Wednesday 25 June 2014

Waiting for the rain

Stage = 33.25cm, Discharge = 0.374 m3/s

Depending on the arrival of the rainy season downpours, mid to late June can have the lowest discharge levels of the year for Takiya River. The snowmelt season has ended, and conditions can be extremely dry and hot. Levels of ET (evapotranspiration) rise and this reduces groundwater levels and the amount of flow in the river. The hydrograph below shows some rain fell on 13-14 June (45mm), but it is not enough to prevent the continuing fall of river discharge towards annual minimum levels.


Friday 6 June 2014

A walk in the river

Discharge measurement in the tributary, Takiya 2 (basin area approx. 1km2)

A walk in the river can teach you many things. Today we walked the several hundred metres from the gauging point on Takiya River to the point where irrigation water is taken, close to the confluence with the Miomote River. Along the way we walked in the flowing water through riffles and pools, observing the changing channel form and channel bed materials, and the ecological environment.

Gauging point on Takiya River
Right bank with staff gauge and pressure transducer inside the steel pipe
Left bank with stable bedrock and moss
Dozens of small frogs were spotted in the river


Huge keyaki tree interrupts the plantation cedars
Channel becomes wide and shallow upstream of the irrigation diversion dam
Irrigation diversion dam made from gabions - wire crates filled with local rock material
Irrigation canal headworks gate
Settling pond for sediment below the headgate
Pure mountain water flows off towards the paddy fields