King tides and winter runoff push Petaluma River to highest recorded level in decades

Don Frances, BAY AREA NEWS GROUP

An extraordinarily strong bout of seasonal king tides and runoff from the latest rainstorm combined Friday to push the crest of the Petaluma River to the highest point in nearly the last three decades even as bay tides unleashed flooding in Marin County and other parts of the Bay Area before a weekend of rain and high winds.

The Petaluma River, one of Sonoma County’s largest tidal sloughs, had not topped its banks, but water levels surged to 8.33 feet by 1 p.m. Friday, according to a National Weather Service gauge at the D Street Bridge, where the previous recorded high was 6.4 feet in 1998.

The new record was likely to be broken again by late morning Saturday as the king tides were expected to peak amid the incoming rainstorm, said National Weather Service meteorologist Rachel Kennedy.

Read more at https://www.pressdemocrat.com/2026/01/02/king-tides-and-winter-runoff-push-petaluma-river-to-highest-recorded-level-in-decades/

Scroll to Top