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Klamath or Bust! Learn What’s on Tap at the Water Education Foundation in 2025

Happy New Year to all the friends, supporters, readers and participants of the tours, articles and workshops we featured in 2024! We’re grateful to each and every person who engaged with us last year.

As we turn the page to 2025, one of our most exciting projects will be a first-ever Klamath River Basin Tour in September. We’ll visit some of the sites where four dams came down along the river’s mainstem, and talk to tribes and farmers in the region and learn from scientists watching the river’s restoration unfold.

While most of our tours span three days, this one will likely stretch to four or possibly five days to accommodate the time to get to this remote watershed straddling the California/Oregon border. Stay tuned for more details!

Our array of 2025 programming begins later this month when we welcome our incoming California Water Leaders cohort. We’ll be sure to introduce them to you and let you know what thorny California water policy issue they’ll be tackling.

Klamath River in Humboldt County. Credit: Western Rivers ConservancyIn March, we return to the Southwest’s most important river with our Lower Colorado River Tour, and the bus is quickly filling up! We then journey across the San Joaquin Valley on our Central Valley Tour in April and take a deep dive into California’s water hub in May with our signature Bay-Delta Tour.  

Announcement

Registration Open for First Water Tour of 2025; Save the Dates for Other Tours & Workshops

In case you missed it, registration for our first water tour of 2025 along the Colorado River opened last week and the bus is filling up quickly! Seating is limited, so reserve your spot soon while tickets last.

Lower Colorado River Tour: March 12-14

Don’t miss the return of our annual Lower Colorado River Tour as we take you from Hoover Dam to the U.S.-Mexico border and through the Imperial and Coachella valleys to learn about the challenges and opportunities facing the “Lifeline of the Southwest.” Experts discuss river issues such as water needs, drought management, endangered species and habitat restoration. Get more tour details and register here!

Water News You Need to Know

Aquafornia news The Mercury News

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: San Jose water agency to vote on whether to help fund Gov. Gavin Newsom’s $20 billion Delta tunnel project

Silicon Valley’s largest water agency will vote Tuesday on whether to support Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to spend $20 billion to build a massive, 45-mile long tunnel under the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to make it easier to move water from Northern California to Southern California. The board of the Santa Clara Valley Water District, a government agency based in San Jose, will consider contributing $9.7 million toward planning and geotechnical studies for the project, which it says could improve its water supply reliability — but which is also one of California’s most long-running and controversial water proposals. Newsom’s idea is to build a 36-foot diameter concrete tunnel to take water from the Sacramento River about 15 miles south of Sacramento, near the town of Courtland, and move it roughly 150 feet deep, for 45 miles under the marshes and sloughs of the Delta to the massive State Water Project pumps near Tracy, reducing reliance on them.

Related article:

Aquafornia news SFGate

What La Niña means for California’s Sierra Nevada snowpack

At the beginning of the new year, California’s snowpack looked promising. On Jan. 2, the state’s Department of Water Resources measured the snowpack at 108% of average, for that date. The bomb cyclone in November and a push of winter storms in December had set up California’s mountains with a better start than last year. On the same day last year, the state’s snowpack was just 28% of average, to date. … Weather experts say La Niña typically sets up a weather pattern that favors Northern California with wetter conditions, leaving the southern parts of the state drier. Now that La Niña is officially in play, many say this trend will likely continue. 

Related articles:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

‘Completely dry’: How Los Angeles firefighters ran out of water

… Officials now say the storage tanks that hold water for high-elevation areas like the Highlands, and the pumping systems that feed them, could not keep pace with the demand as the fire raced from one neighborhood to another. That was in part because those who designed the system did not account for the stunning speeds at which multiple fires would race through the Los Angeles area this week. … Municipal water systems are designed for firefighters to tap into multiple hydrants at once, allowing them to maintain a steady flow of water for crews who may be trying to protect a large structure or a handful of homes. But these systems can buckle when wildfires, such as those fueled by the dry brush that surrounds Los Angeles’s hillside communities, rage through entire neighborhoods.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Inkstain

Blog: Stable on the Colorado River: When ‘good’ is not good enough

Preliminary year-end Colorado River numbers are stark. Total basin-wide storage for the last two years has stabilized, oscillating between 30 and 27 maf (million acre-feet), where storage sits at the start of 2025[1]. That is lower than any sustained period since the River’s reservoirs were built (Fig. 1). Stable is better than declining, but we did not succeed in rebuilding reservoir storage during 2024’s excellent snowpack but modest inflow. Although reservoir storage significantly increased after the gangbuster 2023 snowmelt year, we have not protected the storage gained in 2024 when inflow to Lake Powell was ~85% of normal from a 130% of normal snowpack. We can’t rely on frequent repeats of 2023; we must do better at increasing storage in modest inflow years like 2024.

Other Colorado River articles:

Online Water Encyclopedia

Aquapedia background Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Map

Wetlands

Sacramento National Wildlife RefugeWetlands are among the world’s most important and hardest-working ecosystems, rivaling rainforests and coral reefs in productivity. 

They produce high levels of oxygen, filter water pollutants, sequester carbon, reduce flooding and erosion and recharge groundwater.

Bay-Delta Tour participants viewing the Bay Model

Bay Model

Operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Bay Model is a giant hydraulic replica of San Francisco Bay and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. It is housed in a converted World II-era warehouse in Sausalito near San Francisco.

Hundreds of gallons of water are pumped through the three-dimensional, 1.5-acre model to simulate a tidal ebb and flow lasting 14 minutes.

Aquapedia background Colorado River Basin Map

Salton Sea

As part of the historic Colorado River Delta, the Salton Sea regularly filled and dried for thousands of years due to its elevation of 237 feet below sea level.

The most recent version of the Salton Sea was formed in 1905 when the Colorado River broke through a series of dikes and flooded the seabed for two years, creating California’s largest inland body of water. The Salton Sea, which is saltier than the Pacific Ocean, includes 130 miles of shoreline and is larger than Lake Tahoe

Lake Oroville shows the effects of drought in 2014.

Drought

Drought—an extended period of limited or no precipitation—is a fact of life in California and the West, with water resources following boom-and-bust patterns. During California’s 2012–2016 drought, much of the state experienced severe drought conditions: significantly less precipitation and snowpack, reduced streamflow and higher temperatures. Those same conditions reappeared early in 2021 prompting Gov. Gavin Newsom in May to declare drought emergencies in watersheds across 41 counties in California.