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Post by rozenn on Feb 24, 2023 8:21:31 GMT -5
Lol. Jan 21-Feb 16 precip vs avg.
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Feb 24, 2023 9:58:49 GMT -5
at that horrific winter drought rozenn
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Post by rozenn on Feb 25, 2023 13:04:49 GMT -5
36 days and counting without any precip, even 0.1 mm, in Melun (SE suburbs). Longest period without > 1 mm was Feb/Mar 1956 with 43 such days. Will prolly be beaten now, setting a new record.
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Post by rozenn on Mar 1, 2023 14:22:01 GMT -5
Alarming.
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Post by rozenn on Mar 2, 2023 5:25:38 GMT -5
GFS 1w1/2 precip map. Lol @ Paris.
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Post by srfoskey on Apr 8, 2023 14:01:25 GMT -5
While the southeastern half of Oklahoma has gotten enough rain to get them out of a drought, things are still pretty bad in the northwestern part of the state. These drought conditions extend north into Kansas as well. The gradient in drought is very sharp, with areas of no drought only being 50 miles (80 km) away from areas of exceptional drought.
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Post by jetshnl on Apr 8, 2023 14:05:18 GMT -5
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Post by Crunch41 on Apr 15, 2023 10:45:58 GMT -5
A wet spring means there's no signs of drought in my area. The plains region as a whole is still dry. D4/Exceptional drought in central Texas, much of northern Oklahoma and western Kansas, and northeast Nebraska.
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Post by jetshnl on Apr 15, 2023 16:12:25 GMT -5
A wet spring means there's no signs of drought in my area. The plains region as a whole is still dry. D4/Exceptional drought in central Texas, much of northern Oklahoma and western Kansas, and northeast Nebraska. How is North Dakota under drought when they have had a really snowy winter and are expecting big flooding in the coming weeks?
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Post by Crunch41 on Apr 15, 2023 16:35:17 GMT -5
jetshnl Good question, I'm not sure. This map shows % of normal rainfall since October 1 which is 6.5 months. A few dry spots but mostly above average.
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Post by rozenn on Jul 25, 2023 16:24:21 GMT -5
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Post by Donar on Jul 25, 2023 16:32:07 GMT -5
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Jul 25, 2023 18:43:28 GMT -5
Nice arroyo
If you look back at the October 2017 image, you'll see that this has happened before though.
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Post by rozenn on Jul 26, 2023 11:38:49 GMT -5
Nice arroyo
If you look back at the October 2017 image, you'll see that this has happened before though.
Water levels are naturally lower in October than in June, flash floods aside. But what's scary imo is the sorry state of the vegetation. It looks like late fall / early winter rather than early summer.
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Post by rozenn on Oct 8, 2024 11:56:36 GMT -5
Same place in the Vosges back in September 2007 and now in August 2024. Mind you, the 2024 photo follows a YTD total north of 1000 mm. Loads of dead trees, broom replacing heather in treeless areas, etc. The collapse is a long terme one. In other news... Soil wetness index rn compared to 1 year ago. What a relief the last 12 months have been. Almost twice the average rainfall in parts of the country. And parts of that dark blue area are supposed to receive up to 100 mm tomorrow.
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Post by ilmc90 on Nov 9, 2024 12:14:57 GMT -5
Current drought conditions here. Brush fires have been breaking out across the state over the past few weeks.
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Post by ilmc90 on Nov 11, 2024 9:20:49 GMT -5
0.24 in/6.1 mm rainfall last night which is the heaviest rainfall since September 26th. Won't make a big dent in the drought but better than nothing.
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Post by ilmc90 on Nov 14, 2024 14:09:49 GMT -5
The remaining areas of North Jersey that were in the D1 Moderate Drought category have shifted to D2 Severe Drought. D3 Extreme Drought conditions have expanded in South Jersey.
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