Foix (river)

The Foix (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈfoʃ]) is a river in Catalonia in the province of Barcelona, northeastern Spain. Its source is near La Llacuna in the Comarca of Anoia 800 m above the sea. Later it runs through the Comarca of Alt Penedès, where it feeds a reservoir in the nature reserve of Parc del Foix since 1928, which is highly important for the drinking water supply of the densely populated coastal plain between Barcelona and Tarragona. Then it goes through the Comarca of Garraf from north to the south where it ends into the Mediterranean Sea west of the village of Cubelles. This little delta became an important natural reserve and recreational area after the campground ″Camping Paradiso″ was removed in the late 1990s.

Foix
Foix reservoir, view from Castellet
Location
CountrySpain
Physical characteristics
Source 
  elevation800 m (2,600 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Mediterranean Sea
Length41 km (25 mi)
Basin size312 km2 (120 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average0.28 m3/s (9.9 cu ft/s)

For most of the year, the river is dried up because of the dam and because of hot-summer climatical reasons. That can suddenly change in the winter months when heavy rain comes down in the mountains.

See also

Essentially, the Foix river is dry during many months of the year, due to scarce rainfall in the region. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasonal_lakes_of_Pivka#/media/File:Palskopanorama-autumn.jpg (another example of a seasonal body of water in Europe. In this case, Slovenia). 41°25′20″N 1°33′55″E


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