My take on your statement would be, it's all about "problem management" and selecting terrain appropriate for dealing with the problems that exist. If you'd like to discuss terrain decisions and ways of managing this problem any further, I invite you onto the thread in the Slide Zone.
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"Strapping myself to a sitski built with 30lb of metal and fibreglass then trying to water ski in it sounds like a stupid idea to me.
I'll be there." ... Andy Campbell
Join the club...
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-f...107-story.html
"We don't beat the reaper by living longer, we beat the reaper by living well and living fully." - Randy Pausch
That was my post, and I probably wasn't clear- the 3.5 hours was a two hour wait for the Mothership to pop + a 1.5 hour wait for Granite Chief to open. Self inflicted waits on both, at the expense of hot laps on other chairs, and worth every second as they were two of the better resort runs I've ever had.
it'd be a lot c o o l e r if you d i d . . .
^^ I do admire the patience of that, I have to admit. Not something I could do.
Am I allowed to punch anyone that says Commiefornia is still in a drought after this?
Got it. I'm past the point of waiting that long for a lift to open. I'll leave that to you young whippersnappers.
As far as drought goes--still drought. There will still probably be a huge groundwater deficit, although no one will know for sure because the state just started keeping track of ground water usage. As of the first snow survey in Norcal on Jan 3 the water content of the snow back was 55% of normal. The last storm obviously improved things but it will depend on what happens the rest of the season. Once the reservoirs are full continued rain doesn't help--right now the reservoirs are increasing releases and the bypasses are being opened to prevent flooding which means the water that is falling now isn't being stored . Only a healthy snowpack that will provide water through the summer and fall will help. And that's for norcal. Socal is in worse shape.
Yes. But we're coming out of the most severe drought in the last 1200 years, so... it's been a bit worse than normal.
Check out the tree mortality photos of the Southern Sierra. Not exactly normal. And that continued this past year. May (likely will?) continue next year too.
Plus, in terms of water supply for human consumption, rain to super high elevations isn't ideal. We couldn't hope to build close to enough reservoir space to make up for the snowpack. On that note, it's likely that water managers are going to consider the state essentially in a permanent semi-drought state from this point forward even if we're no longer in a true drought (which, as I said, much of the state still is) according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Climate change + insufficient infrastructure = permanent water supply drought. New normal.
Yep, exactly. Things were looking *really* ugly in 2015.
Which is why I think the water managers are going to treat things going forward as a kind of semi-permanent drought. We've lived way outside our means in the past. We still are, honestly.
Seems obvious it'll be that much better this year, but yeah. U.S. Drought Monitor still ugly for the southern 2/3s of the state.
California
Nevada
U.S.
That is the best that last map has looked in years. It will be interesting to see how the next week pans out. Those maps also do not include the water event from Tuesday to Thursday last week. Things are moving in the right direction for the first time in years. I'd wager that this week's events will drop the LA region to D2, and much of the D4 zone into D3. Feeling optimistic.
I agree with Lightranger that the state will likely continue to operate as if we are in Moderate Drought in the future. While this drought was/is severe, fluctuations in snowpack are not uncommon. Hopefully this means curtailment on development.
commiefornia is still in a drought
bring it!!!!!
heheheh
By definition, no.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/drought
A drought in a desert means the desert gets unusually low amounts of precip.
It would be more accurate to describe the south west as a desert. Central and Northern California have very different climates.
Santa Cruz has an annual average rainfall of 31"
Seattle - 38"
Wenatchee (which is lee, for sure) - 14"
Go a little further north
Humboldt County - 55"
So suggest the state is largely a desert is incorrect. A portion of the very large state where the vast majority of the population live is a desert is perhaps a better description.
As for water and shortages, it likely depends on which region you are in.
I think the difference between here, and a place in the midwest is not how much water we get, but when and how we get it. Typically there is no rain south of Shasta and west of the West Slope from mid May to mid October.
There's always a drought in late spring resort skiing considering the nearly 20% increase in season pass sales and the nearly doubling of skier days over the past couple years. Those increased sales, especially when combined with deep winters, used to get reflected in much longer seasons.
Well I did say semi arid desert and desert. The entirety of the Bay area with the exception of a few places right on the coast are classed a semi arid desert. The Central Valley is a semi arid desert. Nearly every thing south of Sacramento with the exception of a few small micro climes is semi arid desert or desert. CA is dry. WA is too, the precip here is more like 9-10".
Bear Valley preemptively closed tomorrow for weather.
10/01/2012 Site was upgraded to 300 baud.
Surprisingly it got better as the day wore on. From 2 - 4 it snowed 2-3 inches, the wnd blew, the buff was Good!! Ended up with a 6 hour day and wanted more. Unexpected fun for sure.
To the whiners to the west.
The Chutes never opened and no one complained. We just accepted the fact that with the wet snow this morning, 35- 60 MPH gusts that patrol knows what thier doing and made the right decison.
Didn't see anyone in this thread ever blame patrol. WTF are you talking about?
+1. Marin where I live in gets 54 inches of average annual rainfall sustaining green, fern filled coniferous forest. Old growth red wood forests in deep canyons. Reservoirs used for our water here were officially 99.99% full before this storm hit. No drought here and hasn't been but water rates still went up.
Drought has become a politicized term used for a variety of reasons. I do believe the condition is more severe in parts of central and southern Cal that pipe from the mountains and sustain a lot of agriculture
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