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<br />" () (': 11 <br />1(,)\)'1; <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />and Canal Company exchange water was expected to be imported. However, <br />heavy demands allowed for imports during June and July. <br /> <br />The actual diversion for June and July was 14,180 acre-feet as <br />measured at the outlet portal of Boustead Tunnel. Of the <br />14,180 acre-feet of water at Boustead Tunnel, 730 acre-feet was <br />Busk-Ivanhoe water transported for them under contract. The m~ximum <br />mean daily import throug,h Boustead Tunnel was 508 ft3/s on <br />June 21, 1988. A senior call was placed on the Colorado River several <br />times during 1988; however, no releases from Ruedi Reservoir were <br />necessary to replace Project diversions as no diversions were made when <br />the call was on the Colorado River. <br /> <br />The yearly total imports, the water used for Twi n Lakes Reservoir and <br />Canal Company exchange, and the accumulated imports to the <br />Arkansas River are shown on table 4. The 17 years of accumulated <br />imports total 752,600 acre-feet for an average of 44,300 acre-feet per <br />year. A plot of the Boustead Tunnel imports during water year 1988 is <br />shown on exhibit 5. <br /> <br />The discharge records for all diversions in water year 1988 are shown in <br />appendix A. <br /> <br />D. Twin Lakes Reservoi~ & Canal CompantLfryingpan Arkansas Project <br />rx~'lange <br /> <br />On October I, the Twin Lakes Reservoir' and Canal Company (Company) <br />began bypassing water into the Roaring Fork River drainage in exchange <br />for water in Twin Lakes. The exchange followed the operating criteria <br />as shown in appendix B. The total amount of the exchange at Twin Lakes <br />was 1,980 acre-feet. The Company's account in Twin Lakes was never at <br />maximum storage due to the Company's work on the collection system and <br />the demands on storage. The call being placed on the Colorado River in <br />July forced Twin Lakes Canal Company to byp~ss all flows, from late July <br />through the end of September, into the Roari,ng Fork. When a condition of <br />spilling or excess releasing exists, the Company does not receive credit <br />for water being bypassed into the Roaring Fork System. The monthly <br />summary of the exchange is also shown in appendix B along with plots of <br />the daily flows. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />E. Turquoise Lake <br /> <br />On September 3D, 1987, 126,100 acre-feet of water were in storage <br />in Turquoise Lake. Homestake Project niaintained their storage at <br />approximately 26,000 acre-feet throughout. the year by meeting their <br />demands from imports through the Homestake Tunnel. Total imports from <br />Homestake Tunnel were 29,880 acre-feet. In addition to the Homestake <br />imports, Busk-Ivanhoe imported approximately 4,200 acre-feet of water <br />through the Carlton Tunnel throughout the year and 730 acre-feet of <br />water through Boustead Tunnel during: June (exhibit 6). The <br />4,930 acre-feet of imports of Busk-Ivanhoe water was divided equally <br /> <br />8 <br /> <br />. <br />