Agree with the flow rate.
90,000 cfs translates to about 16 feet at the Dam. That is about as high as I would want the river to be when wading as well. Anything much over that puts the river level up almost into the trees and casting, even with a spinning rod becomes problematic.
Look at the USGS gauge online. Call the hotline for the generation schedule.
1-888-457-4076.
This will tell you how many generating units will be in service, and tells you how cfs they will pass thru the turbines, but they don't tell you the actual river level.
During the week, the flow goes up and down during the day. A rising flow during a low light period is great, a falling level during mid day can slow things way down.
On the weekends, the river level is often lower. Anything much below 11- 12 feet is low for this time of the year.
For what it's worth, I find that the Potomac's run starts about 2 weeks earlier than the Susky's.
90,000 cfs translates to about 16 feet at the Dam. That is about as high as I would want the river to be when wading as well. Anything much over that puts the river level up almost into the trees and casting, even with a spinning rod becomes problematic.
Look at the USGS gauge online. Call the hotline for the generation schedule.
1-888-457-4076.
This will tell you how many generating units will be in service, and tells you how cfs they will pass thru the turbines, but they don't tell you the actual river level.
During the week, the flow goes up and down during the day. A rising flow during a low light period is great, a falling level during mid day can slow things way down.
On the weekends, the river level is often lower. Anything much below 11- 12 feet is low for this time of the year.
For what it's worth, I find that the Potomac's run starts about 2 weeks earlier than the Susky's.
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