Thomes Creek


Thomes Creek is a major watercourse on the west side of the Sacramento Valley in Northern California. The creek originates in the Coast Ranges and flows east for about to join the Sacramento River, at a point about northeast of Corning in Tehama County.
Thomes Creek is a highly seasonal stream and drains a mostly rural watershed of some. There are no permanent dams on the creek, although there are some small diversions for agriculture and domestic water supply, and the overall water quality is considered good. The upper of Thomes Creek are rated Class IV–V+ for whitewater kayaking and rafting.

Name origin

Thomes Creek was named after Robert Hasty Thomes, a pioneer who arrived to the area in the 1840s. Thomes' name has been frequently mispronounced and misspelled, resulting in many officially-recorded variant names such as "Thomas Creek", "Thoms Creek" and "Toms Creek".

Geography

Thomes Creek begins at Kingsley Lake, a small pond at elevation in the Mendocino National Forest. The lake is in a saddle between Solomon Peak, and Sugarloaf Mountain, near the Tehama-Trinity County line. The creek flows south through a deep valley for about and turns east at the confluence with Willow Creek. It passes through the narrow Thomes Gorge, also known simply as "The Gorge", and emerges from the mountains near Paskenta. From there it flows east-northeast through the semi-arid foothills of the Coast Ranges past Henleyville, Richfield and Tehama to join the Sacramento River at river mile 226.
The upper watershed is rugged, mountainous and highly prone to flooding and landslides. The highest point in the watershed is the summit of Mount Linn at in the Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel Wilderness. The lower part of the creek flows over a wide cobbled alluvial bed composed of coarse gravel and large boulders. Due to the seasonal nature of precipitation in this area, the lower part of Thomes Creek is often dry during the summer. The watershed receives most of its precipitation in the form of rain, though snow falls frequently at elevations above. The average precipitation in the lowlands is, while in the mountains it can be as high as.
Water quality in Thomes Creek is considered good although it has been impacted by high rates of erosion, caused in part by the unstable sedimentary rock that makes up much of the Coast Ranges, but also from human activities such as ranching, logging, agriculture and mining.

Discharge

A U.S. Geological Survey stream gage at Paskenta measured the discharge of Thomes Creek between October 1920 and September 1996. The average annual flow was, with a monthly average ranging from in February to in October. The highest recorded flow was on December 22, 1964 during the Christmas flood of 1964.

Ecology

The creek provides habitat for as many as 22 fish species according to a 1982 study, including Sacramento pikeminnow, Sacramento sucker, hardhead, California roach and speckled dace. The creek is host to significant runs of steelhead trout, as well as resident populations of rainbow trout above the waterfalls in the Gorge which form partial barriers to fish passage. The creek is also home to spring-run chinook salmon.