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Snowpack, Spring Floods, and Why the Northwest is Better than California

Written By Hourpost on Tuesday, May 22, 2012 | 9:55 PM

Yes, the weather has turned cool and wet again, with snow falling in the higher passes and upper mountain slopes.  Paradise at Mt. Rainier received ten inches yesterday (see pic).
 But we have a really good snow pack and lots of water for this summer.   Here is the latest snow pack in terms of percentage of normal.  Most of Washington State is well above 100%--much of it above 150%.  Northern Idaho and western Montana is in decent shape too.  But the situation to our south is very poor...15-20% in the central Sierra, and in the teens and single digits in Utah and Colorado.  The Colorado River will be running real low this year.


According to the State of California, total water content in the Sierra snow pack was measured at 40 percent of normal. It was 190 percent of normal this time last year.
And that is why California will get by this year...they had such a huge snow pack last year they were able store enough water for a second year in the reservoirs. 

Closer to home, here is the snow pack information for Seattle's watershed (Cedar/Tolt) for this year (red), last year (green), an average (1971-2000).   Although both this and last years were La Nina years with big snow packs, the snow pack evolution was very different for these two years.   This year we peaked higher, but earlier---with the snow  pack dropping rapidly during the last month with our warm weather.   Last year we had an amazingly late spring and the snow pack increased into early May.  So we are in about the same place as last year at this point--well above normal--but got there is a different way.  Good for irrigation, good for hydropower, good for fish. Great for waterfalls, like in the magnificient Columbia Gorge.


Spring snow melt brings up the levels of Northwest rivers, particularly east of the Cascade crest, and this sometimes causes flooding.  Here is the latest river level information from the Northwest River Forecast Center in Portland.


No floods right now, but several eastern Washington and northern Idaho rivers are at or above bankfull (orange colors)--this is from snowmelt.  Many of these rivers were even higher a week ago when we had the warm weather that caused intense melting.  To illustrate, take a look at the flow on the Okanogan River near Tonasket (see below)--they even reached flood stage (red line)


Our future?   Well, the next 48-h should bring more showers (see 48h precipitation forecast below), but we should dry out on Friday and for the weekend.  The jet stream moves south of us, taking the wet stuff south to those poor dry devils in California.  They need the water to fill their hot tubs and water their illicit crops in the hills.












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