The Chogray Reservoir () is an artificial reservoir on the
East Manych River on the border of
Stavropol Krai and
Kalmykia in southern Russia.
The reservoir, 49 km long, was constructed in 1969–1973, primarily to satisfy the demands of local irrigated farming.
Its area is 185 square km, volume 0.7 cubic km. Besides capturing water naturally brought by the tributaries of the East Manych River, the reservoir receives water from the
Terek River and the
Kuma River over the
Kuma–Manych Canal, which was completed a few years before the reservoir.
Later on, another irrigation canal – the
Chernyye Zemli Main Canal (Черноземельский магистральный канал, ''Chernozemelsky magistralny kanal'') was built, taking water from the Chogray Reservoir further east and north, into Kalmykia.
In 2008, after almost 40 years of operation, the reservoir was reported as in dire need of maintenance, as were many other reservoirs of its age in the area. Under certain conditions the waters are polluted by blooms of toxic cyanobacteria (blue-gree algae).
As the East Manych (and, thus, the Chogray Reservoir) is not connected in a navigable way with any other body of water (although that may change if the
Eurasia Canal
The Eurasia Canal (, ''Kanal "Evraziya"'') is a proposed 700-kilometre-long (430 mi) canal connecting the Caspian Sea to the Black Sea along the Kuma-Manych Depression. Currently, a chain of lakes and reservoirs and the shallow irrigation K ...
is constructed), delivering a boat, or any other large floating installation to the Chogray Reservoir would be a non-trivial task. Such an operation was undertaken in 1976, when two large floating pumping units, weighing 320 and 280 metric tons, respectively, had to be delivered to the reservoir for use by the local irrigators. They were taken by boat from the
Don up the
West Manych River waterway to
Lake Manych-Gudilo
Lake Manych-Gudilo () is a large salt lake, saltwater reservoir lake in Kalmykia, Russia. Part of the lake lies also in Rostov Oblast and Stavropol Krai. It has an area of about 344 km2 and average depth of only about 0.6 m.
Lake Manyc ...
– the end of the existing navigable waterway, – from where they were transported 85 km overland using special heavy trailers. Thirty years later, that story was still remembered locally.
Плыли в степи корабли
("Boats were sailing through the steppe"), ''Stavropolskaya Pravda'', 28.12.2006.
References
{{Reflist
Reservoirs in Russia
Reservoirs in Kalmykia
Reservoirs in Stavropol Krai