Los Angeles Times

Dry October may signal drought

California’s possible return to drought depends on how you define it

- By Paul Duginski

Definition­s vary, but indicators point to more abnormal dryness in California’s near future.

“There are 200 different definition­s of drought,” said climatolog­ist Bill Patzert. “If you’re a firefighte­r with no rain in the month of October, and there are strong Diablo and Santa Ana winds, it’s a drought.”

Southern California got no rain during October, and it was desiccated by superdry Santa Ana winds.

The jet stream that fed cold air into the Great Basin last week, fueling strong Diablo and Santa Ana winds in California, could have been delivering the first rain storms of the season from the Gulf of Alaska if it had been positioned about 500 miles to the west.

According to the Drought Monitor, almost one-fifth of California is either abnormally dry or in moderate drought as of the end of October. It’s abnormally dry in portions of the eastern part of the state south of Lake Tahoe and in the central Sierra. A strip of land along the Colorado River from about Lake Havasu to the Mexican border is in moderate drought.

Three months ago, only 4.32% of California was abnormally dry. But that was roughly midway through the dry seven-month period in the state’s Mediterran­ean climate.

Drought is all in your definition, said Patzert, a retired climatolog­ist from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. Although the reservoirs are generally pretty full, he says he looks at conditions in the wildlands and forests, and after almost no rain for the last seven months, “it’s not just dry, it’s incendiary.”

Falls are likely to be drier because of climate change, Patzert said. And we’re undoubtedl­y warmer than the average for the last 30 years, but a lot of that is due to suburban sprawl and the urban heat island, he said.

According to the National Weather Service, it was warmer than average in most places in Southern California in October, except in the Antelope Valley. El Niño and La Niña are in neutral this year, but most of the rain in the Los Angeles region comes later in the season, and 60% to 70% of that is borne by atmospheri­c rivers, which stream moisture from the tropical Pacific into California like a fire hose. “And there are no good predictors for those,” Patzert said.

Atmospheri­c rivers are sometimes called “Pineapple Expresses” because they’re from the Pacific around the Hawaiian Islands. They’re always wet, but sometimes they’re warm, causing the snowpack to melt. The bulk of L.A.’s rain comes in January, February and March. That was the case in the 2018-19 season, but October was closer to average last season.

Forecasts for November are predicting warmerthan-normal weather in all of California, and drierthan-normal conditions in most of Northern and Central California. It is the northern Sierra Nevada that serves as a water bank for the state, where snow piles up at high elevations through the winter, then gradually melts and replenishe­s the state’s reservoirs as warmer weather arrives in the high country with the spring and summer months.

This natural storage system can be thrown out of whack if warm storms drop rain at high elevations, causing the snowpack to melt too quickly and pose a risk of flooding.

There are many factors in California’s water picture, and it’s too early to call the game, Patzert said, but “it’s the first quarter right now and the Santa Anas are ahead 28-0.”

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 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? NO RAIN FELL in Southern California in October, and almost one-fifth of the state is either abnormally dry or in moderate drought. Above, the dry bed of Stevens Creek Reservoir in Cupertino in March 2014.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press NO RAIN FELL in Southern California in October, and almost one-fifth of the state is either abnormally dry or in moderate drought. Above, the dry bed of Stevens Creek Reservoir in Cupertino in March 2014.

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