California Drought

   / California Drought #381  
Don't they already have a dam everywhere water can be stored? All the conditions have to be right to build a storage reservoir. I don't know, I'm just asking.

Not even close. They could build hundreds more smallish dams. Thousands of very useful micro-dams. The nice thing about small dams is that they don't destroy thousands of acres of house fly habitat (or whatever the endangered "species" du jour might be), and if they fail, they don't wipe out entire cities.
 
   / California Drought #382  
   / California Drought #383  
Yeah I saw those but it isn't much considering the state of things. Funny thing ,one minute he's sticking his thumb in Trump's eye and the next he hat in hand looking for a handout from him.

Guess which state pays into the federal coffers the most. Guess which state pays more into federal coffers than they get back. I let you guess which 4 states are covered by the state you are bashing to make up for their lack of payments into their federal coffers. We are the worlds 6th largest economy. We should leave the union, take Oregon, Washington, BC and Alberta with us.
 
   / California Drought #384  
That is about the funniest thing I ever heard��. BC's water going to California! LOL!

They have talked about getting our water for decades; lots of people here would be opposed to that . To bad as so much ends up in the ocean anyway. Instead of pipelines they were talking about tankers to transport it. Besides my sister that lives near Sacramento told me a couple of days ago they have lots of water.
 
   / California Drought #387  
   / California Drought #388  
Guess which state pays into the federal coffers the most. Guess which state pays more into federal coffers than they get back. I let you guess which 4 states are covered by the state you are bashing to make up for their lack of payments into their federal coffers. We are the worlds 6th largest economy. We should leave the union, take Oregon, Washington, BC and Alberta with us.
There are a hellofalotta Midwesterners that would say bye bye
 
   / California Drought
  • Thread Starter
#390  
United States Drought Monitor > Home

Days of heavy precipitation continued to improve mountain snowpack, but created areas of flooding, especially downstream from the favored upslope areas. As of February 21, the daily Sierra Nevada snowpack was 186% of average for the date and 151% of the April 1 climatological peak. The North Sierra 8-Station Index for February 21 showed 230% of average precipitation for this date, and the Central Sierra San Joaquin 5-Station Index for February 21 showed 230% of average precipitation for this date, both of which are above the 1982-1983 record for the date; the Southern Sierra Tulare Basin 6-Station Index for February 21 showed 223% of average precipitation for this date, which is very near the 1968-1969 record for the date. Over a foot of precipitation was reported for the week at several CoCoRaHS stations, including 16.60 inches at Honeydew in Humboldt County, 15.36 inches at Alta Sierra in Nevada County, 14.54 inches at Big Sur in Monterey County, and 13.80 inches at Monte Sereno in Santa Clara County. Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties, which have been the epicenter of drought in California in recent weeks, received much-needed rainfall. Over 8 inches of rain was reported at two stations near Santa Barbara and over 6 inches at Ojai (6.97 inches) and Thousand Oaks (6.59 inches) in Ventura County. Streams were running full which helped refill depleted reservoirs in the area. Lake Cachuma rose 24 feet in just one day, which is remarkable and most welcomed. Even though the reservoirs were responding quite favorably, they still have a long way to go before we can classify this area as drought-free. As of February 22, Lake Cachuma was at 82,011 acre-feet, or 42.4% of capacity, Jameson Reservoir was at 52.5% capacity, Lake Casitas at 42.3%, and Lake Piru at 31.7%. These values still represent a significant hydrological drought. Generally a one-category improvement to drought conditions was made from central California to the Los Angeles basin. Areas of D0-L were left in the San Joaquin Valley where wells were still in jeopardy and groundwater aquifers will take many more weeks or months to recharge. D3 was eliminated but D0-D2 were left in place along the Central Coast where the reservoirs were still below average and groundwater has yet to be recharged. D0-D2 were left in place in southern California where the precipitation was not as heavy and longer-term precipitation deficits remained. With the removal of this D3, D2 is now the worst drought condition in the state; August 6, 2013 was the last time California had no D3.

Kevin
 

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