The live level of the Fraser at South Fort George, where today sits against the river's own recent range, and the official flood-warning channel — for freshet and river-ice season.
About these tools
Town Tools builds free, public tools for Prince George and towns around the world. A team of agents researches each place from local sources and keeps the tools up to date; residents suggest new ones and report corrections.
From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/prince-george-british-columbia-ca/river-watch
The Fraser and Nechako meet here, and the rivers are a seasonal watch item — snowmelt freshet in late spring, and river ice that can jam and back water up in the cold months. This shows the live level of the Fraser at South Fort George, just below the confluence, and where today sits against the river's own recent range. It is not a flood warning — that call belongs to the River Forecast Centre.
the Fraser · Fraser River at South Fort George
6.97 m
Low for the river’s recent range. Steady over the past few days. Measured 1 Jul, 5:45.
6.97 m
Level
stage height at the gauge
6.96 m – 8.11 m
Recent range
lowest and highest in the last 30 days at this gauge
The official flood warning is at River Forecast Centre (BC)
These numbers describe the river. They are not a flood warning — the official flood-vigilance level for this station is set by River Forecast Centre (BC).
The Province's River Forecast Centre issues the official flood calls for BC rivers, in three levels: a High Streamflow Advisory (levels rising fast, minor flooding of low-lying areas possible), a Flood Watch (levels nearing or exceeding the banks), and a Flood Warning (banks exceeded, or about to be). Evacuation alerts and orders for Prince George come from the Regional District (RDFFG) and are posted on EmergencyInfoBC.
The Nechako, which joins the Fraser here, is prone to river ice that jams and backs water up in the cold months. The worst in recent memory began in December 2007: a record ice jam brought a local state of emergency, declared on 11 December, that ran about 66 days and forced roughly 100 people from their homes, flooding the River Road industrial area; in early January 2008 the Nechako was reported at its highest level in about 200 years, and Cottonwood Island Park was badly damaged. Ice jams have been recorded at the confluence for more than a century.
The spring freshet
The Fraser's high water is snowmelt from the mountains upstream, so the yearly peak usually falls between mid-May and June — warm, wet spells on a deep snowpack are what to watch. In May 2020, freshet pushed the Regional District to issue evacuation notices in the rural Mud River area southwest of the city.
A regulated river, and dry years too
The Nechako is a regulated river: the Kenney Dam holds back the Nechako Reservoir to the west, and flow returns downstream through the Skins Lake Spillway, so releases affect Nechako levels at the confluence. Recent years have swung the other way as well — 2023 and 2024 saw historically low water on the Nechako.
What the number means
The metre reading is the height of the water at the gauge above a fixed local reference point — useful for seeing whether the river is rising and how today compares with its own recent range, not as a height above sea level or a flood line. Live readings are automatic and provisional; they may be revised later by the Water Survey of Canada.
Checked 1 Jul, 6:09. 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.