Jake Flannagin, KNX (via msn.com); Seth Auberon, Pfc. Sandoval (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
LOS ANGELES — California is headed into a colder and wetter 2022, with more record-breaking snow and rainfall at the year’s end.
California state water officials will conduct a snow survey on Thursday. They are expected to find the state’s mountain snowpack to have grown by nearly 160% of the average for the date, according to The San Francisco Chronicle.
Rivers of mud sliding downhill (KNX) |
“December has been great in that we have a fantastic snowpack started,” state climatologist Mike Anderson with the Department of Water Resources told The Chronicle.
“But if you have the perception that this [weather] has fixed everything, it didn’t,” he cautioned. “We dug a really deep hole with this drought, and we have a really long way to go to get out of it.”
Reversals in fortune have happened before. In January 2013, the snowpack measured 137% of average, only for winter to end at 47%, according to The Chronicle. More
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