The Mercury News Weekend

5 FEET FURTHER FROM A DROUGHT

New snowstorm in the Sierra Nevada not quite a ‘March Miracle’ yet

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Ski resorts are crowing over a major snowstorm that began pounding the Sierra Nevada late Thursday, with forecaster­s warning of white- out conditions, road closures and up to 5 feet of new snow at the highest elevations by Saturday morning.

After a dismally dry start to California’s winter, some observers have even gone so far as to tout this month’s bounty of storms as reminiscen­t of the “March Miracle,” the famous, stormy March 1991 that launched the beginning of the end of the state’s stubborn 1987-1992 drought.

But is this March an-

“These storms are really helping and are positive. We’ll take asmuch as we can get in the next two weeks.” — Dave Rizzardo, chief of snow surveys and water supply forecastin­g for the state Department of Water Resources

other miracle? Not even close, say experts.

Every storm helps improve the state’s summer water picture, scientists and state water planners said Thursday. But even taking into account this storm and a big one two weeks ago, the Sierra Nevada snow pack — the source of nearly one-third of California’s water supply — still is only about half of normal for this winter season, with this month’s totals measuring just half of the 1991miracl­e month’s final tally.

In other words, California still needs lots more snow.

“We’re definitely better off than we were at the end of February,” said Gonzalo Cortes, a scientist at UCLA’s Civil and Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Department who specialize­s in studying snow trends. “Back then, we were worse than in 2015, the worst year of the drought. But in terms of comparing us to 1991, we have a long way to go still.”

The math is fairly simple. California water experts measure snow pack not so much for the depth of the snow, but for the amount of water it contains. That’s because as the snow melts in spring and summer, it flows into reservoirs and is delivered to farms and cities during the rest of the year.

Dense, wet snow has more water in it than light, fluffy snow. So when researcher­s or weather forecaster­s on TV talk about the snow pack, they’re really talking about the “snow water content,” or the amount of water that would come out of the Sierra snow if it were all melted at once.

The Sierra Nevada snow pack increased from an alarmingly low 19 percent of normal three weeks ago to 40 percent of normal on Wednesday. That’s a jump from about 4.6 inches of total water content up to 10.9 inches. The historic average for April 1, however, is 30 inches.

The storms blanketing the mountains now will help get California closer to that historic average, bringing in about another 3 inches of water content, the National Weather Service estimates. That should move the seasonal total to about 14 or 15 inches, or about 50 percent of the historic average for this time of year. That’s still just half of normal.

“These storms are really helping and are positive. We’ll take as much as we can get in the next two weeks,” said Dave Rizzardo, chief of snow surveys and water supply forecastin­g for the state Department of Water Resources. “Overall it’s turning wet, but it’s been a dry winter. It’s realistic to think we could end the season with 60 to 70 percent of normal.”

Lucki ly, last winter’s monster storms, which ended the five-year drought, filled many of California’s reservoirs.

“By all standards we’re looking at a below- average year,” Rizzardo said, “but the reservoirs are in good shape, so water supply-wise, I think we’re OK.”

Another measure is eight key weather stations located between Lake Tahoe and Mount Shasta that sit above watersheds that feed many of the state’s largest reservoirs, like Shasta, Oroville and Folsom, the backbone of California’s water system.

Through Wednesday, those stations had received 6.2 inches of precipitat­ion — rain and water content in snow — this month. By comparison, the historic average for March is 7.6 inches. During 1991’s Miracle March, the same eight stations received three times that much, or 17.94 inches of precipitat­ion.

“We’ve gone from an extremely dry situation to a below- average situation,” said Cortes. “To get to an average year, we’ll need another three big storms like this one.”

This winter got off to a good start with a wet November, but then there was virtually no snow in December and February. Those two months were so warmand dry that they left the state in a deep winter water deficit. January had just one major storm.

As a result, the storms in March are like the bank deposits of a middle-aged worker who didn’t save enough, and is now trying to salvage the highest balance possible as retirement draws closer with every passing day.

“Any rain and snow we get is welcome,” said Hannah Chandler, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento. “These are significan­t storms. Better late than never.”

Rain is expected in the Bay Area for much of the day Friday, with light showers Saturday morning.

The National Weather Service cautioned motorists that today will mean hazardous driving in the Sierra, with chain controls and possible closures over mountain passes, and 3 to 4 feet of snow at Donner Summit on Interstate 80. The agency suggested that skiers wait until Saturday morning to head up to the Lake Tahoe area.

Ski industry officials, who suffered through the bleak February, were overjoyed neverthele­ss.

“The conditions are great. It’s snowing now,” said Stephanie Meyers, a spokeswoma­n for Northstar, which had half its 100 runs open last month and Thursday had all of them open. “The mountain looks like a snow globe erupted all over it. It’s absolutely beautiful.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SCOTT SADY ?? A woman plays in the snowon a pier in Tahoe City after a stormdumpe­d about a foot of snowin the Sierra onWednesda­y.
PHOTOS BY SCOTT SADY A woman plays in the snowon a pier in Tahoe City after a stormdumpe­d about a foot of snowin the Sierra onWednesda­y.
 ??  ?? Fernando Cori digs out his family’s cars on Donner Pass Road near Donner Summit.
Fernando Cori digs out his family’s cars on Donner Pass Road near Donner Summit.
 ?? PHOTO BY SCOTT SADY ?? A family enjoys a snowball fight while waiting for a bus at Squaw Valley ski resort in Olympic Village on Wednesday.
PHOTO BY SCOTT SADY A family enjoys a snowball fight while waiting for a bus at Squaw Valley ski resort in Olympic Village on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Snow falls on the South Yuba River next to Interstate 80 near Donner Summit on Wednesday.
Snow falls on the South Yuba River next to Interstate 80 near Donner Summit on Wednesday.

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