The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Winter storms wash away drought, burnish snowpack

- By John Antczak The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES >> California is drenched and its mountains are piled high with snow amid a still-unfolding winter of storms that was unimaginab­le just a few months ago.

Drought conditions have almost been eliminated, hills blackened by huge wildfires are sporting lush coats of green, and snow has fallen in the usually temperate suburbs of Southern California, where chilly conditions have made jackets and scarves the rule.

Indeed, downtown Los Angeles set a record Thursday for the first February without reaching at least 70 degrees in more than 140 years of record-keeping.

Also this week, a twoday storm inundated parts of wine country north of San Francisco and sent the Russian River to its highest peak in more than 20 years.

None of this was expected as recently as October, when the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Climate Prediction Center issued its outlook for December through February.

The scenario envisioned above-average temperatur­es in the western U.S., continuati­on of drought in Southern California and only equal chances of a wet or dry year in the rest of the state.

That abruptly changed the following month as the center cited high confidence in a forecast for wetter than usual conditions in the West and predicted at least improvemen­t if not a complete end to drought conditions throughout much of California.

The storms, including aptly named “atmospheri­c rivers,” began arriving.

Blizzards have pounded the Sierra Nevada, burying the towering mountain range in massive amounts of snow. On the eastern side of the range, for example, the Mammoth Mountain resort reported nearly 47.8 feet of snow at the summit so far this season.

While frequently disrupting travel, the storms stoked a big part of the state’s water supply — the Sierra snowpack that melts and runs off into reservoirs during spring and summer.

The California Department of Water Resources reported Thursday that the Sierra snowpack is now 153 percent of average to date.

A manual measuremen­t at Phillips Station off U.S. 50 near Sierra-at-Tahoe found a snow depth of 113 inches and a snow water equivalent of 43.5 inches, more than double what was recorded there in January.

Phillips Station is where then-Gov. Jerry Brown attended a snowpack survey in April 2015 that found a field barren of any measureabl­e snow. Brown later ordered California­ns to use less water.

On Thursday, the department was unable to livestream the measuremen­t because stormy weather cut the cell connection. “This winter’s snowpack gets better each month, and it looks like California storms aren’t done giving yet,” Karla Nemeth, the department director, said in a statement. “This is shaping up to be an excellent water year.”

Where it hasn’t snowed, there has been rain, and a lot of it.

Nearly 21 inches of rain fell in 48 hours this week near the Northern California wine country city of Guernevill­e, where the Russian River was slowly receding Thursday after extensive flooding.

Downtown Los Angeles has recorded nearly 15.8 inches of rain this season, nearly 5 inches (12.7 centimeter­s) above normal to date. A year ago the total was less than 2 inches. San Francisco has a similar total, nearly double last year’s.

Southern California’s seasonal rivers have repeatedly roared to life, their normally dry beds filled with churning water.

The water resources department said the state’s six largest reservoirs are holding between 84 percent and 137 percent of their historical averages to date.

The U.S. Drought Monitor reported Thursday that more than 87 percent of California was now free of any level of drought or unusual dryness. Just 2.3 percent — along the Oregon border — was in moderate drought, and the remainder was in a condition called abnormally dry.

Three months ago, nearly 84 percent of the state was in moderate, severe or extreme drought, and the rest was abnormally dry.

In October, NOAA said forecaster­s expected a weak El Nino, the weather-influencin­g warming of the Pacific Ocean, to be in place by late fall or early winter.

NOAA, however, didn’t confirm the arrival of the El Nino until Feb. 14.

An agency assessment last week said heavy rain over the previous 30 days was due to a series of atmospheri­c rivers fueled by a combinatio­n of El Nino conditions and a lesser-known atmospheri­c phenomena called the Madden-Julian Oscillatio­n.

A NOAA fact sheet describes it as a “tropical disturbanc­e that propagates eastward around the global tropics with a cycle on the order of 30-60 days.” One of its most significan­t U.S. impacts during winter is an increase in the frequency and intensity of heavy precipitat­ion along the West Coast.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John King of the Department of Water Resources, thrust the snow survey tube into the snowpack while conducting the third manual snow survey of the season at the Phillips Station near Echo Summit Thursday. The survey found the snowpack at 113 inches deep with a snow water equivalent of 43.5 inches at this location at this time of year.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS John King of the Department of Water Resources, thrust the snow survey tube into the snowpack while conducting the third manual snow survey of the season at the Phillips Station near Echo Summit Thursday. The survey found the snowpack at 113 inches deep with a snow water equivalent of 43.5 inches at this location at this time of year.
 ?? JOHN ANTCZAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Grasslands trail at Malibu Creek State Park near Calabasas is seen on after rains caused new green growth on lands blackened by the 2018 Woolsey wildfire.
JOHN ANTCZAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Grasslands trail at Malibu Creek State Park near Calabasas is seen on after rains caused new green growth on lands blackened by the 2018 Woolsey wildfire.

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