How high the Bow River is running through Banff right now — live flow and level from the Water Survey of Canada gauge, with the official Alberta flood-warning link.
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How high the Bow River is running through Banff right now — its live flow and level from the Water Survey of Canada gauge at Banff, where today sits against the past month, and the official Alberta flood-warning link. It describes the river; it is not a flood warning.
Bow River · Bow River at Banff (Water Survey of Canada gauge 05BB001)
177 m³/s
Within its recent range. Falling over the past few days. Measured 2 Jul, 20:25.
177 m³/s
Flow
discharge, cubic metres per second
3.06 m
Level
stage height at the gauge
107 m³/s – 250 m³/s
Recent range
lowest and highest in the last 30 days at this gauge
The official flood warning is at Alberta Rivers (Alberta Environment and Protected Areas)
These numbers describe the river. They are not a flood warning — the official flood-vigilance level for this station is set by Alberta Rivers (Alberta Environment and Protected Areas).
Alberta's official river service issues the flood watches, flood warnings, high-streamflow advisories and ice-jam advisories for the Bow Basin. This page shows how the river is running; the warnings live there.
On 21 June 2013 the Bow peaked at about 466 m³/s at Banff — several times a normal summer flow — during the flood that tore through the Bow Valley and Calgary. Every high-water June since is read against that year.
The Bow is a snow-and-glacier river
It rises through late spring and summer as mountain snowmelt and glacier melt feed it, usually running highest in June, and drops to a low, clear flow under ice in winter. A warm, wet spell on a deep snowpack is what pushes it up fast.
Watch the flow and the trend, not the exact metres
The gauge's level is measured against a local reference point, not height above sea level, so the metres themselves are not a depth. What tells you something is the flow in cubic metres per second and whether the river is rising or falling — both shown above.
Checked 2 Jul, 21:03. River data from the Water Survey of Canada (Environment and Climate Change Canada), under the Open Government Licence – Canada. Real-time readings are provisional and unvalidated, and may later be revised.