Description - The US Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District, supervises the drainage area of 226 square miles or about 92 percent of Kettle Creek. The project reduces flood heights of Kettle Creek below the dam and of the West Branch below the mouth of Kettle Creek.
Attractions
- The earth and rock fill dam has a maximum height of 165 feet above the streambed and a top length of 1,350 feet. The horseshoe-shaped tunnel is uncontrolled and located in rock adjacent to the right abutment. The reservoir has a storage capacity of 75,000 acre feet at spillway crest, equal to 6.22 inches of runoff from the drainage area above the dam and the pool at this elevation extends upstream for a distance approximately 8.8 miles. The permanent pool covers 160 acres and extends for 2.2 miles. The project controls a drainage area of 226 square miles or about 92 percent of Kettle Creek. The project reduces flood heights of Kettle Creek below the dam and of the West Branch below the mouth of Kettle Creek.
Recreation - The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania coordinates operation of its George B. Stevenson Dam with Curwensville, Alvin R. Bush and Foster Joseph Sayers Dams to secure optimum flood control benefits from this controlled systems operation. The recreational facilities are operated and maintained by the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Recreation facilities include a beach, boat launch, picnic areas and campgrounds. Climate - Pennsylvania generally has a moist climate with cold winters and warm summers. The Kettle Creek area has cold winter months with temperatures averaging around 22 degrees Fahrenheit (-6 degrees Celsius). The area's average summer temperatures range around 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 Celsius). Precautions should be made when traveling this snowy area in the winter. Location -
Alvin R. Bush Dam is located on Kettle Creek approximately 8.4 miles above the mouth and about 15 miles above Renovo in Clinton County.
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