Recent storms boost Sierra snowpack

Discussion about winter adventure sports in the Sierra Nevada mountains including but not limited to; winter backpacking and camping, mountaineering, downhill and cross-country skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing, etc.
Post Reply
User avatar
ERIC
Your Humble Host & Forums Administrator
Your Humble Host & Forums Administrator
Posts: 3254
Joined: Fri Oct 28, 2005 9:13 am
Experience: Level 4 Explorer
Location: between the 916 and 661

Recent storms boost Sierra snowpack

Post by ERIC »

Recent storms boost Sierra snowpack

By Don Thompson
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Posted on Fri, Jan. 06, 2006


SACRAMENTO - The series of storms that flooded California rivers and streams over the long holiday weekend also brought accumulations to well above normal for this time of year in the Sierra Nevada.

"It sounds like a lot, but it's still very early in the season. We still need more cold storms," Snow Survey Chief Frank Gehrke said Wednesday near Phillips Station along Highway 50 south of Lake Tahoe. In just a few days, 41 inches of snow fell there on what had been mostly bare ground.

The first snow survey of the season found the snowpack at 145 percent of normal statewide after a slow start when much of the early precipitation fell as rain. Lake Tahoe area ski resort operators were dismayed to see their usually heavy Christmas holiday traffic melt away in the slush.

Colder temperatures led to the rapid accumulation over New Year's weekend.

The northern Sierra was back to a normal year; the central part of the range was at 148 percent of normal; and the southern Sierra, where elevations are generally higher, was at 195 percent of the typical year's snowpack. The depths are collected by more than 50 agencies and utilities from remote sensors and human surveyors, and are tabulated by the state Department of Water Resources.

Farmers and water managers -- as well as skiers -- hope the Sierra continue to get regular storms through early spring that will build a healthy snowpack. The state gets more than a third of its drinking and irrigation water from Sierra snow, which functions as a giant, frozen reservoir along the 400-mile range. Hydroelectric plants rely on the snow melt to produce about a quarter of the state's power.

Last year in early January, more than 12 feet of snow fell over two weeks in the Sierra, the most in nearly a century. With the bulk of winter storms likely still ahead, the snowpack statewide was at 54 percent of the total that would typically fall by April 1.
New members, please consider giving us an intro!
Follow us on Twitter @HighSierraTopix. Use hashtags #SIERRAPHILE #GotSierra? #GotMountains?
Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HighSierraTopix
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 26 guests