Sheridan County Water Supply Report
March Report
How to Use This Report
What is this report?
Instead of combing the internet and clicking a million links to learn about water supply in Sheridan County, let us do the work for you! This report compiles many trustworthy sources into an easy-to-read and access report. It includes information about streamflow, snowpack, drought, soil moisture, and precipitation for both the Tongue and Powder Rivers. This report is a one-stop shop for information that can help you be aware of water in Sheridan to make decisions for your ranch and your land.
Helpful Hints:
- All forecasts have the word forecast underlined in the page's title.
- Each page has a little blurb at the top that gives you some helpful information.
- If you would like to know more about a topic, check out the sources at the bottom of the page!
- Sources are precise and bring you as close as possible to the original source.
Table of Contents
Drought Index and Change
Drought History and Forecast
Precipitation - Tongue River
Precipitation - Powder River
Reservoir Capacity and Stream Flow
Select Stream Flow Stations
Tongue Water Supply Forecast
Powder Water Supply Forecast
Temperature and Precipitation
Temperature Forecast and Precipitation Forecast
Vegetation Drought Responses and Soil Moisture
Drought Index and Change
The U.S. Drought Monitor gives you a broad overview of the drought conditions in the US. Its strength is bringing together many ways of determining drought. It is useful as a large-scale view of drought, but local drought resiliency efforts are not considered.
All of Sheridan County is experiencing some level of drought, with more than half classified as Severe Drought. Almost all of Wyoming is experiencing drought conditions, with the southern portion of the state the most dry.
Over the past month, approximately three-quarters of Sheridan County experienced a Class 2 Degradation. Statewide, drought conditions worsened compared with last month.
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Maps/MapArchive.aspx
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Maps/ChangeMaps.aspxhttps://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Summary.aspx
Drought History and Forecast
The first half of this page shows current conditions, followed by the forecast. The outlook is a prediction of
Drought conditions have worsened since last month in Sheridan County. Nearly 100% of the county is experiencing some degree of dryness or drought, up from 31.84% three months ago.
Looking ahead for the month, NOAA forecasts show that the drought will persist in Sheridan County.
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?fips_56033
https://www.drought.gov/forecasts
1https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/expert_assessment/mdo_summary.php
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/expert_assessment/mdo_discussion.php
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Summary.aspx
Precipitation - Tongue River
These graphs represent precipitation affecting the Tongue River. Snow water equivalent (SWE) represents the amount of water contained within the snowpack when it melts.


Snow Water Equivalent is at approximately 5 inches. This is well below normal for this time of year.
Precipitation accumulation is below normal for this time of year.
https://nwcc-apps.sc.egov.usda.gov/awdb/basin-plots/POR/WTEQ/assocHUCwy_8/tongue.html
https://nwcc-apps.sc.egov.usda.gov/awdb/basin-plots/POR/PREC/assocHUCwy_8/tongue.html
Precipitation - Powder River
These graphs represent precipitation affecting the Powder River watershed. Snow water equivalent represents the amount of water contained within the snowpack when it melts.


Snow Water Equivalent is approximately 5.5 inches, which is below normal for this time of year.
Precipitation accumulation is slightly above normal for this time of year.
https://nwcc-apps.sc.egov.usda.gov/awdb/basin-plots/POR/WTEQ/assocHUCwy_8/powder.html
https://nwcc-apps.sc.egov.usda.gov/awdb/basin-plots/POR/PREC/assocHUCwy_8/powder.html
Reservoir Capacity and Stream Flow
The total capacity of reservoirs and current water storage includes inactive storage below the outlet.
Lake DeSmet
Water storage level is at 197,132 ac/ft. Total Capacity if 234,987 ac/ft. The lake is 83.89% full.
| Reservoir | Total Storage (Acre-ft) | Current Storage (Acre-ft) | Percentage of Total Capacity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bighorn | 4,624 | 1,579 | |
| Cross Creek | 824 | 185 | |
| Dome Lake No. 1 | 1,506 | 1,354 | |
| Kearney Lake | 6,324 | 3,092 | |
| Park Lake | 10,362 | 4,230 | |
| Sawmill | 1,275 | 603 |
Tongue River Reservoir
Water levels have increased to 49,715 ac/ft. The reservoir is 62.9% full.

Reservoir Level

This graph displays the real time data of the Tongue River Reservoir. This data remains provisional until it is officially reviewed due to variables that can affect the gages. These include but are not limited to algal and aquatic growth, sediment movement, malfunction of recording equipment, and back water from ice or debris such as log jams.
Sources:Lake DeSmet Operating Department at lakedesmet@johnsoncowy.us
https://seoflow.wyo.gov/Data/Map/Parameter/Total%20Storage/Location/Identifier/Interval/Latest
https://gis.dnrc.mt.gov/apps/stage/gage-report/location/3f087fe86bde421f857dfedff4e40e93/1680476400000-1683154740000
Select Stream Flow Stations
These graphs give context to stream flow percentile classes. The selected USGS stream gauges are on the stateline with Montana, being the downstream end of the Tongue and Powder within our region. The flow represent average 7-day flows. The vertical axis is logarithmic meaning it goes up by 10x for each major tick mark.


Streamflow is in the very bottom portion of the "Normal" range or 25-75th percentile.
Streamflow is in the bottom portion of the "Normal" range or 25-75th percentile.

https://waterwatch.usgs.gov/index.php?id=mv01d
https://waterwatch.usgs.gov/?id=wwchart_sitedur&ofmt=plot_mvbg&site_no=06306300
https://waterwatch.usgs.gov/?id=wwchart_sitedur&ofmt=plot_mvbg&site_no=06324500
Temperature and Precipitation
Temperature and precipitation are large drivers of changes in drought conditions. As you might expect, high temperatures and low precipitation can worsen drought conditions while low temperature and high precipitations can improve them.

Last month was 8 - 9 degrees warmer in Sheridan County than most years.
The precipitation anomaly for Sheridan County was normal last month.

https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/tanal/temp_analyses.php
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/Global_Monsoons/American_Monsoons/NAMS_precip_monitoring.shtml
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/expert_assessment/mdo_discussion.php
https://www.weather.gov/byz/daily_records?city=Sheridan
Temperature Forecast and Precipitation Forecast
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/long_range/lead14/interactive/index.php Explore link above for an Interactive map that displays percentage chance above and below normal for any point in US

Sheridan county has an 33-40% probability to have higher temperatures this month than normal.
Sheridan has am equal chances outlook for precipitation this month.

https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/long_range/lead14/interactive/index.php
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/expert_assessment/mdo_discussion.php
Vegetation Drought Responses and Soil Moisture
The graphs below are two ways of visualizing on-ground conditions. The vegetation Drought Response Index (Vegdri) uses a satellite to estimate vegetative stress. Soil moisture is helpful when looking at many things. Soil acts as a bank for moisture and can buffer drought degradation or improvement. It is also the water that plants have available to them so is linked to vegetative stress.

Vegetation Drought Response is not very reliable this time of year.
Soil moisture percentiles fall in the 40–60% range across the county.

https://vegdri.unl.edu/Home/VegDRIQuad.aspx?WY,2
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/Soilmst_Monitoring/US/Soilmst/Soilmst.shtml
http://www.wrds.uwyo.edu/Soil/SM-Ptile-Current.html
Additional Resources
These are the broad sources we got information from. These websites are trustworthy and are reliable sources for additional information. In the future we hope to add more source for additional information.
- https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu
- https://www.drought.gov
- https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov
- https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/wcc/home
- https://waterwatch.usgs.gov
- Lake DeSmet Operating Department at lakedesmet@johnsoncowy.us
- http://dnrc.mt.gov/divisions/water/projects/tongue-river
- https://seoflow.wyo.gov/Data/Map/Parameter/Total%20Storage/Location/Identifier/Interval/Latest
- https://vegdri.unl.edu/Home/VegDRIQuad.aspx?WY,2