At
9:45pm, Friday 11th October BST
(8:45pm, Friday 11th October GMT)
Within the usual range for this location
Steady, no change from previous measurement at 9:30pm, Friday 11th October BST
No current or recent warnings.
River Sheaf from West View Lane, Abbeydale to Archer Road, Norton Hammer
No current or recent warnings.
River Sheaf at Buttermere Close, Norton Hammer
No current or recent warnings.
River Sheaf at Little London Road and Abbeydale Road, Norton Hammer
No current or recent warnings.
River Sheaf at the Nether Edge end of Broadfield Road
No current or recent warnings.
Darker blue shaded areas on long term data indicate maximum and minimum levels for the date (you may need to zoom in closer to see them).
Long term data may have gaps where the API data was not available.
Download long term data as csvNote: CSV data will include any outlying values that have been ignored by our graphing system as probably erroneous (eg, because they are ridiculously high compared to the values either side of them). It is your responsibility to filter these out if necessary.
Important! If you are planning to retrieve the csv data automatically, you must read and understand the limitations on the data and its availability.
Please note: Geographic coordinates may reflect the access point for the gauge, and not the precise location in the watercourse that it is taking readings from.
The usual range of the River Sheaf at Dore Twenty Well Lane is between 0.13m and 0.80m. It has been between these levels for 90% of the time since monitoring began.
The typical recent level of the River Sheaf at Dore Twenty Well Lane over the past 12 months has been between 0.28m and 0.58m. It has been between these levels for at least 151 days in the past year.
The highest level ever recorded at the River Sheaf at Dore Twenty Well Lane is 1.78m, reached on Monday 25th June 2007 at 4:00pm.
Note that this data may not take account of recent measurements, as we wait until a level has been verified by the Environment Agency before adding it to our records.
Monitoring locations on nearby rivers