Western Flows

Fontana Water Co Surface Diversion

Near Fontana, CA Stream Gauge USGS: 11062400 Provisional Data Last Updated: May 26, 09:44 PM PT

Current Flow

23.7 cfs
Steady
No Water Temp Probe

Expected Weather

Temp --°F
Wind -- mph
Rain Chance --%
Pressure -- hPa

Location

Basin: Santa Ana County: San Bernardino Elevation: 2,254 ft
Flow is within the typical range for this time of year (25th–75th percentile, based on 54 years of USGS record).

System Insights

  • Did you know? One acre-foot (AF) of water is exactly what it sounds like: one acre of land covered in one foot of water, roughly 326,000 gallons.

Verify access, permits, and local conditions before entering any waterway.

Today's Weather

Forecast Details

Morning

At 6 AM: 49°F and Overcast, wind S at 5 mph. By 10 AM: 52°F and Overcast, wind S at 10 mph.

Afternoon/Evening

At 2 PM: 62°F and Overcast, wind SW at 14 mph. By 6 PM: 60°F and Overcast, wind SW at 18 mph.

Overnight

Dropping from 51°F at 10 PM to 48°F by 4 AM. Conditions Clear with wind SW at 12 mph.

3-Day Outlook

🌔 Waxing Gibbous

Today, May 26

☁️

64° / 49°

Chance of Rain: 10%
5:41 AM 7:52 PM

Wednesday, May 27

🌧️

58° / 47°

Chance of Rain: 20%
5:40 AM 7:53 PM

Thursday, May 28

🌫️

66° / 46°

Chance of Rain: 9%
5:40 AM 7:53 PM

7-Day Flow History

Source: USGS

The current cfs of 24 CFS is running significantly above the historical median of 0 CFS for this date, indicating higher-than-average seasonal water levels.

Current (CFS)
Historical Median
Normal Range (p25–p75)

7-Day Water Temperature (°F)

Source: USGS

Temperature Data Unavailable

The USGS does not maintain an active temperature probe at this gauge location.

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Glossary & Methodology

Cubic Feet per Second (CFS)

The standard measure for streamflow. One CFS is equal to one cubic foot of water flowing past a specific point in one second (about 7.48 gallons).

Acre-Foot (AF)

The volume of water needed to cover one acre of land to a depth of one foot. One acre-foot is exactly 325,851 gallons.

Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

The amount of water contained within the snowpack. It can be thought of as the depth of water that would theoretically result if you melted the entire snowpack instantaneously.

Data Sources

Live metrics and historical medians are aggregated directly from the US Geological Survey (USGS), California Data Exchange Center (CDEC), and National Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Daily flow statistics represent provisional records and are subject to agency revision.