The Signal

Tulare Lake Set for Reappearan­ce

- Dan WALTERS Dan Walters’ commentary is distribute­d by Calmatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

Spanish soldier and California explorer Pedro Fages was chasing deserters in 1772 when he came across a vast marshy lake and named it Los Tules for the reeds and rushes that lined its shore.

Situated between the later cities of Fresno and Bakersfiel­d, Tulare Lake, as it was named in English, was the nation’s largest freshwater lake west of the Mississipp­i River. It spread out to as much as 1,000 square miles as snow in the Sierra melted each spring, feeding five rivers flowing into the lake. Its abundant fish and wildlife supported several Native American tribes, who built boats from the lake’s reeds to gather its bounty.

When the snowmelt was heavy, the lake rose high enough that a natural spillway would divert water into the San Joaquin River and to the Pacific Ocean through the Sacramento-san Joaquin Delta and San Francisco Bay. It was fairly common in the 19th century, but the last time it happened naturally was in 1878. With the arrival of the railroad, the region was becoming an agricultur­al center and farmers were diverting water from Tulare’s tributarie­s for irrigation.

As those diversions expanded in the 20th century, Tulare Lake gradually shrank and disappeare­d altogether after World War II, when Pine Flat Dam blocked the Kings River, its major tributary, and levees channeled flows.

Once dry, the lakebed became the site of immense cotton farms, principall­y those of the Boswell and Salyer families. However, every few decades nature would reassert itself, piling up so much snow in the Sierra that the dams and levees were unable to contain the Kings and other rivers and Tulare Lake would be recreated.

I personally witnessed one such recreation, in spring 1970, as editor of the Hanford Sentinel. The Kings River runoff was so intense that Pine Flat Dam came within a few feet of being overtopped. I visited the dam during that period to report on what was happening and was taken inside the concrete structure, which was groaning and slightly leaking – a bizarre and somewhat eerie experience. The dam held but water roared down the mountains in the Kings and other rivers and very quickly, or so it seemed, Tulare Lake reappeared.

The Boswell and Salyer families, which had feuded for years, battled over whose lands would be flooded. Guards with shotguns patrolled the Tulare Basin Water Storage District’s levees as rumors spread about clandestin­e plans to dynamite them. That didn’t happen, but the Salyer holdings were inundated and the two agribusine­ss giants waged a legal battle all the way to the Supreme Court.

The most spectacula­r re-emergence of Tulare Lake in recent years occurred in 1983 as record snows in the Sierra again overcame human efforts to control its rivers. The lake was so high that two men, Bill Cooper and John Sweetser, kayaked 450 miles in 11 days from Bakersfiel­d to San Francisco Bay. They paddled down the Kern River, across Tulare Lake, up the Kings River and through the Fresno Slough into the San Joaquin River for a downstream run into the Delta and the bay.

This bit of history is offered because snowfall in the watersheds of the Kings and other rivers that flow into the Tulare Lake basin is surpassing the record level of 1982-83. It’s almost certain Tulare Lake will again spring to life.

The probabilit­y is even generating some hopeful, if unrealisti­c, speculatio­n that state and/or federal government­s could buy up the lakebed’s fields and bring back Tulare Lake permanentl­y.

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