[pct-l] Washington Snow Year
trekker4 at aol.com
trekker4 at aol.com
Wed Jan 13 23:10:40 CST 2010
_griffin at u.washington.edu_ (mailto:griffin at u.washington.edu) is published
for the 1st of each month, Jan-May; they used to do a 1 Jun report also.
Much better than tables of statistics. "Save as" a picture, then print it;
it'll come out 8.5x11.
Bob "Trekker"
Big Bend Desert Denizen, and...
Naturalized Citizen - Republic of Texas
In a message dated 1/13/2010 10:35:37 P.M. Central Standard Time,
griffin at u.washington.edu writes:
I just get the digest, so excuse the repetition if someone has already
replied to Tex's question.
In today's Seattle Times, there was a brief item about the lower than
normal snowpack thanks to El Nino:
-------------------------
Associated Press
YAKIMA, Wash. —
El Nino is shaping up as expected for the Pacific Northwest this winter,
resulting in warmer temperatures, drier conditions and below-average
mountain snowpack in Washington, the federal government said Tuesday.
The warmer and drier conditions this year have resulted in mountain
snowpack levels that are below average across Washington state, except
on the Olympic Peninsula, said Scott Pattee, water supply specialist for
the USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service.
It's too early to know if those conditions will continue for the rest of
the winter, but weather forecasters predict above-average temperatures
through March, he said.
That could present challenges for water managers and water users later
this summer, who rely on mountain snowpack to feed rivers and streams
and fill lakes and reservoirs as it melts. Seventy to 80 percent of
Washington's surface water supplies come from mountain snowmelt in the
summer.
After above-average precipitation in October and heavy snowfall in
November, Washington was on track for a good winter, Pattee said.
"But come December, Mother Nature just turned the faucet off," he said.
"Typically, by this time, we should have a solid 50 percent of our
snowpack on the ground and we're 10-15 percent behind on that right now."
Last month, the Pacific Northwest experienced the 14th-coldest December
since 1895. It was also the 11th-driest December for Washington state.
In Eastern Washington, snowpack levels ranged from 56 percent of average
in the Spokane River basin to 89 percent of average in the Walla Walla
area. West of the Cascades, snowpack in the central Puget Sound area
registered at 72 percent of average, while the Olympic Peninsula came in
at 123 percent of average.
----------------------------------------------
It's too early to say for sure, but this could turn out to be a good
year for southbounders. Stay tuned..
Tom "Bullfrog" Griffin
Seattle
>Date: Wed, 13 Jan 2010 18:31:41 -0600
>From: "CHARLES MILLER" <chuck-miller at earthlink.net>
>Subject: [pct-l] Washington Snow Year
>
>
>How is the snow depth going in Washington so far this year? Does the
year appear average, or more, or less.
>
>I know no one knows what will happen the next months, but how does it
look so far?
>
>Thanks for any ideas,
>Tex
>
>
>
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