UPDATE - 3/31/23Thanks again for asking about the dam situation, Sue!
It is pretty much "situation normal" for the end of March. Our "rainy season" is pretty much winding down. In years in the recent past we would be seeing warm (80-ish) days (and above), and the rain would be pretty much finished. This year, there is still a bit of rain in the forecast for next week.
In years past we have had our first 100-degree day around April 1, but (as I am sure that everyone knows) we have had a banner year for precipitation, in some areas the snow pack in the Sierra (which keeps California in water through the summer months, as the snow pack melts) is 200+ % of "normal".
However, as our local meteorologist, Mark Finan (employed by a Sacramento television station) says there really isn't a such thing as "normal". California precip can vary all over the map from year to year - it has in the past, and will likely continue to do so on into the future.
Although we have had a banner year for rain here, doesn't mean that next year will continue the trend. 2017-18 (measured over the rainy season winter months - which always spans the end of one year, and the beginning of the next - of October, November, December, January, February and March) had a lot of rain, 19-20, 21-22 not so much.
But we are thankful for what we have received!
Oroville dam had recently filled to about 861 feet, with current water releases it is now down to 857 feet (as of this morning's date, above), with current outflows of 12,614 csf and inflows of 13, 567 csf.
The major part of the Sierra snowpack has not yet begun to melt, so it will be a balancing act at Oroville Dam (and for other California Dams as well) for the California Department of Water Resources from here on out.
The goal is to let enough water out to "make room" for the snowmelt that will melt slowly over the coming months and flow into California dams, including Oroville, but not to let "too much" water out so that it is not available for the millions of California residents who use this water, both directly and indirectly, all across the state.
https://www.dsrsd.com/home/showpublishe ... 8457670000So things are good, barring a major warm storm over the Sierra which might melt the snowpack very rapidly, or an earthquake. A major storm at this time of year is becoming more and more unlikely, and although one can never quite tell when an earthquake might happen, thankfully they are fairly rare in my area as well.
Here is the latest inflow/outflow and lake level information on Oroville Dam as of this morning:
https://cdec.water.ca.gov/dynamicapp/QueryF?s=ORO&d=31-Mar-2023+08:34&span=25hoursWhere does all of that water from Oroville go? Pretty much all over California:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oroville_Dam#:~:text=Since%20its%20completion%20in%201968,water%20supplies%20to%20coastal%20Southern"Water released from Oroville Dam travels down the Feather River before joining with the Sacramento River, eventually reaching the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, where the SWP's California Aqueduct diverts the fresh water for transport to the arid San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. Oroville–Thermalito hydroelectric facilities furnish about one-third of the power necessary to drive the pumps that lift the water in the aqueduct from the delta into the valley, and then from the valley over the Tehachapi Mountains into coastal Southern California. [i.e. the Los Angles area - about 450 miles south of Oroville dam] Water and power from the dam contribute to the irrigation of 755,000 acres (306,000 ha) in the arid San Joaquin Valley Westside and municipal water supplies to some 25 million people."And, of course, all of this major rainfall has caused all of the grasses and native manzanita brushlands of California to have accelerated growth.
Although a full-throated spring is taking its time to get here, if we have our usual broiling-hot (105 - 110 degree days for weeks on end) summer, the tall seasonal grasses will die and become bone-dry, and the millions of acres of native manzanita chaparral brushlands that cover much of the foothills of northern California will dry (after a spurt of growth spurred by all of the rain), becoming primed and ready for the next cycle of California's seasonal wheel of change.
Can anyone guess what comes next?
Here is a hint (and a Fun Fact as well!):
"The seeds of most manzanitas and many ceanothus species require fire to germinate, as do those of a number of the wildflower species that produce spectacular spring displays following a fire."https://baynature.org/article/the-bright-side-of-fire/#:~:text=The%20seeds%20of%20most%20manzanitas,fire%20to%20reproduce%20from%20seed.Thanks for reading, everyone, and have a GREAT day!
Anne