There has been enough rain across Texas during May to cover the entire state nearly 8 inches deep. That's over 35 trillion gallons!
quote:"Conservation Pool Level" on that type of lake is 100% capacity. That extra 200% is the flood retention level - the difference between where they like to maintain it (CPL) and the spillway elevation.quote:It looks to be about to spill. The most recent gage reading is 257.69' and the spillway crest is 258'.
Can someone explain to me how lake Somerville is at 300% of capacity and not spilling over?
quote:I noticed Stillhouse has a ways to go, but Belton is creeping towards max capacity (but that last few feet is a huge amount of water on that lake). The Brazos sure doesn't need all that water from the Leon coming down.
Texas Lake Levels
This is a much better website for lake levels, it updates every hour and some lake more than that.
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I don't know where on earth the brazos is 19' below cut bank, but be grateful if so. I'm on the beach side, but normally the far cut bank is 40 feet tall. Now it is 2.
quote:Lake Belton normal pool is 594 and the spillway elevation is 631. Right now it's at 598.5quote:I noticed Stillhouse has a ways to go, but Belton is creeping towards max capacity (but that last few feet is a huge amount of water on that lake). The Brazos sure doesn't need all that water from the Leon coming down.
Texas Lake Levels
This is a much better website for lake levels, it updates every hour and some lake more than that.
quote:I could only find reservoir elevation data going back to the mid-90s and the highest the lake ever got was 255 ft. Looking at storage volumes there might have been a time in the late 80s that it spilled, but its tough to say.
Last time Somerville went over the spillway?
quote:Only time Somerville ever went over was 1992.quote:I could only find reservoir elevation data going back to the mid-90s and the highest the lake ever got was 255 ft. Looking at storage volumes there might have been a time in the late 80s that it spilled, but its tough to say.
Last time Somerville went over the spillway?
So either some time in the late 80s or never.
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It's really interesting. They are keeping the projected river height below the historic height, I guess to keep the fear-mongering down, but at the current rise rate, it will exceed the 50.00' marker by potentially more than 1.5'...
Wonder why they are doing that?
quote:they'll be under water.
If it gets that high what will it do to the university farm and other land in the bottoms over there?
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FM50 between College Station and Brenham has been closed due to flooding....and Somerville Lake might soon add to the misery.
quote:is it at the Yegua Creek Crossing?
FM50 between College Station and Brenham has been closed due to flooding....and Somerville Lake might soon add to the misery.
quote:Just south of FM50 and TX Hwy21 is "Moehlman Slough", a former path of the Brazos River. It's a very deep cut, with water sometimes pooled in the bottom. Totally FULL as of yesterday!
if you look on google earth at brazos/burleson counties, you can see that the Brazos used to be a couple of miles west of its current channel. There is an old channel that is west of FM 50 and snakes across the river bottom down towards Independence.
quote:yep, I drive past it every day!quote:Just south of FM50 and TX Hwy21 is "Moehlman Slough", a former path of the Brazos River. It's a very deep cut, with water sometimes pooled in the bottom. Totally FULL as of yesterday!
if you look on google earth at brazos/burleson counties, you can see that the Brazos used to be a couple of miles west of its current channel. There is an old channel that is west of FM 50 and snakes across the river bottom down towards Independence.
quote:From Brenham radio station:quote:is it at the Yegua Creek Crossing?
FM50 between College Station and Brenham has been closed due to flooding....and Somerville Lake might soon add to the misery.
quote:The Cowhouse was almost full banks again this morning too.
My dad lives in Gatesville and the Leon has been out of its banks for a few days. That's a lot of water still to run to Belton Lake. I think if they get too much more rain, the chain reaction to the Brazos could have it flooding before long.