The Prince George Citizen

SNOWPACK SETS STAGE FOR SPRING FLOODING

The Fraser River is set to burst its banks this spring.

- MARK NIELSEN Citizen staff

Runoff in the range of 132 per cent of normal at Shelley is in the cards during April-July, according to the B.C.’s River Forecast Centre’s April 1 snow survey and water supply bulletin.

That’s due in large part, to extremely high snow packs recorded in the Upper Fraser.

Thanks to significan­t snowfall during the first and last week of March, snow pack in Upper Fraser East grew to 147 per cent from 135 per cent over the month, while the level in Upper Fraser West declined to a still-significan­t 129 per cent from 135 per cent.

A handful of records were also recorded in the region, led by the measuring station at Longworth in Upper Fraser East, where 1,378 mm was reached, 179 per cent of normal.

Records were also noted at Horsefly Mountain (735 mm, 158 per cent) and Yanks Peak (1215 mm, 153 per cent) in the Middle Fraser-Quesnel region and at Cook Creek (789 mm, 136 per cent) in the North Thompson.

The snowpack in those regions added up to 131 per cent and during the freshet roughly two-thirds of the river’s flow originates from those areas.

It could translate into trouble downstream as well.

“Historical­ly, there are only a few years where the snowpack in the major tributarie­s of the Fraser River have all been high at the same time (these years include 1972, 1974 and 1999),” the agency says in the bulletin.

“Given the importance of the Upper Fraser and Thompson River for the overall freshet flow on the lower Fraser River, this means the seasonal flood risk for the entire Fraser River is elevated.”

Weather going forward remains the wild card.

“Cooler weather over the next few weeks may delay the onset of melt, which can increase flood risks as more snow melts into May and June,” the agency says.

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