Lake Powell Drought Hite Low Water Level April 2023

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • This video depicts real time water levels at Hite, the upper portion of Lake Powell. Hite is adjacent to the confluence of the Colorado and Dirty Devil River. Hite has limited facilities that are open seasonally. The city of Blanding Utah is 70 miles east. Hite has experience changing times from a gold prospecting in the late 1880s also, a uranium boom in 1949 and later to be the site of a marina on the shores of Lake Powell. But all these ventures have eroded over time to yet again a primitive section of the Colorado Plateau.
    *Disclaimer:*
    This RUclips video is not monetized and is intended solely for educational purposes. The content presented herein adheres to the guidelines and principles outlined by the First Amendment, ensuring the protection of free speech and expression. Our goal is to provide informative and educational material.

Комментарии • 223

  • @larrykaminski3269
    @larrykaminski3269 Год назад +7

    Thanks. Being a Lake Powell boater from 1967 until late 80's, this is sad. Terrible governmental control plus water hungry CA

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      A terrible mix of state and federal at the citizens expense.

    • @Clawson_customs
      @Clawson_customs Год назад +2

      Yes it is I think they should cut California off and let it fill to the 50% point then only let out the same amount of water that comes in - evaporation that way we can use the lake from end to end

    • @coolwiz7994
      @coolwiz7994 Год назад +1

      So you want to starve. Ok! No skin off our ass here in cali. People like you probably have enough stored fat to make it through a winter anyways.

    • @FastEddy301
      @FastEddy301 Год назад +2

      ​@cool wiz LMAO, people have zero idea how much of the food on their table comes from the desert SW, especially while the rest of the country is frozen.
      Having said that Cali could do a much better job with retaining much of its water from the north

  • @just4kicks950
    @just4kicks950 Год назад +4

    Thanks for sharing these breathtaking 🎬 ✨️👍WOW ⭐️. I'm praying for a turnaround of our Colorado & reservoirs. The gems of the beautiful desert /canyons 🙏✌️

  • @alanshelby5980
    @alanshelby5980 Год назад +10

    In 1980 We had the bright Idea to buy Fry Canyon Hotel and Cafe. It was pretty fun and a terrible loss of money. It was a boom town in the uranium boom, because there was a spring that provide water. It turned out that the water was very contaminated with uranium. We had many guests from all over the world. Charles Steen was around quite aa bit still looking for his next big strike.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +3

      That’s awesome! I love the history. Yeah based on the BLM archives, Fry Canyon Spring had groundwater contamination of uranium, copper and radium. A nice cocktail of heavy metals.

    • @i.p.freely3561
      @i.p.freely3561 Год назад +3

      My wife and I traveled from Hanksville intending to camp at the lake in 1978. Cannot camp on sandstone, everyone there had a camper. It was getting late and after looking at a map, decided would have to try for a room in Mexican Hat. So off we go blazing along in the dark went I see lights off to the right. I had noticed something named Fry Canyon when we had looked at the map. So hard right to check it out. To our delight, it had a general store and four cabins. No one was staying there. Wow. We had a place to stay and cooked a meal on our propane stove. During the night, there was a rain and the air smelled wonderful. In the morning we left and again I’m blazing down the road. My wife said maybe you want to slow down because of the steep grade ahead. Slowed down and pavement ends and out of nowhere is this gigantic drop off at Moky Dugway. We stopped and marveled. If we had not found Fry Canyon, I may have very well driven straight off the road hitting earth hundreds of feet below. Fry Canyon saved our life. God was looking after me again.

  • @scottfeatherstone7156
    @scottfeatherstone7156 Год назад +6

    Nice video. Idea for future videos, show the old landing strips. I was pilot for Lake Powell Air Service in the early 1990’s based in Page. We flew daily to Hite, Bullfrog, Halls Crossing and Cal Black. Hite landing stip was on north side of river just downstream to the bridge, there are about three landing strips at Bullfrog, some dirt, one paved, Halls Crossing was dirt. When Halls Crossing was closed they built Cal Black, paved and nice airport but way out in the middle of nowhere. We were flying boat parts and cash receipts, etc.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Appreciate the feedback. To be honest, I don’t know why I discriminated towards landing strips will do.

    • @francoutah
      @francoutah Год назад +1

      The Hite airstrip is still there and it is still used by the river outfitters. Just off the highway North of the bridge. Look for the orange windsock.
      Once upon a time ('97) I flew back to Moab with an injured woman from a Cataract trip that I was guiding on. We were in a little single engine Cessna, four or five seater. It was early Spring and we flew over Canyonlands NP with thunderstorms all around. The updrafts would toss us a couple hundred feet in all directions. Still to this day, I have never been so scared in my entire life. You pilots got some huge balls.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Yeah, it’s literally right off the highway. Now you’re making me regret not feeling it. Those small planes can definitely have their ups and downs. I remember dropping like 500 feet one time in one of those scariest moment of my life. Those thunderheads or nothing to play with. Glad y’all made it out safe.

  • @Big_Diehl
    @Big_Diehl Год назад +5

    Love the Hayduke Lives... Gonna have to grab a shot next time I roll through.
    Powell has always been a conundrum for me... A beautiful lake and being from the west I know the need for water... On the other hand, all we lost underneath it.

  • @meowmix2731
    @meowmix2731 Год назад +2

    Thank you for uploading this footage & documenting it for those of us who are not near enough to see it in person.

  • @elrobo3568
    @elrobo3568 Год назад +4

    We used to camp with our boat just right of the ramp. the water was about 1/3 up the ramp. I think they should let much more water out so Lost Vegas can have their hotel fountains and golf courses. They are letting out thousands of acre feet of water out now (May3,2023) supposedly to re-create the beaches in the Colorado but I think it was so Mead gets more for Nevada Thanks, I was there a few months ago at the same spot you are on and wanted to see what it looked like now. I flew over this area as a search and rescue pilot and always am stunned bu the beauty of the area. I have rafted the Colorado twice and camped and boated the lake at least 4 times a year for 30 or more years. I love this area. I also explored the uranium mine and hiked the hole in the wall and across the lake to the other side.. Thanks again!

  • @benjeanettebooth1800
    @benjeanettebooth1800 Год назад +5

    Beautiful country down there! You are absolutely right about the solitude. The Hite area is deserted. I am optimistic that we will be pleasantly surprised with water inflows. There is a massive snowpack which could substantially replenish this arid region.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      It’s stunning. Optimism is key that’s for sure.

    • @rogertucker2613
      @rogertucker2613 Год назад

      ​@Desert Rat Explorations Optimism? How does that help water move? 😅

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      @@rogertucker2613 poop in one hand and wish in the other hand kind of deal.

  • @nancyhaun
    @nancyhaun Год назад +4

    Wonderful video-thank you!

  • @GretchenlKlein
    @GretchenlKlein Год назад +3

    Fun to watch ~ with amazing footage and interesting facts and information. I worked for a company that did kyack trips through Desolation, Cataract..One of the bennies was we got 4 and 5 day trips FREE SO. MUCH. FUN. Another great video, TYVM

  • @user-yf9st4vs2u
    @user-yf9st4vs2u Год назад +3

    Thanks for the up date,m good footage. you looked at things that matter. Thanks

  • @fyerfyter339
    @fyerfyter339 Год назад +2

    Love Hite and areas around. I’ve explored an area 100 miles radius around Hite for years. So much diversity but honestly I miss the water the most.
    Thanks for the great video.

  • @johntipton2354
    @johntipton2354 Год назад +4

    Your Videos are Awesome! You do a good job. Be proud=)

  • @abqdor
    @abqdor Год назад +2

    Our very first Lake Powell experience was renting a houseboat out of Hite. Hard to believe it's been that many years. Thanks for the information you shared about the upper reaches of the Colorado River.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      That’s awesome to hear. Do you have any only photos of Hite? I’ve never seen a photo of the Marina

    • @abqdor
      @abqdor Год назад

      @@DesertRatExploration Wow, that was back before digital photography. I might have an album around somewhere. I'll have to look.

  • @frphxkaboom3008
    @frphxkaboom3008 7 месяцев назад +2

    house boated in 83 and again in 87 first from Wahweap and then from halls crossing Hite was a regular marina at the time. Dangling rope was a must stop for fuel. I drove a 52 ft houseboat right up to rainbow bridge towing a ski boat. Most of the people on the trips have passed,. a truly magnificent area

  • @paulcarter7445
    @paulcarter7445 Год назад +3

    Great images and explanation. Lake Powell water is being released into Lake Mead at present, in anticipation of Powell filling from snow-pack melt. Mead has been rapidly getting deeper over the last few days.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      We are expecting 50 feet here at Powell but, majority of that is going to Mead down stream.

  • @timsmothers8740
    @timsmothers8740 Год назад +2

    Very Nice, thank you. You showed me so much that I had never seen before it quite amazing how scrub land can be so kind to the eye, such vast openness that has been washed and wind blown into something beautiful. Great work when Mountains were shown.

  • @jaymoran1930
    @jaymoran1930 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the awesome videos.

  • @danielepplett3645
    @danielepplett3645 Год назад +2

    In the early seventies the lake reached its maximum I descended from the vista point and there was a makeshift marina on the north side of the lake Hite about a mile before the DD bridge. I launched an aluminum canoe with a 3hp motor it was big water to the gouge and CR bridge made it to Gypsum Canyon but couldn’t push any farther because of the current it was mid Sept. water was running clear. Spent a week exploring the Dirty Devil and Dark Canyon. This was before the marina was put in on the south side and people started coming.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      That’s awesome to hear. I’ve bet exploring those rivers with lots of fun.

  • @davidpitts1976
    @davidpitts1976 Год назад +6

    I work full time for the Harbor team. We're expecting 60ft of water over the next few months. We will be moving boat rentals twice a day soon.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Twice a day! That’s more work for y’all. Good to hear. Thank you for the information

  • @jonclyde3873
    @jonclyde3873 Год назад +3

    Great video. My father (Hal M. Clyde) built the Colorado River Bridge, Dirty Devil Bridge and the road from the North Wash to the area beyond the Colorado. This was done in the early sixties before the lake was filled. Many artifacts and canyons were lost but now are re-emerging. During that project our family spent three summers in the work camp in the North Wash. It was a great adventure.

  • @lostsoul1813
    @lostsoul1813 Год назад +2

    Thank you for the video!!

  • @tomthatcher7757
    @tomthatcher7757 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for sharing the history. I've been to the Hite Overlook and driven UT95. I really enjoyed this. I am now a subscriber 😊.

  • @beavis8167
    @beavis8167 Год назад +4

    This is what I'm talking about showing places that nobody ever shows around lake mead lake Powel. You know Different areas around the lakes and the history of them spots. Awesome video thank u. Like I said before I'm from the Pittsburgh area I've always wanted to go out West to lake Mead and lake Powel The Grand Canyon Death Valley the superstition mountains ect ect ect. And I hunt for videos like You've been making Thank you. I would like to add the audio was a little low in the video here that's all

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Thanks for the feedback! Yeah, I’m trying to get a mic soon. You definitely need to come out and check things out over here.

  • @davidnewkirk2438
    @davidnewkirk2438 Год назад +2

    Gorgeous footage and interesting information! Thanks for sharing

  • @derek6947
    @derek6947 Год назад +2

    Nice video. I was in Hite in December 2021. My previous visit was in the early 1990s. I found the fish cleaning station at the former Hite Marina both humorous and sad. Great video and thanks for sharing.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Appreciate the feedback. That’s cool you got to see it back in the day.

  • @francoutah
    @francoutah Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing. Well done. You did your research too.
    I vividly remember taking river boats out of the water on the Hite boat ramp back in the 90's. Our trucks would back 40' trailers down and you could float your boat on.
    Now, it looks like it's a quarter mile from the water. The current take out is super sketchy. (Just downstream from the bridge on river right.) Otherwise, you need to go all the way down to Bullfrog.
    It will be interesting to see how things will turn out down there. I'd love to float Glen Canyon one day. The rewilding of damned rivers is a thing and I'm down.
    Hayduke Lives!

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      That’s great history that you’ve lived. Also, how was the Marina? I’ve never see photos of it.

  • @jcc777
    @jcc777 Год назад +2

    I’m almost glad I haven’t been able to travel to Lake Powell due to medical and physical conditions the last six years. Looking at those massive mud flats that used to be a launch point go fishing and some of my favorite fishing areas. I do appreciate the tour a great deal. I just hope to see it come back to what it was 20 and 30 years ago.

  • @Clawson_customs
    @Clawson_customs Год назад +4

    I miss boating and fishing at Hite the last time I was about to fish there from a boat we got several hundred fish between two of us

  • @CrAck-MoNey
    @CrAck-MoNey Год назад +2

    Very informative and wonderful production.

  • @bobthompson4923
    @bobthompson4923 Год назад +2

    I do admit I had to refresh my brain on "Hayduke Lives!". Suppose I am glad you forced me to look!

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Yeah, I choose not to explain that phrase. Don’t want any prying eyes.

  • @bigbranch1
    @bigbranch1 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed the tour of Height and surronds.....love that terrain.....Thank you.

  • @golfaddict5276
    @golfaddict5276 Год назад +2

    I used to camp / fish out of Hite all thru the seventies. you could go miles up the Dirty Devil in the back waters of Powel to a sandy beach where the "river" was running slow most of the time. So sad to see what it is now.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Thank you for sharing your story. I’m happy you got to experience full pool.

  • @DaveFiggley
    @DaveFiggley Год назад +2

    Another fine video, Sir Rat. Thanks.
    The river is certainly making a dent in all that sediment which is up to 150' feet thick in this area. It's all being blasted downstream to send the delta-front ever southward. I doubt the rise this year will trouble this area - probably we'll see the lake reach Trachyte but Farley and White canyons will have their respective lakes remain in splendid isolation. Farley sits at a fairly constant 3585 and White is probably at a similar level. White, having such a high load of dirt flowing into it, is fast getting filled in.
    0:53: The lake is over 10 miles from where you're standing.
    2:14: It's difficult to make out but opposite the mouth of the Dirty Devil, there's a rocky outcrop in the centre just to this side of the Colorado. As we look at it, the river used to flow to the RIGHT of here. There was an airstrip on the triangular-shaped rocky feature just to the left.
    5:40 'Dandy Crossing' was downstream at the mouth of White Canyon near where the ferry operated from 1946-64. There was a huge sand bar that facilitated that crossing but there was also plenty of sand opposite the mouth of North Wash so who knows?
    I don't have photos of Hite Marina but the aerial shot is there from 1993 on Google Earth.
    I have a fairly grainy picture, taken from Hite Overlook in 1983, of the reservoir at full pool+ showing the top of the ramp peeping out of the lake . The marina is obviously there but difficult to make out. The level of the water against the Hite ramp is most interesting though.
    I don't have 'a channel' on here so have no idea how to share this picture with you, Sir Rat.
    I also have a few pics of the marina at Piute Farms on the San Juan arm of Powell where the depth of water was always marginal. I think it existed for a couple of years, 87-89 maybe, before the lake receeded and it was dismantled. You can still see the traces of the concrete ramp on Google Earth.
    Keep these great videos coming, Ratty.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +3

      Thanks for the feedback David . I always appreciate your insight and history regarding these areas.

  • @onrycodger
    @onrycodger Год назад +2

    Glad your channel came up in my feed. Great footage. I subscribed and give you thumbs up 👍

  • @shawneldridge4465
    @shawneldridge4465 Год назад +2

    🎣 now that looks like a good spot to do some fishing, tubing, whitewater rafting and some swimming.
    I will say beautiful view

  • @A-K_Rambler
    @A-K_Rambler Год назад +2

    Excellent!!!

  • @Sailor376also
    @Sailor376also Год назад +1

    I have been there. Hite, twice. Once by car, once by canoe. You still showed me as much and more than I have seen. Thank you. What I wished you had videoed and investigated is the raft take out for the crews on Cataract Canyon. I will be at the Confluence, mid July, and I am threatening to continue down to Hite. I have heard they use a winch to get the boats up to the parking lot, at the North Wash Boat Ramp. I think I saw the turnoff in your video,,, laughing,, I was wishing you had taken the turn off and driven down to the parking area and ramp.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      I Camp where the take out is. It’s a very steep hill right now. The opening shot of this video is below that dirt take out.

  • @clintbouck9161
    @clintbouck9161 Год назад +2

    Well done

  • @CrAck-MoNey
    @CrAck-MoNey Год назад +3

    2019 was when I was at Hite last. Very crazy the difference since then.

  • @bodhimartina6985
    @bodhimartina6985 Год назад +2

    Oh, my! Such extraordinary footage. What a powerful and beautiful land. The title caught my eye because I am a "water watcher" for many years now and wanted to see what Lake Powell looked like. Not sure why you stopped short, but the images of the landscape are critcal for people to understand the crisis that is heading our way by 2026. Lake Powell is a huge player in whether or not the lower basin states and Mex get water in the future.
    Do you have a picture of Lake Powell April 2023. Thank you for sharing this!

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +2

      I appreciate the feedback. Thank you I don’t have any photographs, but I do have more videos of each launch ramp.

    • @bodhimartina6985
      @bodhimartina6985 Год назад +1

      @@DesertRatExploration do you have a picture of Powell's ramp for April, 2023? I can use this in one of my articles and give your channel credit.
      I live in Baja and 80% of our clean water comes from Lake Mead. Right now I understand that Powell is not going to release water to Mead. If Mead goes Dead Pool, our river water doesn't make it to us.
      Thanks!

    • @bodhimartina6985
      @bodhimartina6985 Год назад +2

      Oh, I just found the Lake Powell Thank you!

  • @fordraven5884
    @fordraven5884 Год назад +2

    Like your videos

  • @michaelnancyamsden7410
    @michaelnancyamsden7410 Год назад +2

    Nice filming.

  • @LongdistanceRider22
    @LongdistanceRider22 Год назад +2

    Incredible

  • @kevinmclea3211
    @kevinmclea3211 Год назад +2

    My first view’s of Hite since I worked there in Boat Rentals almost 50 years ago. We could take boats miles up the Dirty Devil!

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      That’s crazy to think about. You need to see it for yourself this summer!

  • @jsnjcnt
    @jsnjcnt Год назад +5

    I don't know if the water management is intentionally causing this problem or if they are just Stooo pid.

  • @youtubesucks5007
    @youtubesucks5007 Год назад +3

    "Do not, my friends become addicted to water. It will take hold of you and you will resent it's absence." - Immortan Joe

  • @michellenunes8264
    @michellenunes8264 Год назад +4

    It appears the river is dying to return to her natural state. 🌎💙

  • @Frank00
    @Frank00 Год назад +3

    Hydro electricity has been generated now for 100 years. It’s been successful, safe, cheap and powers peoples day to day life. Without it this part of the country that fuels much needed agriculture to the rest of the country would be nearly impossible. It’s one of man’s great achievements of land and water management.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Your not wrong Frank.

    • @Bouncer-id1rh
      @Bouncer-id1rh Год назад +1

      Which is why the reservoir(s) would never get to "deadpool". The Ag industry COMPLETELY understands this.

  • @skipstein744
    @skipstein744 Год назад +1

    Thanks

  • @robertwestern5908
    @robertwestern5908 Год назад +1

    Cool I need to check it out just moved to church wells😊

  • @bdsgreg500
    @bdsgreg500 Год назад +3

    I believe that making hydro electricity is more important than keeping water in both Powell and Mead has brought this problem on

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Money money money

    • @Frank00
      @Frank00 Год назад

      Hydro electricity has been generated now for 100 years. It’s been successful, safe, cheap and powers peoples day to day life. Without it this part of the country that fuels much needed agriculture to the rest of the country would be nearly impossible. It’s one of man’s great achievements of land and water management.

    • @Bouncer-id1rh
      @Bouncer-id1rh Год назад +1

      @@DesertRatExploration How is it about money? Explain.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      @@Bouncer-id1rh well it’s very in depth and complicated subject but some Dams were built for the purpose of solely making a profit. The term is called “cash register facility” in the buisness. These types of facilities provide funds for future reclamation projects through the sale of cheap hydropower. Some critics of Glen Canyon Dam say that it in of itself is one of those facilities. It’s a long story but old timers say that’s why the 1983 flood at Glen Canyon Dam happened. The B.O.R topped off the Lake so they can sell more electricity and didn’t project storms in the Rockies in May of 1983 which, almost took out the Dam with cavitation of its spillways. There is my explanation my good sir.

    • @Bouncer-id1rh
      @Bouncer-id1rh Год назад

      @@DesertRatExploration Thanx for the reply. I hear ya, it's one explanation. I see these public works projects as just as that ...public works projects. They benefit society, and the long term benefit is they pay for themselves over time. The Profit from the Hoover Dam once it was paid for, has sent more money into our Federal treasury then any other public works project in our country's history. They are the definition of "win/win"-other than from the environmentalists perspective.
      As far as Glenn Canyon, the cavitation was really about an engineering failure when the dam was built. Mead also had water going over the spillways, yet it's spillways didn't have the cavitation issues. Also, it wasn't so much a mistake, it was the fact that the BOR couldn't get the information to the managers at Glen Canton fast enough. The info was slow coming, and each day the volume estimates increased, not giving the managers enough time to release water before the volume hit flood stage, almost cresting the the dam. So I don't see it as the Dept of Energy holding back water to sale electricity...that to me is urban myth. Besides, the DOE doesn't regulate water releases, that's the BOR's responsibility. The BOR wouldn't say..."hey, let's hold back some water so our friends at the DOE can sale more power". The BOR operates under a metrics... do you know how irresponsible it would be for the BOR to do that. Had that dam failed, people would of gone to jail once an investigation found the BOR wasn't operating under it's obligatory operating metric. Changes were made after that event, particularly from a communications aspect, and those protocols have been updated since the changes in 1984.
      Anyways, than for listening to my opinion.
      Thanx for the convo.

  • @bobsimon2242
    @bobsimon2242 Год назад +1

    Great vid. Please keep them coming.

  • @alanwilson2073
    @alanwilson2073 Год назад +3

    For me, your video throws up a lotta red flags for Las Vegas real estate, especially these high-end multi-million dollar properties with views. Like what's the point if you got no water. The area might get a little relief with the El Nino cycle returning but then what happens when La Nina returns. This has been happening now for over two decades and still counting. Watching this also makes me feel fortunate just to take a sip of ice cold water and know that I can get another glass with impunity, no water shortages here in Hawaii. Your thoughts on LV real estate though?

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Shoot that’s a good question. Las Vegas has lead the way believe it or not on conservation. They are THE roll model for conserving water, crazy. In regards to real estate I’d recommend Vegas over Phoenix. Vegas will last especially that it’s a city with more worth. Phoenix has provided little effort with conservation of water and is just growing like cancer.

    • @alanwilson2073
      @alanwilson2073 Год назад

      @@DesertRatExploration Ok, I can work with that. The dark underbelly of all that conservation though just means more water for California, the big stinky elephant in the room. The only solution I see for Lake Meade and Vegas would be pipelines from the North West or even the Great Lakes. Almost a federal plan of redistribution but on a national scale, not just Vegas. Phoenix also has quite a homeless problem, water woes as well, as per the videos I see here on YT. Thank you for all of your help and hard work!!!

  • @rickyaz8640
    @rickyaz8640 Год назад +2

    I camped up at Hite back when it was an actual Marina.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Your time there was valuable. Not a lot of eyes have seen it like that.

    • @rickyaz8640
      @rickyaz8640 Год назад +2

      @@DesertRatExploration rode my bike across the country. It was a nice stop. Helluva climb out heading north in July heat,… THAT I remember!

  • @gup8175
    @gup8175 Год назад +2

    the top of the reservoir is presently at white canyon
    :edit thx for the vid, liked and subbed :D

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Год назад +1

    I have a copy of John Powells float down that river. I thought he was crazy to float it like he did. But my eyes were from the 1970's and all they really had was wood.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      And one arm!

    • @rogerdudra178
      @rogerdudra178 Год назад

      @@DesertRatExploration I know! And, he had a chair strapped to the top of one of the boats to ride in. I've done many floats in Montana and when I read about his float I was amazed that no one died. He did a lot of the river.

  • @brendanvierk7039
    @brendanvierk7039 Год назад +1

    The recent three fold surge in the river's discharge must have been a sight to behold

  • @Raptorman0909
    @Raptorman0909 Год назад +3

    Lake Powell may gain a few feet this season but it looks like they plan to transfer much of that water to Lake Mead. Lake Powell is unlikely to rise much and may even be lower this time next year than it is now. California and Arizona consume a crap ton of water from the Colorado River but they get most of if downstream from Hoover Dam so the upper basin states can look elsewhere thank you very much...

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Yeah, Saint George has been trying to get their cut these past three years vigorously.

    • @Raptorman0909
      @Raptorman0909 Год назад +2

      @@DesertRatExploration -- Unfortunately, St George wants the water for golf courses -- in the desert!

    • @Bouncer-id1rh
      @Bouncer-id1rh Год назад

      @@Raptorman0909 Oh no, more dumb comments.

    • @Raptorman0909
      @Raptorman0909 Год назад

      @@Bouncer-id1rh You are a zero content troll who's YT channel was created one month ago! The fact that you found me again tells me you are part of a troll farm with tools to track people!

  • @bluesharp59
    @bluesharp59 Год назад +2

    Thumbs Up !

  • @Scalihoo
    @Scalihoo Год назад +3

    How much of the heavy snowpack will end up in Lake Powell ??

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +2

      Everything west of the Rockies so, a good amount to be fair.

    • @troyjames7866
      @troyjames7866 Год назад +2

      The estimates I've heard are that Lake Powell is expected to rise 6% this year.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Год назад +1

    Water once covered the highest bluffs visible here, overwashing the entire area with something like 350-500 trillion acre-feet of water, eroding the bluffs, creating the arches, and generally defining everything within sight. It was NOT the "seabed" of an inland sea, but it was the site of an immense "lake", one that stretched from north of Price, down to Show Low, Springerville and Pie Town, northwest to southeast, from the Humphreys (San Francisco Peaks) to the Sierra Nacimiento's, around 87,964.59 sq miles, containing 140.7 billion acre-feet of water. This was left over from the larger surge, a body that would eventually create the Grand Canyon, and the other 7 National Parks in the region, as it slowly drained away.
    Not "millions of years ago" (anyone who thinks the arches are even ONE PERCENT of that scale doesn't understand the desert, or the area, much less the process they were created by), but within the period of "recorded history" (not textbooks). The Anasazi camped alongside this lake for nearly a millennium, until the water finally drained away to leave the desert as we know it. The first wide-angle view in your video reveals a landscape that can best be described as "what anywhere would look like after a half-quadrillion acre-feet of water flowed across it, at the speed of a tsunami", if, of course, other, more dramatic, events were occurring, pushing up mountains, uplifting ancient seabeds (no longer found at the bottom of a sea). How anyone can look at the American Southwest, and NOT think, "biggest flood, ever" escapes me. Lap-lines, the result of longstanding water lapping at an edge or shore, abound, at 2,500-3,500 feet elevations.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      I enjoyed the spillover theory. It does explain a lot of cutting. Thank you for your comment.

  • @bigcheese5902
    @bigcheese5902 Год назад +3

    😮

  • @lonniefarmer7067
    @lonniefarmer7067 Год назад +2

    The Lake is 119ft below Hite currently.

  • @azspotfree
    @azspotfree Год назад +4

    The real runoff this year from the upper Colorado Basin is just starting. You aint seen nothing yet.

    • @michaeld53
      @michaeld53 Год назад

      Yes if we continue to get the extremely hot summers

  • @aleu650
    @aleu650 Год назад +2

    Beautiful scenery. Apparently nature "claimed back" their possessions.

  • @nobozos7444
    @nobozos7444 Год назад +2

    At 11:45 I believe that's the White Canyon Bridge.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      You are right! Wow I can’t believe I mixed them up. White canyon was a important by transportation.

    • @derrickstanley3804
      @derrickstanley3804 Год назад

      ​@@DesertRatExploration Is white canyon still connected to the lake or possibly river now?

    • @DaveFiggley
      @DaveFiggley Год назад +1

      @@derrickstanley3804 No. There is a huge amount of sediment blocking the mouths of both White and Farley canyons.
      Behind the sediment, both canyons have their own captive lakes, each approximately a mile long.
      The lake in Farley has a fairly constant surface elevation of ~3585 which, currently, puts it over 60' above the level of Powell. It is therefore safe to assume the sediment is banked to an elevation of at least 3585. As of 4-27-23, the flat water of Powell is over six miles downstream of Farley.
      The lake in White canyon is interesting in that it has been divided in two by the silt washing into it from the creek. To the west, towards the river (and sediment dam), it is getting filled in with deposits and appears a muddy red colour. To the east, the water remains fairly blue and is probably substantially deeper.
      Again, the top of the sediment at the mouth of White is probably at ~3585 so any change in this area will require Powell to rise more than 60 feet this year. It will be interesting to see what happens.
      Check out the state of Powell as it rises on Sentinel Playground. The resolution is pretty good down to 300m / 1000ft.

    • @derrickstanley3804
      @derrickstanley3804 Год назад +1

      @@DaveFiggley thanks for the information!! I used to launch a flat bottom and fish White and Farley, my buddy lost what might have been a world record crappie at the boat!

    • @DaveFiggley
      @DaveFiggley Год назад

      @@derrickstanley3804 I don't really do fishing but I manage a world record crappie most mornings.

  • @bennysapien4148
    @bennysapien4148 Год назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @Diddley-js6lf
    @Diddley-js6lf Год назад +1

    I feel like the reason for the lake drop is they have constantly built Cities and Communities all over that area, Reno, Las Vegas and other places all over and over used the Water.

    • @deviates1
      @deviates1 Год назад +1

      its not a natural lake. its a resevoir built to SERVE WATER to those cities and generate electricity. Of course the lake drop is because of the cities. How fucking retarded can you be to think hey this is a natural lake in the desert.

    • @artmosley3337
      @artmosley3337 Год назад +2

      @@deviates1 The problem is.. they haven’t built any New reservoirs in California, Arizona, Nevada in the last 30 years!!! But the populations have more than doubled… California also has a homeless problem because of drugs and state-local regulations on building housing and apartments…

  • @yoyoyooo4735
    @yoyoyooo4735 Год назад +2

    good job america, next full on desert in creation. Thanks for the video.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      That it is at the moment.

    • @johnnyonthespot1665
      @johnnyonthespot1665 Год назад +1

      With runoff just starting and the highest recorded snow totals in Northern Utah in the history of the state, I don't think this is going to be a problem for very long.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      @@johnnyonthespot1665 keep it coming!

    • @yoyoyooo4735
      @yoyoyooo4735 Год назад

      @@johnnyonthespot1665 True and might be the case but its MERICA, more water from the environment = more water to spend. That is MERICAs logic. I think the good old days are gone. Ground water levels are so depleted that the planet cant compensate anymore.

    • @dreindenver798
      @dreindenver798 Год назад

      ​@johnnyonthespot1665 Unfortunately, it's not enough to replenish Lake Powell. It will take years if not decades to recover from the drought. Utah is still in a moderate drought, and it's been abnormally dry. I don't think we will see it recover. At least not in our lifetimes.

  • @danielhardy3411
    @danielhardy3411 Год назад +3

    Lake Mead can now sell more water to California

    • @Bouncer-id1rh
      @Bouncer-id1rh Год назад

      How do they "sale" more water? Calif has an allocation already. What water are they going to sale?

    • @michaeld53
      @michaeld53 Год назад +3

      Californication just steals it because they thinks they entitled

    • @Sailor376also
      @Sailor376also Год назад

      you mean buy water from California.

  • @fly4rnr
    @fly4rnr Год назад +2

    Have you been to the airport at Hite? Actually it's just a strip.

  • @christiansabia8500
    @christiansabia8500 Год назад +2

    Any word on the gas station?

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      The NPS website is the best place to get any reliable information. Besides me driving out there and checking it out.

  • @scrick7112
    @scrick7112 Год назад +2

    I’m going to sleep, wake me when you get to the good part.

  • @az_exit1279
    @az_exit1279 Год назад +2

    What is "hite"?

    • @sdtayw
      @sdtayw Год назад +2

      Hite was the boat ramp, marina, ranger station when lake was there. When he says there's the ramp, that's how high water used to be. Lake is a long way off now.

  • @scotttownley5076
    @scotttownley5076 Год назад +4

    So they are lying. The water is not going up like they said. So sad

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      It is going up right now by about a half a foot. By the beginning of May, we should start seeing a rise of a foot or more a day.

    • @DaveFiggley
      @DaveFiggley Год назад +4

      'They' are banking water in the upstream reservoirs first before releasing down to Powell. Flaming George, Blue Mesa and Navajo reservoirs all need to be replenished before any significant quantity of water is sent down to Powell.
      There is a huge snowpack to play with and once they're happy that these smaller, but important, reservoirs are at a satisfactory level they'll start sending significant quantities of water to Powell.
      The Upper Basin states still 'owe' the Lower Basin shitloads of water so much of what arrives in Powell will go through the dam and head down the Grand Canyon to Lake Mead.
      I'm not an expert but I reckon the 'water managers' will be happy to see Powell at 3550 at the end of this Water Year with the peak level being, maybe, 3560.
      Then it's time to pray for more snow.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      I keep forgetting about the smaller dams. From what I’ve seen regarding the Bureau of reclamations website, they anticipate the end of the water year to be near 3564-3606 feet above sea level respectively.

    • @DaveFiggley
      @DaveFiggley Год назад +2

      @@DesertRatExploration BuWreck's predictions are notoriously optimistic. If Powell gets anywhere near 3600 I'll eat my wife's testicles. Er, don't try that at home kids.
      Once Powell has 'paid' Mead, 3560 sounds more realistic, which is an improvement on the 3520 of a few weeks ago.
      The river was over-allocated in 1922. Powell taking 17 years to fill should have been the first warning sign, although the upstream reservoirs were coming online in the late sixties and swallowed plenty of water.
      The last time Powell came anywhere near to being full was in July 1999 when it reached 3694.74.
      The Bureau of Reclamation should put away their slide rules and get out the prayer mats.

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад +1

      Yeah, they are optimistic. I would assume science and math was put into their calculations but to be fair, the B.O.R has done some Hail Marys these past few years.

  • @jonclyde3873
    @jonclyde3873 Год назад

    WW Clyde&Co

  • @citizenkane0014
    @citizenkane0014 Год назад +1

    wtf is hite?

    • @DesertRatExploration
      @DesertRatExploration  Год назад

      Upper Lake Powell.

    • @DaveFiggley
      @DaveFiggley Год назад +2

      Hite, named for Cass Hite, was originally a small settlement close to the mouth of Trachyte Canyon.
      The Colorado at this point often ran slow and shallow with a substantial sand bar appearing at low water. Horses could walk / swim to the opposite bank with little trouble and this became known as 'Dandy Crossing', probably one of only three points in 200 miles that the river could be traversed with relative ease.
      Fast forward to the twentieth century and Art Chaffin, an erstwhile prospector, saw the potential for a permanent, fixed crossing of the river at this point and in 1946 opened his home-built ferry which, via a rough and torturous road, connected Hanksville with Blanding. The east bank landing was a half mile downstream of White Canyon. Ruben Nielsen operated the ferry from 1949 until 1964 when the reservoir flooded the site. From memory, the ferry landings were at 3443 so would eventually end up under 257 feet of water. The Nielsens also created a thriving farm at Hite growing all sorts of exotic fruit and veg.
      Fast forward to 2023 and 'Hite' is just a concrete boat ramp, four miles north, that nobody has used in decades.