Category Archives: Wildlife

Flows Increase In American River

The American River is flowing higher through Sacramento today, part of a federal effort to help young salmon at risk during the drought.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation doubled water releases from Nimbus Dam from 500 cubic feet per second to 1,000 cfs. The increase began Wednesday night and is expected to reach 1,000 cfs before returning to 500 cfs just before midnight today.

Biologists call the release a “pulse flow.” It is intended to help some of the wild-spawned fall-run chinook salmon eggs that became dewatered in their gravel nests, or redds, when Reclamation reduced flows in January. That action was taken to conserve water stored in Folsom Reservoir for Sacramento-area communities.

It turns out that not all of those stranded salmon eggs perished as the river shrank. Tom Gohring, executive director of the Sacramento Water Forum, said many were able to survive on the small amounts of water and oxygen that remained within the gravel and hatched into “alevins,” a kind of embryo life stage. The pulse flow is intended to wash those alevins into the river so they can transform into fry, the first finned stage of salmon life.

More at SacBee.com >>>

California Snowpack Still Well Below Normal

California’s Department of Water Resources said Thursday its latest survey shows the Sierra Nevada snowpack is still well below normal — which is bad news for the drought-stricken state.

The survey was done as the first of two back-to-back Pacific storms lightly blanketed the Sierra with fresh snow.

The department said manual and electronic readings show the snowpack’s statewide water content at 24 percent of average for the date.

“It’s just a reflection of the fact that what storms do come through are fairly modest,” snow survey chief Frank Gehrke said. “And then the blocking high-pressure ridge sets back in almost as soon as they’ve left the state.”

The northern and central Sierra snowpack provides about a third of California’s water supply.

More snow is expected from the week’s second and more powerful storm, which is expected to arrive late Thursday and last into Saturday.

Gehrke said such storms are still far from enough to end the drought.

“We’d need 15 or 20 of them — and that’s just not in the cards,” he said.

Rainwater streamed across the parking lot and down the boat ramp at Folsom Lake on Thursday afternoon.

The lake level has risen by more than 6 inches in the past 48 hours, but the reservoir remains about 70 percent empty.

More at KCRA.com >>>

Estimate To Acquire Private Land, Construct Sacramento Riverfront Trail — $14.5 million

Hop on a bike at Discovery Park just north of downtown Sacramento, and it’s clear riding along the scenic banks of the American River all the way to Folsom.

Heading south along the Sacramento River? You’d better bring a map.

But after years of debates and delays, Sacramento city officials said Tuesday they have finally identified 110 pieces of private land they need to acquire in the Pocket, Greenhaven and Little Pocket neighborhoods to create a riverfront trail stretching from downtown to the city’s southern border. The city also has an estimate for how much that property acquisition and construction of the path would cost: $14.5 million.

“I believe in public access,” said Councilman Darrell Fong, who represents the Pocket and has worked to develop the riverfront plan for three years. “You can’t tell me having access on the rivers all the way to Folsom wouldn’t be an attribute for people who live here.”

This is a debate that has raged in the city’s riverfront neighborhoods for decades. The discussion was resurrected at City Hall every few years, only to be shelved when the attention turned toward the controversial task of purchasing easements along the river levee from property owners who have staked claims to the waterfront.

Even today, many homeowners are defiant of the plan, saying they would rather move than sell a part of their backyards for a riverfront trail. City officials said they may use eminent domain to acquire land from the holdouts.

“No one is selling,” said Rosie Walker, who has lived in a home backing up to the Sacramento River in the Pocket for 50 years. “I don’t want to live here with people looking down into my kitchen windows or living room. Who wants people looking into their home?”

Other neighborhood residents support the concept.

“It’s a beautiful walk along the river and then you hit those gates,” said Greenhaven resident Chris Thoma. “I realize there were a lot of reasons things were set up the way they were, but it’s odd.”

More than a dozen supporters of the plan attended a City Council hearing Tuesday night, describing a neighborhood that is eager to reclaim access to a natural amenity.

“We’re concerned that the progress has been painfully slow,” former Mayor and Councilwoman Anne Rudin told the council.

Mary de Beauvieres, a principal planner with the city’s parks department, said the city will begin contacting homeowners along the river over the next two months to determine how many are willing to sell.

For now, public riverfront access in south Sacramento is broken into clusters of fenced-off stretches and unpaved levee trails. A paved bike path runs from downtown to the Westin Sacramento on Riverside Boulevard, where it suddenly ends.

From there, cyclists, joggers and walkers are forced to maneuver into the quiet Little Pocket neighborhood or travel along Riverside Boulevard for nearly a mile before a paved riverfront trail starts up again. But that path ends again after a short stretch in Greenhaven, blocked to the public by gates and chain-link fences.

Councilman Steve Hansen, who represents the Little Pocket, said public safety is the chief concern of his constituents who live along the river. Hansen said one longtime resident was attacked on the levee behind his home.

As a result, Hansen said he wants the riverfront trail to bypass Little Pocket and instead has proposed creating a two-lane protected bike path along Riverside Boulevard from the Westin to Greenhaven.

“I know some people feel righteous about wanting this, but it has to meet the reality of the facts on the ground,” Hansen said in an interview. “We need to investigate whether there’s an alternate route that’s a better use of public resources. If we really wanted this, we should have long ago purchased those properties.”

Fong said the city would try to ease public safety concerns. He said the park would be closed at night and that the city would explore increasing patrols by park rangers.

In the meantime, city officials are confident they’ll succeed in coming up with the funding for the trail.

De Beauvieres, the city parks planner, said the California State Lands Commission administers grants for local governments building access to waterways. That money can be used only to buy property from willing sellers.

More at MercedSunStar.com >>>

California Bans Fishing On Part Of American River Near Folsom Amidst Drought

California has banned all fishing on a section of the American River near Folsom to help protect fish populations.

The concern is there is not enough water for them to migrate and spawn.

The emergency regulations went into effect this week, complete with signs up-and-down the river.

Some fishermen said they saw the signs and turned around, but not everyone is playing by the rules.

“We were actually next to a couple,” American River visitor Janel Halteh said.  “We actually saw them. There was a big fish that they had caught.”

More at NBCSanDiego.com >>>

Drought Could Leave Folsom Lake Levels Too Low To Pump To Residents


Federico Barajas is keeping a close eye on water levels on Folsom Lake.

“We continue to hope for the best, but plan for the worst under the circumstances and the drought we are in today,” he said.

That’s why the man who oversees water deliveries at Folsom Dam is keeping a close eye on Folsom Lake. It provides water for Folsom, Roseville and Granite Bay.

“That is a very critical water supply delivery that we have, given that the cities surrounding this facility rely upon that water,” he said.

If the lake level, which is at historic lows, drops close to the intake valve at 320 feet, water from the lake can’t get into the tubes to be pumped to people who need it.

Before the last big rain earlier this month, Folsom Lake got as low as 355 feet, getting dangerously close to the 320-foot level of the intake, where the intake would suck air instead of water.

More at CBSLocal.com >>>

Army Corps Seeks Feedback On Raising Folsom Dam

Right now, Folsom Lake’s water levels are at historic lows because of a third consecutive dry winter. But federal officials say in the future, when we get way too much rain and snow, the reservoir won’t be able to hold all the water. That’s why the dam needs to be raised by 3.5 feet.

Specifically, the plan calls for raising all of the dykes, the Mormon Island Auxiliary Dam and the right and left wings of the main dam. It’s a long term project and construction wouldn’t start for another two years.

In a separate project, Folsom Dam is getting new flood-control gates designed to release water quicker during a flood. The steel gates were built in Oregon and are scheduled to arrive later this month.

The meeting on the dam raise project will be held Wednesday from 5 to 7 PM at the Folsom Community Center.

From CapRadio.org >>>

Eppie’s Great Race Considers Change Of Venue

Facing the very real possibility of an extremely low American River flow in July, the organizers of the 41st Eppie’s Great Race are considering using Lake Natoma for the paddle portion of the triathlon.

Eppie’s Great Race is scheduled for July 19 this year, and without substantially more rain this season, the American River may have very limited flows by race time.

The race features a 5.8-mile run and 12.5-mile cycle that usually ends with a 6.4-mile paddle down the American River.

More at BizJournals.com >>>

Folsom Lake Rises 20 Feet In 4 Days

Folsom Lake continues to rise as creeks and rivers flowing into the reservoir surge with runoff after days of rainfall.

Since the start of the storm Friday, the lake has risen 20 feet, according to data from the California Department of Water Resources.The lake saw its greatest gains about 4 p.m. Sunday when flows into the lake peaked at 30,000 cubic-feet-per-second. Since then, flows have been decreasing.On Sunday alone, the lake rose 10 feet.

Over the four-day period, the lake added roughly 84,000 acre-feet of water, nearly a quarter of the lake’s current content.

This weekend’s storm brought much-needed rain to the drought-stricken area, but experts say it will take much more before the region can close the deficit left by months of abnormally dry weather.

More at KCRA.com >>>

Giant New Floodgates Soon To Arrive At Folsom Dam

After six years of construction, a momentous event is expected later this month at the new flood-control spillway being built at Folsom Dam: The steel flood-control gates – the mechanical heart of the project – will begin to arrive for installation.

This event will be hard to miss, because the gates are so large that 600 miles of roadway between Folsom and Portland, Ore., will have to be closed – in legs – as they make their way south. The journey will require 18 separate shipments.

The billion-dollar project at Folsom Dam, funded mostly by federal taxpayers, is intended to double the dam’s flood-protection rating to shield the Sacramento region from the biggest storms on the American River. In a drought year as bad as this one, it may be hard to imagine the need for this capacity. But it hasn’t been that long since the current dam’s limits were revealed. In 1986, the reservoir overfilled and flood-control officials were briefly forced to release more water than downstream levees were rated to withstand. Sacramento narrowly avoided disaster.

Although construction has been underway since 2008, most of the work has gone unnoticed except to residents near the project site and regular visitors to the lake. The delivery of the gates will change that, because it will require extended road closures throughout the region.

There are six main gates in the new spillway, designed to release water earlier and faster during a flood. Each assembled steel gate is about 40 feet long, 45 feet tall and 30 feet wide.

Imagine 12 school buses strapped together in a cube, three wide and four high, and you begin to get an idea of the challenges involved in transporting each gate.

“It’ll be pretty interesting, pretty spectacular, for them to be moving something this large down from Oregon,” said Rick Johnson, executive director of the Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency, which is funding the local share of the project through property taxes. “I anticipate it’ll be similar logistics to moving the space shuttle.”

The primary contractor on this phase of the spillway project is Granite Construction Co. of Watsonville, which holds a $125 million contract from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to build the gate-control structure. This massive structure is equivalent to building a whole new dam. It is as tall as the Statue of Liberty and requires enough steel to build two-and-a-half Eiffel Towers.

The steel gates were fabricated at Oregon Iron Works in Clackamas under a separate $45 million contract. The first road shipment will be made this month. The exact timing of the deliveries isn’t known yet, but the contractors are working with Caltrans, the California Highway Patrol and local governments on the details. They plan to alert residents through the news media when the shipments occur.

There are actually two gates for each of the six openings in the new spillway. The primary gate, called a tainter gate, rotates in an arc to control water releases into the new spillway. These gates are exposed to water pressure from the reservoir at all times. The secondary structure, called a bulkhead gate, is installed just upstream of the tainter gates. It is a flat panel that is lowered into a slot only when it is necessary to access the tainter gates for maintenance.

Each bulkhead gate is about as wide as two highway lanes and will be shipped in one piece, one at a time. The tainter gates are bigger – about three lanes wide. These will be shipped in two pieces: one trip for each gate’s girder framework, and another for each gate’s curved steel face. That makes a total of 18 truck trips.

Because Interstate 5 is only two lanes wide over most of its length, it will be necessary to close the highway entirely when the gates are delivered. The closures will occur only at night, said Army Corps project manager Katie Huff, and the trucks will lay over during the day. There are a number of well-known choke points along the way that could cause traffic delays, even at night, such as bridges over the Yolo Bypass and Shasta Reservoir.

A drive that normally takes a car about nine hours will instead take a couple of weeks for each shipment, Huff said. As a result, it will take months to deliver all the gates. By May, all the parts are expected to be on-site at the spillway construction area, where they will be assembled and lowered into place with a giant crane.

“This is a huge milestone,” said Rep. Doris Matsui, D-Sacramento, who has worked to secure federal funding for the project, including another $70 million in the new appropriations bill passed by the House in January. “It’s quite remarkable, and those gates are huge. I think it’s something people are really going to stop and look at.”

Once off Interstate 5, the gates will be trucked east on Interstate 80. Then they will travel along Madison Avenue to Greenback Lane, Folsom-Auburn Road and Folsom Lake Crossing to reach the construction site. Closures will be required on all these roads, as well.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Sacramento Rainfall Record For Date Set; Folsom Lake Rises Over Two Feet

Downtown Sacramento beat the record for the most rain in a 24-hour period for the date on Saturday, posting 1.29 inches.

The previous record for Feb. 8 of 1.17 inches was set in 1985.

Several other nearby cities also received a lot of moisture from this storm, which started Wednesday night.

Auburn Dam Ridge reported getting 7 inches of precipitation, while Placerville received 6.34 inches. Newcastle posted 5.04 inches of rain, while Orangevale recorded 4.10 inches.

“Folsom Lake has risen two to three feet so far from this system,” said Stefanie Henry, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento.

And this storm isn’t done yet.

“We’re expecting 0.5 to 0.75 inches tonight into Monday for Sacramento,” said Henry.

Similar amounts of rainfall are expected for Marysville, although Auburn may get up to an inch of rain before the storm passes.

“This is the heaviest one we have in terms of rainfall this season,” said Henry. “It’s a significant storm, and it’s not over yet.”

A flash flood warning for the area where the American fire burned was allowed to expire Sunday when the heaviest rain rates – up to an inch an hour – shifted south and east.

“It did happen but we haven’t heard of any flooding because of it,’ said Henry.

“In Sacramento, we are starting to see significant rises in small creeks, with local flooding, and water ponding,” she said.

The California Highway Patrol was busy Sunday responding to reports of roadway flooding in the Auburn and Placerville areas.

The wet weather is due to a strong atmospheric river, with a lot of moisture from the subtropics being funneled into the area.

Sacramento area residents can expect a soggy commute early Monday with occasional showers, but the system will leave the area by late morning.

“We expect rain to be tapering off tomorrow (Monday), although snow will linger in the mountains,” said Henry.

The Sierra received 10 inches to 13 inches of precipitation from this storm, with Boreal reporting getting over 4 feet of new snow. Sugar Bowl received 50 inches of fresh powder since last Wednesday.

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