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Feb 05, 2010 8:55 am |
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re: California and the Gravity of Environmental Abuse |
James Booth
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. Related to "Cafilornia + water"
From an e-mail today ... _
Subject: Precip Report from CA, Plumas County area in the Sierra Nevadas in N. CA, from my sister who works for CALTRANS
JANUARY JUMP START
It's difficult to find the proper set of adjectives to describe January precipitation. Perhaps it would be better to simply avoid descriptions and stick with facts. So here they are. January 2010 brought 91 inches of snowfall to the west side of the Lake Almanor basin. That's seven feet, seven inches of new snow, with almost all of it arriving during the ten day period from January 17 through the 26th.
January began with a near-average amount of accumulated snowfall for the season but well below average amount of water (only 69%). We were basically 4 inches behind in water content on New Years Day. Rainfall during the first half of the month did begin to ease that deficit, but there was no measurable snowfall until the 17th. The storm series that followed was truly extraordinary. A well forecast shift in the jet stream over the Pacific sent back-to-back waves of moisture into California. At one point during the peak of the storm series, local snowfall was arriving at a rate of more than an inch and a half per hour. The daily snowfall totals for January 20th and 21st were the highest at 22 inches each day.
The main storm series had passed by early Friday, the 22nd, but residual moisture and minor follow-up fronts brought additional snow over the subsequent several days. When it was all done, the snowfall total for the month stood at 91 inches, which is well over twice the average amount of snow expected for January. The early snow was quite wet, causing it to cling to tree branches, but most of the subsequent snowfall was in the relatively dry category. Between the rainfall and snowfall, total water content for the month at the Prattville recording station was 9.67 inches, well over the average for January.
In terms of season totals, the Lake Almanor basin is now looking considerably better than it did at the start of January. The initial large water deficit has now been erased, and the season total precipitation at the end of January is 18.46 inches, or 97% of average. Season snowfall now stands at 133 inches on the west shore, or 173% of average at this point.
An average February would bring us another 28.5 inches of snow and 5.5 inches of water content. An average month would be just fine, thank you.
.Private Reply to James Booth (new win) |
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