You’ve followed a link to a topic that doesn’t exist yet.
If permissions allow (as a AW Member, you may edit River Wiki, for example) you may create it by using the “Create This Page Button” below by hovering your mouse over the edit wrench.
If you don’t see a wrench, you don’t have permission to edit or edit is turned off.
If you don’t know what you are doing click on the sandbox and instructions link off the create page link.
The gauge that was on this page previously is in fact a flood control dam miles downstream. So there's often very little correlation between that dam and the river -- it was running at 240cfs while the run itself was in total flood. Thanks to Dave Paton for the info.
The best way to tell if this is running is to look at the dam behind the Riverside Deli. If there's a big hole, it's very high. It usually runs after rains, and if other creeks come up this will definitely come up. It often holds longer than most creeks, because it's fed by a pond at the putin.
User Comments |
|
2007-04-23 11:12:57 (538 days ago)
David Paton
UPDATE:
The gauge is at Thomaston which is a flood control dam miles downstream of the section we paddle. During last weeks flood they actually ponded up a few billion gallons to release later. The upper West branch is basically a small creek and will be up when the Hubbard and Sandy are running.
|
|
2007-04-17 12:33:59 (544 days ago)
David Paton
Warning- do not rely on the gauge information for the Naugatuck. Right now the river is too high to run safely-lots of trees and some nasty keepers- but the gauge says its only 240 cfs. The actual volume must be at least a thousand or more. Look at the dam behind the Riverside Deli in West Torrington. If there is a giant hole then the run is HIGH.
|