Top

Henry’s Fork, March 8th, 2022

Fly Fish Food Jimmy's / Fishing Reports  / Henry’s Fork, March 8th, 2022

Henry’s Fork, March 8th, 2022

Access to the lower river from the Ora bridge downstream to Chester is opening up. Increasing BWO activity during afternoons and midge hatches are providing some top water fishing that will increase as we move through this month. Life cycle patterns of these insects will produce. Streamer and giant stone fly nymphs will attract post-spawning rainbows almost anywhere in the river.

Fun Farm Bridge at Dusk

Excerpts from Dr. Rob Van Kirk’s Henry’s Fork drainage water status report of this morning follow.

Headlines:  

  • Light snow late yesterday kept water-year precipitation at 82% of average and SWE at 67% of average.
  • Island Park Reservoir continues to fill slowly but steadily at a rate of around 200-210 ac-ft/day.
  • Light to moderate snow is forecast watershed-wide today.

Details:

Mean temperature yesterday was 12 degrees F below average and will stay that cold for the next several days. Snowfall arrived yesterday evening as forecast, but only a few hundredths of an inch were recorded through midnight, mostly in the valleys. Widespread snow is expected today, accompanied by strong winds and very cold temperatures this afternoon and evening. Unfortunately, water-equivalent totals now look to be lower than anticipated yesterday, a consistent pattern over the past two months. The heaviest snowfall appears to be headed to our south again, as happened a few days ago. More precipitation is expected Sunday and into next week, but this far out, forecast precipitation could easily disappear.

At an average outflow of 214 cfs, Island Park Reservoir gained 201 ac-ft yesterday and is 85% full, compared with 79% full on average. Yesterday I reported that the mean winter (December-February) outflow from Island Park Reservoir was 218 cfs, compared with 360 cfs on average. Winter flow in the Buffalo River was 200 cfs, compared with an average of 214 cfs, so total flow through Box Canyon—the most important variable determining survival of juvenile trout—was 418 cfs, 73% of average. However, natural stream flow was much lower than average this winter regardless of the effect of storage in Island Park and Henry’s Lake. In absence of the two reservoirs, stream flow through Box Canyon this winter would have been only 516 cfs. Thus, the actual stream flow through Box Canyon this winter was 81% of the river’s natural flow, not a bad outcome following last year’s very dry irrigation season.

:

Senior Scientist

Rob Van Kirk, Ph.D.

Henry’s Fork Foundation

P.O. Box 550

Ashton, ID 83420

208-652-3567 OFFICE

208-881-3407 CELL

208-652-3568 FAX

[email protected]

HFF blog

Share