I'm compiling a map. This map is a listing of water sources close to primary hiking trails in the San Jacinto Mountains. Here's my
San Jacinto Water map so far. Basically, I mark each water source with a blue dot, give the name of the water source as I know it* (some have multiple names), and then a rating from Roman numeral I to V as follows:
I - Unreliable. Assume no water unless you have a current report to the contrary.
II - Less reliable. Water typically in early season although water possibly later in wet years.
III - More reliable. Water frequently into late season.
IV - Very reliable. Water almost always into late season.
V. Extremely reliable. Water always into late season even in multi-year droughts.
Now,
I need your help. 
I don't pretend to know all the water sources in the San Jacinto Mountains. I've got a good number documented, but I know that there are more. Particularly in the Skunk Cabbage Meadows area I know there are more. So, please, if you have other water sources and can reasonably describe their location, please post here. A dot plotted on a map is good. Please, if you can, give some idea of the reliability source, and if there is a name by which it is commonly known, please give the name as well. A lot of what I have on the map is from memory; my memory could be wrong, so please speak up if I've listed something wrong. Some areas I am very familiar with (like the west side water sources along the Deer Springs, Marion Mountain, and Seven Pines Trails), so please don't be offended if I push back a little on some. But in the give-and-take, perhaps we can get something really valuable put together as a resource for hikers, particularly in this time of drought.
SPECIFIC QUESTIONS:
Do I have "Candy's Spring" right? Or is it "Candy's Creek?" I know there's a wooden sign by it (or at least there was before the fire), but I can't remember the exact position or name.
HJ
*In some cases I have given a name to a source based on surrounding features or in at least one case personal predilections (Joyce Spring). Traditionally, after all, it is the map makers prerogative to name things. How do you think we got Marion Mountain and Jean Peak? The Cartographer was sweet on two women and named two summits after them. He wound up marrying Marion if I recall correctly.