Henry’s Fork, December 14th, 2021
Anywhere you try the Henry’s Fork open to fishing, winter conditions will be your companion. Happy Holidays!
Excerpts from Dr. Rob Van Kirk’s Henry’s Fork watershed report released yesterday follow.
Headlines:
- Yesterday was warm again but the wettest since November 19, moving water-year precipitation up to 94% of average.
- New SWE accumulation was heavy yesterday, especially in the upper Henry’s Fork, increasing watershed-averaged SWE to 68% of average.
- Natural flow increased to 83% of average in response to warmer temperatures and low-elevation rain.
- Island Park Reservoir gained 625 ac-ft yesterday, over half of which was due to direct precipitation, and is 71% full, compared with 67% full on average.
Details:
Mean temperature yesterday was 9 degrees above average, and moderate to heavy precipitation fell across the watershed. Low elevations received a mix of rain and wet snow, while all SnoTel stations accumulated new snow water equivalent (SWE). Precipitation totals ranged from 0.02 inch at Alta to 1.3 inches at White Elephant. As has been the case recently, the upper Henry’s Fork and Fall River subwatersheds received the most precipitation. The watershed average was 0.43 inches, the highest one-day total since November 19. Water-year total precipitation increased from 91% of average yesterday to 94% of average this morning. New SWE totals ranged from 0.2 inch at Pine Creek Pass to 1.3 inches at White Elephant and averaged 0.7 inch over the nine SnoTel stations. This improved SWE from 62% of average yesterday to 68% of average today. Temperatures will drop back to average tonight and stay near to slightly below average for the next week or two. Above-average precipitation is expected to continue for the foreseeable future.
Watershed-total natural streamflow increased in response to yesterday’s warm temperatures and low-elevation rain. Natural flow was 17% below average yesterday. Cumulative natural flow for the water year to date is still 23% below average.
USGS measured outflow from Island Park Reservoir at 213 cfs yesterday afternoon. Updated outflow data are around 7% lower than I have been reporting for the past month or so. The reservoir gained 625 ac-ft yesterday, over half of which was from direct precipitation on the reservoir surface. Since December 1, reservoir outflow has averaged 205 cfs, and the reservoir has gained 325 ac-ft/day. An average fill rate of 270 ac-ft/day is needed to reach the April-1 reservoir target of 93% full. The reservoir is currently 71% full, compared with 67% full on average.
Rob Van Kirk, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist
P.O. Box 550
Ashton, ID 83420
208-652-3567 OFFICE
208-881-3407 CELL
208-652-3568 FAX