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Old 10-03-2025, 01:25 PM   #201
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I’ll say it (one last time in this thread). We are on a near-by dam controlled lake. We have experienced the same drought as you. Our lake has had none of these issues. Water level has been at +/- historical level all season.
Different feeders (springs, rivers, snow melt)? Maybe…
Mismanagement? Maybe…
Yeti? Maybe…
Aliens? maybe…
What lake?
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Old 10-03-2025, 02:28 PM   #202
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I’ll say it (one last time in this thread). We are on a near-by dam controlled lake. We have experienced the same drought as you. Our lake has had none of these issues. Water level has been at +/- historical level all season.
Different feeders (springs, rivers, snow melt)? Maybe…
Mismanagement? Maybe…
Yeti? Maybe…
Aliens? maybe…
Which lake is very important in this context. Even lakes that are dammed can be constant level lakes, as they balance inflows and outflows.... Winnipesauke is a Flood Control reservoir.... The water is held and then released as appropriate to control conditions down stream.... The lake is not meant to be a constant 504.32 feet..... as long as it is below 504.32 feet a minimum outflow of 250cfs has to be maintained, for down stream considerations. The amount below 504.32 feet is an indicator of how much water can be held back when mother nature strikes... My general observation has been that once below about 504 feet, the dam operators feel that they have sufficient capacity. and are happy to run at 250 cfs.......
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Old 10-03-2025, 03:45 PM   #203
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Spring fed lakes seem to be holding up much better. I help my buddy take his boat out of Stinson Lake in Rumney and his lake level was normal level.
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Old 10-03-2025, 04:10 PM   #204
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Angry ....... ugh!

Did you know the last of the indigenous people living at their Weirs Beach fishing village were evicted and forcibly driven out by the year, 1696. They relocated to the shoreline area along the Saco River in what is now Fryeburg, Maine.

So, 329-years later in 2025, here we be and this year's Lake Winnipesaukee low water situation has got to somehow be directly related to the forced eviction ..... www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquadoctan ..... of these indigenous people back in 1696.

Some type of heap big revenge coming from the Smile of the Great Spirit or something, ugh! ...... ..... and double ugh! ...... and holy cowabunga! ...... ..... just imagine moving from Lake Winnipesaukee to Saco River.

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Old 10-03-2025, 05:27 PM   #205
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This is silly.

The dam flow is automatically monitored and reported online hourly. Plus, anyone driving by the area can see the flow levels and confirm they are very low. Do you think dam operators are sneaking out at midnight, opening up the dam gates, and then shutting them before morning twilight so no one can see? That's pretty paranoid. Oops, it's a full moon tonight. Can't open the dam. Someone might see.

The power plant at the dam is, I believe, a smaller one, with regional impact only. This isn't a large corporation sitting in a locked room, counting their ill gotten money from opening the dam surreptitiously. Plus, I will bet power generation records match the dam flow rate. It would be kind of obvious if the dam started cranking out lots of power when the flow was supposed to be 200 CFS. Also, power generation is highly regulated. There are LOTS of eyes on it and odd fluctuations happening in the dead of night by evil dam operators in collusion with the evil power money hoarders would be noticed in a heartbeat.

Finally, the lake level is automatically monitored and reported online as well. We have had a long dry spell so there has been no significant impact of rain water coming into the lake. The lake level has been on a long slow decline that parallels a slow dam rate. It's obviously not one to one but it has been steady. At 200 CFS the lake level would drop about 3 - 4 inches a month and that is exactly what has happened. When we recently got a couple of inches of rain, the lake level bounced up and then resumed its steady decline, again doing what you would expect with the dam at 200 CFS.

The cost of electricity is a red herring. No one is getting rich off of electricity generation and speculation and discussion of electricity management has almost nothing to do with the lake level, beyond the minimal level required to keep the generators operating to prevent damage from non use.

Conspiracy theories can be entertaining but this one is full of holes.

Wow. Tell us more about how cfs flow rates can be verified by looking at the water from a bridge.

Yup only mega size corporations break rules.

It must be low rainfall and evaporation cause any other cause is a tinfoil hat conspiracy.

Yes, there's a mass outflow facility and they are above reproach. Nothing to see here folks... move along.
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Old 10-03-2025, 08:17 PM   #206
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So why complain about the price of electricity if you want the dam to flow less water and produce less electricity?
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Old 10-03-2025, 10:05 PM   #207
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The consensus seems to be the lake is managed for a (very small) amount of power generation and not for the benefit/enjoyment of property owners (tax payers). Winni is a complicated eco system with many stakeholders. If the health of the lake was paramount, seems to me, everyone would benefit.
We are fortunate that our community has rallied around the health of our lake, understanding this benefits all stakeholders. We have programs/grants for septic, run-off, and other initiatives all focused on improving/maintaining water quality.
Maintaining the water level year round just makes sense and certainly makes for a more enjoyable summer.
I don’t’ know the details of the Winni lake management, but if I lived there, i would be getting involved. If you are a property owner, and your quality of lake life declines…you are at risk on many levels. It is difficult to understand why something so basic as maintaining the water level of Winni throughout the summer, has been so controversial. But then again, i am not on winni…
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Old 10-03-2025, 11:22 PM   #208
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Because when too much water is withheld, the lake overflows and damage to the shoreline properties occurs.

No one knows for sure how "wet" the summer is going to be.
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Old 10-07-2025, 08:27 AM   #209
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Someone posted this pic of Lake Champlain on Facebook yesterday. That's rough.



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Old 10-07-2025, 09:55 AM   #210
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Did you know the last of the indigenous people living at their Weirs Beach fishing village were evicted and forcibly driven out by the year, 1696. They relocated to the shoreline area along the Saco River in what is now Fryeburg, Maine.

So, 329-years later in 2025, here we be and this year's Lake Winnipesaukee low water situation has got to somehow be directly related to the forced eviction ..... www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquadoctan ..... of these indigenous people back in 1696.

Some type of heap big revenge coming from the Smile of the Great Spirit or something, ugh! ...... ..... and double ugh! ...... and holy cowabunga! ...... ..... just imagine moving from Lake Winnipesaukee to Saco River.
NO THX, too far away from Pop's!
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Old 10-07-2025, 10:20 AM   #211
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For a second there I wondered if that was the stretch between Ames Farm and Diamond Island. 🫨. Whew.


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Old 10-07-2025, 07:44 PM   #212
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Someone posted this pic of Lake Champlain on Facebook yesterday. That's rough.



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..... put the local ferry boat right out of business and into mothballs.
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Old 10-07-2025, 07:57 PM   #213
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The red line ..... www.weather.gov/btv/lakeLevel?year=2025 ..... represents Lake Champlain's lake level this year, 2025, compared to historic maximum, average, and minimum levels going back to 1907.

Bernie Sanders' 1920 island summer house with a little over one acre on Lake Champlain, North Hero, Vermont ...... http://www.sfgate.com/realestate/sli...ome-133412.php ...... in August, 2016.

Cannot find a Bernie photo for October, 2025 to show today's much lower Lake Champlain water level. That boat lift looks to have four wheels on it for rolling out to deeper water!

Bernie is 84, born Sept 8, 1941, and he still goes water skiing on one ski, but not with today's low water levels ...... too many rocks to destroy the prop!

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Old 10-08-2025, 06:33 AM   #214
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The red line ..... www.weather.gov/btv/lakeLevel?year=2025 ..... represents Lake Champlain's lake level this year, 2025, compared to historic maximum, average, and minimum levels going back to 1907.

Bernie Sanders' 1920 island summer house with a little over one acre on Lake Champlain, North Hero, Vermont ...... http://www.sfgate.com/realestate/sli...ome-133412.php ...... in August, 2016.

Cannot find a Bernie photo for October, 2025 to show today's much lower Lake Champlain water level. That boat lift looks to have four wheels on it for rolling out to deeper water!

Bernie is 84, born Sept 8, 1941, and he still goes water skiing on one ski, but not with today's low water levels ...... too many rocks to destroy the prop!
You have a lot of free time. Maybe you could drive to Bernie's house and take a picture to post here? Thank you in advance!
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Old 10-08-2025, 06:55 AM   #215
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You have a lot of free time. Maybe you could drive to Bernie's house and take a picture to post here? Thank you in advance!
I have no clue what Bernie has for a motorboat? There's a long dock and a boat lift with a canopy frame but no boat in the photos. Would be interesting to learn how this year's Lake Champlain low water situation has effected his boating season?

My guess? Bernie has a 1980 Alumacraft 14' vee hull with a 15hp Evinrude tiller handle 2-stroke and boat and motor came with the house. Everything on the old aluminum boat still works good, and it mostly gets rowed by two rowers using four wood oars, Bernie and wife. The motor only gets used occasionally when the grandkids come visit just for a fun fast ride.

Bernie, row de boat ashore, Hallelujah! ......
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Old 10-08-2025, 07:47 AM   #216
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As a nerd (and I know I have some fellow nerds on here) looking at those Lake Champlain graphs, it is a bit fascinating that on Champlain it is fairly average to have a four-foot swing between high tide and low tide each year. Sometimes five or six-plus, like they have now. So they must have to plan accordingly, hence BS's dock on wheels perhaps.

Meanwhile we are on page 3 of a huge months-long discussion because of the low water... and the difference isn't even 3 feet yet for us. It's pretty DAM interesting!
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Old 10-08-2025, 08:05 AM   #217
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Curious if this bit of rain makes a measurable impact on the lake level.
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Old 10-08-2025, 08:27 AM   #218
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Curious if this bit of rain makes a measurable impact on the lake level.
Based on the marker I'm watching, not much. Maybe 1/4-1/2" max.

First time my boating season ended by lack of water, instead of time.
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Old 10-08-2025, 08:42 AM   #219
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Curious if this bit of rain makes a measurable impact on the lake level.
Well it did rain like heck here early this morning that's for sure! I don't think it's going to make much of a difference in lake level now as I think the surrounding dry ground is just going to soak it all up. There is more rain scheduled for early next week so maybe the lake will come up a bit by then...

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Old 10-08-2025, 09:01 AM   #220
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Well it did rain like heck here early this morning that's for sure! I don't think it's going to make much of a difference in lake level now as I think the surrounding dry ground is just going to soak it all up. There is more rain scheduled for early next week so maybe the lake will come up a bit by then...

Dan
It's not looking like very significant rain next week, but anything right now is welcomed.
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Old 10-08-2025, 10:30 AM   #221
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As a nerd (and I know I have some fellow nerds on here) looking at those Lake Champlain graphs, it is a bit fascinating that on Champlain it is fairly average to have a four-foot swing between high tide and low tide each year. Sometimes five or six-plus, like they have now. So they must have to plan accordingly, hence BS's dock on wheels perhaps.

Meanwhile we are on page 3 of a huge months-long discussion because of the low water... and the difference isn't even 3 feet yet for us. It's pretty DAM interesting!
Having lived right on Lake Champlain, in South Hero for almost 10 years..... Yes Champlain normally has a significant level change through out the year and or summer.... Because of this docks are floating or on wheels and get adjusted through out the year.....it is not uncommon for the shallow portion of a floating dock, at a boat ramp to spend part of the year high and dry....

It is all in what you are used too.....

Note by the definition used on this forum, Bernie is not an islander, you drive onto the Hero Islands, either via bridge in the north, or via the causeway in the south......
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Old 10-08-2025, 12:05 PM   #222
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I have no clue what Bernie has for a motorboat? There's a long dock and a boat lift with a canopy frame but no boat in the photos. Would be interesting to learn how this year's Lake Champlain low water situation has effected his boating season?

My guess? Bernie has a 1980 Alumacraft 14' vee hull with a 15hp Evinrude tiller handle 2-stroke and boat and motor came with the house. Everything on the old aluminum boat still works good, and it mostly gets rowed by two rowers using four wood oars, Bernie and wife. The motor only gets used occasionally when the grandkids come visit just for a fun fast ride.

Bernie, row de boat ashore, Hallelujah! ......
I bet a weekend at Bernie's would be cool.
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Old 10-08-2025, 05:38 PM   #223
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Arrow Winnipesaukee IS A Spring-Fed Lake...

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Spring fed lakes seem to be holding up much better.

I help my buddy take his boat out of Stinson Lake in Rumney and his lake level was normal level.
Unknown how much water (spring-water) flows into Lake Winnipesaukee, but in front of my place, I recorded three major simultaneous surges from about 14-feet of Winter Harbor's bottom.

https://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums...ad.php?t=27101

Haven't seen it since then.

The elevation of the only land that could produce such a spring-water surge is only about 40-feet.

(Wolfeboro Airport's average elevation, minus 504').

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