Othersharon wrote: Sure hoping you folks out west get some rain and lower temps but since it’s only June I can imagine it’ll be a rough summer for all of you.
Unfortunately, it is proving to be a rough summer already. Temps for the past week at my house have been 104 degrees or warmer (topping out two days at 111). Looking at the weather forecast, looks like upper 90's for the rest of the week, then 100 on Friday, 106 on Saturday, 113 on Sunday and 110 on Monday.
And I am sure Barbie's temps are higher than mine.
Farmers here (and elsewhere in the West) are pulling out their crops due to lack of water for irrigation.
Cattle farmers and dairies here are needing to truck in water for their operations (and dairies use a LOT of water). Pastures that are depended upon for summer feed, and that should still be a bit green this time of year, were already grazed down to brown stubs in early May (this is not hyperbole - I took a drive around my area in early May, this is what I saw).
Hay prices have about doubled, where it can be found at all (this is not just California, but over most of the West). Producers are selling livestock because there is no feed available.
Oroville Dam, which supplies drinking and irrigation water down the length of the state, from Northern California to Los Angeles in Southern California, is at around 40% capacity. I am just now reading the electrical generation at the dam will stop in the next month or so, because the water levels are just too low to be able to run through the turbines.
Oroville can generate electricity for 800,000 homes. Our local utility, PG&E, has already requested users to limit electrical usage to prevent power blackouts. When Oroville goes offline, one wonders where the missing electricity will come from. . .
Drought "ratings" are from D0 - "Abnormally Dry" to D4 "Exceptional Drought". I live about 25 miles from Lake Oroville. My area, including Lake Oroville/Oroville dam, and most of the Oroville dam watershed (land that drains into and fills Lake Oroville), is listed as D4, Exceptional Drought.
California drought monitor:
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?CA("Oroville Dam, earth-fill dam on the Feather River, California, U.S. Completed by the state of California in 1968, it is the highest dam in the United States and one of the highest embankment dams in the world.")On these photos, look at the top where the treeline is - this is where the water level should be:
These last two photos of part of Lake Oroville were taken in April - it is much worse now (photo of same bridge, from different perspectives).
There are fires, both large and small, erupting across California and the West.
And it is only June - in a "normal" year (whatever that is) temps would tend to be cool-ish, with maybe a spot of light rain at the beginning of the month. Not this year.
In the "normal" course of things, we will not see any rain - not a drop - until late October, first part of November (so 4 or 5 months of hot and dry to go).
Everyone should keep in mind that California's central valley - where I live - is the "breadbasket" of the country. California feeds the nation.
Yes, things are hard here, but they are about to get worse for the entire country. Get ready for nation-wide food price increases, and possibly shortages on many food items.
It's not pretty. If the rains don't come this autumn (making it the third year in a row without sufficient rain), and water runs out even more than it already has. . . it is difficult to imagine what might be coming.
Estimated population in drought-affected areas: 37,253,956 (over thirty-seven million. . .).
And that is the happy, cheery news from Northern California.
Anne