scel Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 I have been trying to understand this: http://www.environment.alberta.ca/apps/basins/DisplayData.aspx?Type=Figure&BasinID=8&DataType=1&StationID=RBOWCALG Can anyone give some insight? Quote
BurningChrome Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 A spike like that with no recent rain can only mean they opened the dam. Either that or some sort of sensor or software fault. Quote
Tungsten Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 Looks like on the 21st mid afternoon the flow doubled at Banff,on its way down now again. Quote
BurningChrome Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 Looks like on the 21st mid afternoon the flow doubled at Banff,on its way down now again. Maybe it got warm enough to melt some of the snow they got. Quote
TroutPanther Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 It was a didymo fest last night with that flow bump - had to clean the snot off my fly almost every cast. Quote
angler Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 oh yeah. Rain+snow+ warmer days=spike in flow. Got really dirty and high for 2 days. Quote
jtaylor Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 Ya I was wondering what the hell was with the Didymo!! someone should genetically engineer a bug that will eat that *hit. 1 Quote
monger Posted September 25, 2015 Posted September 25, 2015 Quite the carpet up in Bowness I hear Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.