Storm’s punch puts padding on Sierra snowpack
Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2000 | 8:52 a.m.
RENO, Nev. - The punch of a storm that dumped up to 7 feet of snow in the Sierra did wonders to boost the region's snowpack, providing a little padding to the resource that quenches the valleys of California and northern Nevada in the summer.
"This has really been awesome," Gary Barbato, hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Reno, said Tuesday. "It's really helped the snowpack, which is where our water supply comes from."
Only three weeks ago, the overall snowpack in the Sierra registered a dismal 22 percent of normal following the seventh driest December since record keeping began nearly 80 years ago.
What a difference a storm or two can make.
As of Tuesday, the average water content and precipitation levels in the Truckee River and Tahoe basins were roughly 80 percent to 90 percent of normal, Barbato said.
Preliminary data from remote sensors indicate the snowpack in Carson River drainage area made similar gains, while the Walker River region, which stood at a paltry 10 percent of normal earlier this month, jumped to around 55 percent, he said.
"Compared to what we've had so far this winter, this has been something," Barbato said.
Early in the season, a monstrous ridge of high pressure deflected many storms away from the region, leaving the Sierra high and dry.
The first measurable flakes of the season didn't fly until the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, when anywhere from a few inches to 2 feet of snow was reported.
Since then, the snow has been piling up.
Kirkwood ski resort south of Lake Tahoe reported picking up 10 feet of snow in 10 days.
At Boreal near Donner Summit off of Interstate 80, more than 7 feet fell since Sunday.
But it's too early to tell if the storms will keep rolling in and whether the Sierra will register a sixth straight wet winter unprecedented in recent memory.
"We're not out of the woods yet," Barbato said.
If nary a flake falls for the rest of the season, "We'd end up with a water year of about 40 percent to 50 percent of average," he said.
"We've had five wet years in a row," Barbato said. "We have to wait and see what this one will do."
archive
- Most Read
- Discussed
- Most E-mailed
- Live Main Event blog: Cada and Moon set to square off heads-up
- Ensign moves out of home on C Street
- Cada and Moon emerge as Main Event’s final two
- Cities, county find buying valley homes isn’t easy
- Fight snapshot: Reviewing “24/7 Pacquiao/Cotto,” episode 3
- Life in the Limelight: Wayne Newton
- Temperature to hit 80 today in Las Vegas
- Everclear’s Art Alexakis finds Hard Rock Cafe feels like home
- UNLV wins hoops scrimmage at Long Beach State
- Six people share their stories of what led them to jobs at CityCenter
Blogs
Sports: Upon Further Review
Fight snapshot: Pacquiao is a hit with Jimmy Kimmel, and vice versa
The Greene Room
MWC Winners and Losers: Week 10
The Kats Report
Buchanan was one of the city's truly flamboyant characters
Sports: Upon Further Review
Fight snapshot: Reviewing "24/7 Pacquiao/Cotto," episode 3
The Kats Report
Life in the Limelight: Wayne Newton (4 Comments)
Politics: Ralston's Flash
An entire campaign in one mail piece for Harry Reid (5 Comments)
Miech Again
On the road to Long Beach, UNLV hoops style (13 Comments)
Calendar »
- 9 Mon
- 10 Tue
- 11 Wed
- 12 Thu
- 13 Fri
-
Jo Dee Messina at the House of Blues
House of Blues | 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
-
The Revival Tour at Beauty Bar
Beauty Bar | 9 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.
-
DJ Tina T at Prive
Prive | 10 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.
-
The Automatic Tour at The Square Apple
The Square Apple
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.
Technorati










