My brother, Todd, wrote to me on June 8th noting that the C-44 canal was flowing westwards into Lake Okeechobee rather than dumping eastwards into the St Lucie as is standard operating procedure after a big rain…
Yes this canal, as most of the others, can “flow” in either direction, seemly “backwards.”
So how can this happen? This backwards flow?
Dr Gary Goforth says the following:
“Yes this is normal operations; generally when the Lake level is below 14 ft the Corps leaves the locks at S-308 wide open which allows any local runoff to flow into the lake.”
Another way Lake Okeechobee can receive water in an unusual way is if the water is pumped into it–back pumped. This has recently been done from the EAA. Back pumping into Lake O has been outlawed, but it is allowed if communities or farmland would flood.
According to an exchange yesterday on Facebook, with Audubon’s Dr Paul Grey:
“St Lucie (C-44) backflows are just one of many southern inflows now, S-2 is backpumping, three other southern outlets are flowing backward into the low lake (L-8, S354, S-352) the Caloosahatchee was backflowing but appears equalized today. More water is flowing into the lake from downstream areas than upstream right now. Not the end of the world but not desirable either, it is very polluted water. http://w3.saj.usace.army.mil/h2o/reports/r-oke.html “
When I asked Dr Grey if this was being done to gather water in the lake as we’ve recently been in a drought, or to keep the farmlands in the EAA and surrounding areas dry, this was his response:
“Both, they want to fill the lake this summer, and so do I, in concept, but much of this backpumping and flowing is because the farmers have been pumping water so rapdily off their own lands they have made the canals too deep, and risk fooding the communities. And rather than tell the farmers the canal its too deep and they have to modererate their pumping, the SFWMD backpumps/flow it to the lake.”
In any case, when I visited yesterday during my trip to Belle Glade, S-308 was closed at Port Mayaca and no more water was entering Lake O from C-44. I’m not sure about S-2.
The water looks dark and full of sediment. The once beautiful beach is full of gritty rocks. Maybe the lake is healthy in the shallows south, near the islands, but by Port Mayaca it looks terrible. Algae has been reported by S-308 a few weeks ago according to a report from Martin County at the River’s Coalition meeting. But thankfully there is not algae reported in C-44 right now.
We have really made a mess of it. For our rivers and for Lake Okeechobee, the reservoir must be built and we must continue to advocate for sending cleaned water south and re -plumb this outdated system. Forward flow or backwards flow, just say NO.
6-13-17 JTL
____________________________________
Todd Thurlow notes 6-8-17
Jacqui,
Interesting note: if this data is correct, C-44 has poured 10.7 billion gallons (aka 13.82 Stuart Feet) of water into Lake Okeechobee in the last three days. With all the recent “local” runoff into the canal, they have opened S-308, sending the water west to the Lake to help get the low lake level up.
48.5 million gallons passed through S-80 to the St. Lucie on June 5th…
-Todd

Article in Okeechobee News by Katrina Elsken “St Lucie Water Flowing Into the Big O” http://okeechobeenews.net/lake-okeechobee/st-lucie-water-flowing-big-o/
SFWMD: https://www.sfwmd.gov
ACOE Lake O: http://www.saj.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Lake-Okeechobee/




Numerous wood storks and great egrets eating fish in the polluted side canals of C-44:
Unbelievable by any rational thinking person (unless you’re a Farmer in the EAA). Just proves that Lake O. is solely used as a reservoir for agriculture. All this water moving back and forth gives new meaning to the phrase “A Slush Fund” ;-).
Ha! Yes a slush fund it is….
So US Sugar and Florida Crystals are not back pumping; The Corps and SFWMD is doing it for them at our expense. This is so wrong; And this will still happen when we have an inadequate reservoir south of the lake, if that even happens. We need to restore the natural flow of the surface water, and if agriculture wants to keep a private reservoir, they should pay for it. If you fly over the Dike, you can see they built it at least two miles inside the flood plain, so they guarantee the Lake will get too full, and they will have to dump it when it gets too full too fast. They should not keep the Lake artificially high for any reason.
A disgraceful irony indeed….
Where was the algae seen?
not too far from S-308–like last year
Interesting article. Not aware some much water was being back pumped into the lake. What are the nutrient levels of the water being back pumped?
Drew hi. I do not know the answer. Imagine it is way over 10ppb…
Yes, I would guess significantly higher and contributing to further lake contamination.
Likely at least 50 parts, and could be higher
Shared on Facebook – wish we could share the comments above for the public to view??
Yes the blog is just internal for those who visit. Thanks for visiting!