Southern Rockies Nature Blog: Comparing 2011 to Other Drought Years

An informative blog post with graphics on the "Texas-centered drought" through June 2011, with comparisons to other drought years such as 1918, 1934 (still the worst), and 1956.

Posted by Chas S. Clifton [hat tip]

Southern Rockies Nature Blog: Comparing 2011 to Other Drought Years

 


The Phoenix Haboob of July 5th, 2011 from Mike Olbinski on Vimeo.

 

ABQJournal Online » Breaking: Fire Danger To Close Sandias

By Journal Staff on Fri, Jun 27, 2008

A large portion of the Sandia Mountains is expected to close Monday.

“We are in extreme fire danger that we’ve never seen before,”  said Sandia District Ranger Cid Morgan.
All picnic areas along the Sandia Crest Highway (N.M. 536) should remain open except for Nine Mile and Cienega Picnic Ground, but all back country hiking trails will be closed. The Foothill Trail will remain open.

Karen Takai, fire information officer for the Sandia Ranger District, said N.M. 165 will be closed from Placitas to the Balsam Glade Picnic Area except by special permit. Takai emphasized that the trail closures will including the popular La Luz Trail and the trail between the Sandia Peak Aerial Tramway and Sandia Peak. The tram and the peak will remain open.

ABQJournal Online » Breaking: Fire Danger To Close Sandias

ABQJournal Online » Maps of Area Forest Closures

OPEN areas include

• Sandia Crest Observation Area, Sandia Peak Tram and associated facilities, Sandia Peak Ski Area and associated facilities, and Sandia Crest House

• Recreation Day Use Sites: Cienega Canyon, Sulphur Canyon, Pine Flat, Doc Long (front of site only), Balsam Glade.

• Sandia Ranger District Administrative Site and the Tijeras Pueblo Interpretive Trail.

Open Trails: Those portions of Forest Trail 365, including secondary trails associated with Forest Trail 365, outside of the Sandia Mountain Wilderness, and South of the Tram.

Sandia Peak Ski Area mountain bike/hiking trails within the ski area

Open Roads:

• Forest Road 190 to Cienega Canyon Day Use Area.

• Forest Road 242

• Forest Road 413

The open areas are still under Stage II Fire Restrictions which include no smoking, fireworks, fires, stoves, grills, or open flame ; COLD PICKNICKING ONLY. No Dispersed Day Use and/or Camping is allowed along open Forest Service Roads or along State Highway 165.

ABQJournal Online » Maps of Area Forest Closures

 

Aerial imagery of the Wallow Fire in Arizona | Google Earth Blog

Started on May 29, the Wallow Fire, located near the Arizona and New Mexico border, had already burned 389,000 acres when Landsat captured a stunning aerial image of it on June 7.

arizona.jpg

Smoke from the fire has affected air quality as far north as Wyoming and as far east as Georgia. The U.S. Geological Survey and NASA cooperate closely in managing the Landsat program and we have them to thank for images such as this.

To view it yourself in Google Earth, simply download this KML file.

Aerial imagery of the Wallow Fire in Arizona | Google Earth Blog

As usual, Boston’s The Big Picture has some great photos, although I hate scrolling to see them.

Arizona wildfire rages on – The Big Picture – Boston.com

2 Fire crew members sharpen their tools as they prepare for a back burn operation in Eagar, Arizona. A raging forest fire in eastern Arizona has scorched an area the size of Phoenix, threatening thousands of residents and emptying towns as the flames raced toward New Mexico, June 8, 2011. (Jae C. Hong/Associated Press) #

Arizona wildfire rages on – The Big Picture – Boston.com

June 2011 Arizona fires seen from space | Earth | EarthSky

Three images taken from space of the Wallow North fire in Arizona in June 2011 show the fierce magnitude of this event.


June 2011 Arizona fires seen from space | Earth | EarthSky [via Arizona Hiking]

Arizona Wallow fire: Are wildfires getting worse? – By Jeremy Singer-Vine – Slate Magazine

Are large American wildfires becoming more common?

Yes, at least in the West, home to most of the nation’s largest wildfires.

Arizona Wallow fire: Are wildfires getting worse? – By Jeremy Singer-Vine – Slate Magazine [via dangerousmeta]

May 102011
 

“Albuquerque has only had 0.14" of liquid moisture since the start of 2011. That makes this the driest start to any year of record. 1947 comse in second with 0.24" and 2006 is third with 0.31".” [abqjournal]

 

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/LETTERS: Talk of the Town

Hydro Thievery Is Just Morally Repugnant
        REGARDING THE Augustin water grabbers breaking their silence, what they have actually done is create a document of puffery and propaganda of which a peacock would be proud but no person of reason could take seriously.
        The plan to pump oceans of water from underneath the Plains of San Augustin would set a terrible precedent in which water would be sequestered and privatized for individual profit without regard to the wreckage of abandoned communities and environmental devastation left behind.
        Contrary to the corporate claim, it is not known how much water could be pumped from the Augustin basin without impairing the wells of people who live there and without affecting stream flows in the Gila and Alamosa rivers, both of which form rich wildlife corridors on which people depend.
        It is a ridiculous irony that the plan to pipe this water to the Rio Grande and make some as-yet-unsuspecting end users pay for it through the nose would likely undermine the stream flow from the Alamosa River that is already entering the Rio Grande basin for free right now.
MARY KATHERINE RAY
Winston

ABQJOURNAL OPINION/LETTERS: Talk of the Town

 

Exceptionally long heat waves and other hot events could become commonplace in the United States in the next 30 years, according to a new study by Stanford University climate scientists.

Heat waves could be commonplace in the US by 2039

 

National Weather Service – NWS Tucson

New Mexico is Dry

 drought, newmexico  Comments Off
Jun 172010
 

As you look at this map, keep in mind that New Mexico is normally a dry state compared to most. This data indicates that this year, so far, much of the state is abnormally dry. [hattip to John Fleck]

nmdrought

http://drought.unl.edu/DM/DM_state.htm?NM,W

 

ABQ Journal Live Interviews Online: What are are the implications of long-term drought in New Mexico? with John Fleck of the Albuquerque Journal

May 252006
 

ABQjournal: New Web Site to Help Get Word Out on Fires
The Associated Press

SANTA FE— New Mexicans will be able to use their computers for one-stop shopping to find out about wildfires around the state and what areas may be closed.

The new site, www.nmfireinfo.com, links all the fire sites in the state so anyone can connect to Web sites and get information about the entire region, said Kris Eriksen, interagency information coordinator.

“This centralizes information, making access to important wildland fire information and restrictions in the entire area easier and more logical,” she said.

The site will be updated continually, said Hans Stuart, a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

What might prove most useful is information about “what’s open and what’s not,” Stuart said. “Most areas are open right now. … It’s a matter of restrictions on fires, partial closures here and there.”

Agencies involved in the site include the BLM, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, the National Park Service and the state of New Mexico.

The Southwest Regional Office of the Forest Service also offers a toll-free telephone number for restrictions and closures: (877) 864-6985.

 

SOUTHWEST COORDINATION CENTER WEBSITE

Current Wildland Fire Information

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