[Awclist] Rio Chama
Wes Moore
Wes at superiormortgage-nm.com
Wed Feb 22 08:40:11 MST 2012
3 weekends at 800.
Sent from my iPad
Wes Moore
VP/Partner/Sr. Loan Officer
Superior Mortgage Services, LLC
NMLS #205189
(505) 249-4506 cell
www.moore4yourmoney.com
On Feb 21, 2012, at 10:16 PM, "Tim Scofield" <timscofi5 at gmail.com> wrote:
> I never received a response to the email below about flows.
>
> Given that the Bureau will try to have a flushing flow (hopefully 5k in a good water year) in the spring, and a limited amount of water, what release flows would you like to see later in the season when there is minimal water in the Rio Grande? Would you rather boat one weekend at 2400cfs or three weekends at 800cfs or 4 weekends at 600cfs? (Or some other flow level)
>
> Tim
>
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 11:12 PM, Tim Scofield <timscofi5 at gmail.com> wrote:
> The rafters that said that the trip went too fast above 1000 cfs were private boaters from Colorado.
>
> I personally just spend more time exploring when the water's high.
>
> The way I see it, It's really a question of at what point would you not bother going kayaking/rafting/canoeing assuming that the RIo has already peaked and is down to a couple hundred. At what point would you not bother to even go up to the Chama.
>
> There will be a weekend or two that get a peaking flow in the spring to try to maintain a healthy ecosystem, but this section of the Chama is below El Vado, and they're going to try to store as much water as they can as high up as they can. So we're not going to see really big flows like we've ocassionaly seen on the Rio Grande. They doe have some storage in Abiqu lake, but it is somewhat limited for various reasons.
>
> The question is would you rather boat one weekend at 2400cfs or three weekends at 800cfs or 4 weekends at 600cfs. Assuming that there's enough water for any releases at all.
>
> It's also problem if they don't keep at least 150 cfs in the river at all times, which they sometimes don't, because the whole ecosystem up there starts to suffer.
>
> Tim
>
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 8:32 PM, monica a. martin <orangely at yahoo.com> wrote:
> I think it's time to point out the commercial boater perspective: many have had to boat this river with customers and their gear in 14-15 foot rafts in the 200's. This certainly isn't ideal. Many comfortably boat it at 500cfs. If you get to do it at 1000cfs, you've got it posh. Anything above 600cfs works pretty nicely and many of us find it enjoyable in work or play at this level. Isn't maneuvering around rocks part of what makes it interesting?
>
> Monica & Josh
>
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