SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — A sequence of February storms dropped sufficient rain to fill a few of California’s reservoirs to the brim.
Following Tuesday’s atmospheric river, Englebright Reservoir hit 107 % capability and Whiskeytown Reservoir reached one hundred pc capability, based on the California Division of Water Sources’ Day by day Reservoir Storage Abstract.
Reservoirs which might be almost full embody Berryessa at 98 % capability, Lewiston at 97 %, Cherry Valley at 91 %, Antelope at 90 %, and Independence Lake at 80 %.
Inside the previous 5 days, Bay Space rain totals added as much as 17 inches on Mount Tamalpais in Marin County, 10 inches in Bodega Bay, 9.5 inches in Napa Valley, and 9 inches in San Carlos, the Nationwide Climate Service stated.
November and December rainstorms additionally boosted reservoirs.
Between Nov. 19 and Dec. 31 of 2024, Lake Oroville’s water elevation rose 64 ft. Lake Oroville, the biggest storage facility within the State Water Challenge, is presently at 82 % capability. Shasta Lake has reached 86 %.
State water officers lately launched water from Lake Oroville for flood management safety. “With high runoff inflows continuing into Lake Oroville, DWR increased water releases to the Feather River. DWR currently plans to maintain flood releases this week at 35,000 cfs with releases. This is the third year in a row that Oroville Dam’s main spillway has been used for flood control releases. The spillway was rebuilt to the highest engineering and design standards and continues to perform well and operate as intended,” state officers wrote.
Extra rain on the best way
One other atmospheric river will arrive within the San Francisco Bay Space on Thursday. Forecasters stated this method is not going to be as highly effective as Tuesday’s thunderstorms.
The NWS wrote, “Another round of rain and wind moves through Thursday, though the impacts will be much less than Tuesday. Dry, cold weather sets in this weekend with many inland areas dropping into the mid 30s through the first half of next week.”