Drought for the west

The driest winter in 17 years here. 10 inches of snow all winter. 6",then a couple 2" storms.
Been in extreme drought for 5 years,minus one good season. Back in the red again...by Feb.

Woodcutter/guide buddy said the ponderosa are getting devastated again in Gila. Maybe 6 inches of snow in shade in high country.
I mentioned the pinion IPPS back bad. You can see the acres of dead brown trees showing up, thousands of acres.
We both said 90% of trees dead in areas. Guess.
Extreme fire danger with the pinions now. Gas trees. Dry rotted trunks with snapping branches full of pitch.

Very few birds around all winter.
I saw 2 snakes last year. A handfull of lizards around the woodpile.
Not good.
 
We're well below recent trends and above normal temps at the moment. My predictions are going to be more or less the same as last year: hot, dry and fiery!

We had tons of snowfalls entering 2025 with decent spring rains, no one expected a record fire season, which we got. All that moisture disappeared once we had temperature extremes early summer. Mother nature baked that bitch dry!
 
I have two river trip permits, but I might try and go pre-season as I think that might be the only "Flow" we get.
Which rivers? Waiting on lottery permits, though I did take into account the terrible winter when choosing dates...

SW CO has had basically no snow (about 16" at 7800'), after a similar winter last year. Could be an ugly fire season.
 
I keep hearing that the long range forecast for March is wet. I hope that that’s the case. We have a lot of catching up to do. I live at 6000 feet and I normally have snow at my place for most of the winter. It’s dry as a bone now.
 
Did they actually slip in that the dams are "good for fish" ?
He's implying that the flows behind Grand Coullee are good for power generation and good for fish. I don't think he's making any qualitative argument that dams are good for fish

I think even worse is his title where it states that the western US is in good shape on the water outlook which, as someone who works the Colorado, San Juan, and Rio Grande - no.

Edit: Everything above Lake Powell is in the sh*tter. 2002 was a phenomenally bad year
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Which rivers? Waiting on lottery permits, though I did take into account the terrible winter when choosing dates...

SW CO has had basically no snow (about 16" at 7800'), after a similar winter last year. Could be an ugly fire season.
John Day. The permit system is so terrible for that one that I snagged two but will probably only use one
 
SW CO has had basically no snow (about 16" at 7800'), after a similar winter last year. Could be an ugly fire season.

last winter was not similar. we are in record breaking low snowpack territory. last winter we just hung out just a tad below the median the whole time. to be sure, last winter was of course not great.

but, since records started we haven't seen anything like this since 2002-2003 in colorado and, currently, it's worse.


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