downstream. FYI, the water-level reported from the radar unit this morning at 5:45 a.m. HST was 67.43 feet (provisional data, subject to revision). The 6:00 a.m. water level showed 98.52 feet, a false spike due to interference from debris. The spillway elevation is 80.00 feet so you can see why we don't want to show a false spike 18.52 feet higher than the spillway!
The USGS has no involvement with day to day operation of the reservoir so we're unable to answer your other questions. "