Sense of Place: Mendota Pool
While it may not warrant the official designation of “reservoir,” tiny Mendota Pool at the confluence of the San Joaquin and Kings rivers in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley played an historic role in California water and remains a vital link in distributing water to farmers’ fields.
Located about 40 miles west of Fresno, Mendota Pool is created by Mendota Dam and holds about 3,000 acre-feet with a surface area of about 1,200 acres. By comparison, about 40 miles upstream, Millerton Lake, which sits behind Friant Dam on the San Joaquin River, has a capacity of 520,528 acre-feet and a surface area of 4,900 acres.
Mendota Pool has been a diversion point for irrigation water since it was formed in 1919 by an old concrete dam. Today, it is the recipient of a complex infrastructure that keeps water flowing through a canal system. The pool is the end point for water diverted 117 miles from the Sacramento River via the Delta-Mendota Canal, part of the Central Valley Project. The Mendota Pool’s primary purpose is to take canal water and release it into the San Joaquin River, replacing the flows now diverted by the Madera and Friant-Kern canals upstream, and providing a source of water for farmers along the San Joaquin River.
– Susan Lauer
To read more about Mendota Pool, visit Aquapedia, our online encyclopedia at www.watereducation.org/aquapedia.
We stop at Mendota Pool on our Central Valley Tour in April and our San Joaquin River Restoration Tour in November. Check out www.watereducation.org/general-tours for more information.