LOCATION AND SIZE OF SEEPAGE POOLS 
In Cold Creek Canyon: No. 14 (see Photograph 
No. 2), 65 x 21 x 4 feet; No. 15—two pools—one 70 x 15 
x 4 feet and one 30x8x4 feet; No. 16—two pools— 
60 x 20x 4 feet and 30x 10x3 feet; No. 21, 30x 10x 
5 feet. 
In Wind Cave Canyon: No. 10, 30 x 10x 3 feet; No. 
iS xo 2? feet: 
SURFACE-FLOWING SPRINGS 
No. 11 is a small spring in a creek bed that empties 
into Wind Cave Canyon in the center and near the east 
line of the Reserve. 
This water is a few feet above, and trickled into a 
pool 8x 5x 2 feet deep. Being in the creek bottom it 
would be filled with gravel after every freshet, but it 
could be piped fifty feet into a trough without much 
difficulty. 
At No. 12 the water again comes to the surface 
in a small trickling stream in the creek bed. A _ hole 
would have to be kept open here. 
No. 6, in the center of the Reserve, is a small-flowing 
spring from which about fifty head of stock water. It 
has never gone dry. 
At one time this spring supplied a ranch (now 
vacated) through a three-quarter inch pipe, furnishing 
a flow of 22 gallons per hour or 528 gallons per day. 
There are two small springs near here, not shown 
on the map, that for the first time went dry this season. 
The superintendent of the Park would like to see these 
springs connected and the water run to his house 2,100 
feet away, as it is better than the water piped from 
Cold Brook Creek after being used above by cattle. 
A supply for animals, however, could be piped from 
the main spring 50 feet distant. 
As regards piping, the same can be said of Busey 
Spring (No. 20), a flowing spring holding about three 
buckets of water, just west and outside of the Park 
boundary. 
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