Lake Sonoma Explained

Lake Sonoma
Image Bathymetry:Lake_Sonoma_Map.gif
Location:Sonoma County, California
Coords:38.7181°N -123.0094°W
Lake Type:Reservoir
Inflow:Dry Creek
Outflow:Dry Creek
Catchment:130-1NaN-1[1]
Basin Countries:United States
Length:5.70NaN0
Area:2700acres
Volume:381000abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Shore:50miles
Elevation:200feet
Pushpin Map:California#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Lake Sonoma in California, USA.

Lake Sonoma is a reservoir west of Cloverdale in northern Sonoma County, California, created by the construction of Warm Springs Dam. The lake provides water for countywide growth and development, and for recreation.

At full capacity, it has 50miles of shoreline, a surface area of more than 2700acres, and holds 381000acre.ft of water.[1] Activities include boating, swimming, fishing, riding, hiking, camping, and hunting.[2] Notable features include the Milt Brandt Visitor Center, the adjacent Congressman Don Clausen Fish Hatchery, and the Warm Springs Recreation Area below the dam. Access from U.S. Route 101 is by way of Canyon Road (from the south) from Geyserville, or Dutcher Creek Road (from the north) from Cloverdale. The Warm Springs Creek Bridge crosses the lake just south of the dam, connecting the communities east of the lake to the Rockpile AVA to its west.

History

Pomo people had lived in the Dry Creek and Warm Springs region for over five thousand years. The construction of this lake destroyed 122 areas associated with the history of human use. This included ten house-pits, five hunting blinds, two chert quarries, and eleven locations with petroglyphs. In addition, there were eight known gathering spaces where, for more than a hundred years, special plants were collected by Pomo people for traditional use.[3] Some Pomo people resisted the creation of the lake, assisting Archaeologists at Sonoma State University in writing about the prehistory and history of Warm Springs Dam, Lake Sonoma, and the Dry Creek Valley.[4]

Warm Springs Dam

The US Army Corps of Engineers built Warm Springs Dam across Dry Creek. Completed in, this rolled-earth embankment dam is 3190NaN0 high, 3000-2NaN-2 long, and 300NaN0 wide at the top. It contains 30000000-6NaN-6 of earth.[1] The dam aids in flood control, and a hydroelectric plant produces electricity from the water released downstream. A minimum amount of flow must be maintained in Dry Creek to allow fish migration.

Water quality

The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has developed a safe eating advisory for Lake Sonoma based on levels of mercury found in fish caught from this water body.[5]

Campgrounds

Lake Sonoma offers 96 drive-in campsites and two group sites at the Liberty Glen campground. The campground is located on a ridgeline overlooking Lake Sonoma, each campsite includes a firepit, picnic table and tent area, with primitive facilities and no potable water. The campground is closed indefinitely for repairs to infrastructure.

There are 15 secluded primitive campsites surrounding the lake: 12 can be reached by boat, horse, mountain bike or on foot, 3 can only be reached by boat and 1 due to its location on a ridge can't be accessed by boat.[6]

Panorama

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dams Owned and Operated by Federal Agencies. January 4, 2008.
  2. Web site: Lake Sonoma: Welcome. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
  3. Web site: Mihilakawna and Makahmo Pomo: The People of Lake Sonoma. Fredrickson. Vera-Mae. Peri. David W.. 1985.
  4. Web site: Before Warm Springs Dam. Sonoma State University Anthropological Studies Center.
  5. News: Lake Sonoma. Admin. OEHHA. December 30, 2014. OEHHA. June 13, 2018. en.
  6. Web site: Camping & Directions.