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Gauge

Gauge Description:

Contoocook USGS gage is located at the bottom of S-turn rapid. The river generally peaks about 36 to 48 hours after a rain event. Forecast

Level interpertation
 

USGS Gauge       CFS            Intepretation

5.6'-6.6'      233-563         Minimum to scratchy level
6.6'-7.8'      563-1230         Low
7.8'-8.4'      1230-1680        Low to medium
8.4'-9.5'      1680-2900        Medium
9.5'-11.0'     2900-5300        High
over 11.0'     >5300            Very high



Estimated chance (%) of finding the river runnable.
 

Month............% chance....comment
January .............3%....Frozen
February.............3%....Frozen
March...............35%....Especially  late in month during early thaws.
April...............90%....Most dependable month
May ................60%                
June................20%
July.................5%      
August...............5%
September...........20%....Tropical storms and their remains
October.............30%....Trees go dormant less water being absorbed by them
November............60%      
December............50%....River starts freezing up around Christmas.



Be aware this is averaged out over several years. The % chance refers to the probability of finding the river running on any given day. For instance a 5% probability for July means on average you can only expect 1.5 days of water. One year there could be 3 days in July with water other years none. Spring levels are usually higher than fall levels.

Why does that gage level go up and down?

On occassion a regular up down or "sawtooth" pattern will be noticed when looking at the USGS 7 day graph. This is caused by releases well upstream of the gage. Releases come from several hydro and flood control reservoirs upstream including Nubanusit Lake, Edward MacDowell Reservoir, Highland Lake, Lake Franklin Pierce, and other reservoirs upstream. However, releases from the Monadnock Paper mill located 22 miles upstream in Bennington are usually responsible for the most notable rise and fall of the gage. This is most noticable at low botable levels betweeen 5' and 7' on the gage. Releases from the Paper mill reservoir can raise the level 300 cfs. If the gage is a 6' for a baseline, the added 300 cfs can bring levels up to 7'. Because of the distance upstream daily releases do not start to reach the gage until the afternoon, then usually peak in late afternoon to early evening. Note that this occurs rather frequently and usually for a number of days in a row, but almost never occurs on weekends unless the mill is behind with their customer's orders.
 

CONTOOCOOK R NR HENNIKER NH [ NH ]

Current Conditions

Stage Flow Updated
4.97 117 9/6 12:30

Station Graphs


Linked Reaches

Search Results

Level Legend: Running Below Minimum Recommended Flow Above Maximum Recommended Flow Unknown
Descriptions of reaches with River Name in bold have been verified by a regional StreamTeam member.

State River Name/Section Class Level Rel. Level Updated
NH Contoocook— 2. Hillsborough to Henniker III-IV 4.97 ft   low 9/6 12:30
NH Contoocook— 3. Henniker (class II section) II(III) 4.97 Feet   low 9/6 12:30
NH Contoocook, N. Branch— Route 9 & 123 to Hillsboro Fire Sta V 4.97 Feet   low 9/6 12:30

Station Description

AW Gauge ID:68
USGS Station:01085000
HUC:01070003
Latitude:43.1528
Longitude:-71.8567
Class:6

Disclaimer Data Sources

EPA Surf This Watershed

USGS Page for This Station

NPS NH Rivers Inventory