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Drought Conditions Here

Started by Stone-Man, September 14, 2019, 15:57:51 PM

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Stone-Man

Stoney Creek went underground in one spot today and is just a trickle in a few others
If we do not get some serious rain in the next 2-3 weeks,Stoney will be murdered just like it was 9 years ago . There is no rain in the forecast  b';
  And it is just now into it's full recovery from the drought 9 years ago

  Stone-Man

Dougfish

It's getting dire up here for some marginal streams. We got a wooping 0.2" of rain yesterday. Ugh.
"Why don't you knock it off with them negative waves? Why don't you dig how beautiful it is out here?
 Why don't you say something righteous and hopeful for a change? "
Kelly's Heroes,1970

"I don't wanna go to hell,
But if I do,
It'll be 'cause of you..."
Strange Desire, The Black Keys, 2006

Phil

Very bad creek conditions here as well. We had a smidgeon of drizzle last night, but nothing that'll help.

Al

My farmer friends where I deer hunt are singing the same tune b';

Sedition and Pockets

Back sometime in December, I told a buddy of mine that I figured the rain would stop around the second week of July and we probably wouldn't see it again until 2021. That call is looking spot on at the moment, unfortunately.

Onslow

I understand some places need some help, but after last year, I'm relieved it has dried out.  I don't think many folk understand the long term ramifications of prolonged excessive rainfall.  Corn and beans need to dry out for harvest, and current conventional home designs in the SE particularly pertaining to HVAC/insulation/crawspaces are inadequate during excessively humid/hot/wet conditions in the SE.  The Yadkin river has FINALLY dropped below 800 cfs, which means I can actually fish it 300 yds from my house...it has been over a year.

I would be very informative to know just how much was spent on mold remediation, roof leaks, and rot repair last year due to the humidity and heat, and not due to flooding/inundation in the SE.  It is probably in the billions.  It has only been in the two months where area crawlspaces are losing moisture, and not adding due to HVAC ductwork condensation. If last year's trend would have continued, the wet weather would have cause catastrophic damage to at least 30 percent of the homes in the SE, and the HVAC code would have had to be re-written.


Stone-Man

Yeah , my friend (Onslow)  -- Catch -22 for sure. No doubt that zillions have been spent due to it raining for 2 years. Mold and rot remediation is expensive and a helluva lot of folks cannot afford it.
 Naturally I am concerned about my home creek which will die again within the next 3 weeks without rain.
During the last big drought,everything on the planet ate trout. Coons, coyotes , house dogs, bears,herons, bob cats,house cats etc,etc. And the natural preditors (Mink and Otters) got seriously fat.
 I am totally sure that at least 90% of the adult trout in Stoney Creek died in that drought.

 Stone-Man

Onslow

The trout situation was pretty grim in 2008 up my way also. Stone Mt. wild trout populations dropped to 30% of the norm.  Smallmouth benefitted during that decade.  Truth be told, the trout fishing up my way is the best I've ever seen on the east slope side.  Deforestation, land development (UHI effect) appears to be affecting waters around Sparta.

I was stunned how low Big Wilson Creek was near Mt. Rogers this weekend.  I live near the Blue Ridge, and it seems Doughton & Stone Mt. are moisture magnets.  It rained at Stone Mt. this weekend.

Pansyman

JT. My Indian buddy Cochise said you need to do a rain dance.
Take off all your clothes and paint your body with ashes from a fire pit and then put three turkey tail feathers in your hair and dance in a counterclockwise circle three times then reverse course and repeat until it rains.  d:b
You can lead a horticulture<br />but you can't make her think.<br /><br />Only users lose weed.

hcrum87hc

Speaking as our county's road and bridges department's stormwater engineer, I'm torn.  I'd like to see some soaking rains, something like an inch or two spread out over a day or two.  Those give the ground some time to soak some up, and give our stormwater systems a chance to handle the runoff without flooding.  I'm also liking the lack of calls I'm getting from irate citizens. 

On the other hand, I'd like to see some water in our streams.  When I went a few weeks ago, the waters weren't super low, but that's the direction they're heading.
Jeremiah 17:7

Mudwall Gatewood 3.0

This lack of precipitation is a real setback in my neck-of-the-woods.  Besides concern over the fishes and other aquatic critters, I am sure where input occurs there is a concentration of nutrients in certain streams and rivers.  Plus I know these dry conditions are ideal for outbreaks of all kind of bark beetles, blights, and our foe, the hemlock adelgid.  I can think of no good that comes from this drought not even the dwelling-moisture argument, or the drying produce victory, or the reduced flow river-access hardon.
"Enjoy every sandwich."  Warren Zevon

Onslow

https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?VA

Yes, it is a little dry, but if the map is does truly represent current conditions, why all the anxiety?  The Bullpasture is running dead on the 40 year average for this time of year, if not a little more.

Big J

Quote from: Onslow on September 16, 2019, 20:05:08 PMhttps://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?VA

Yes, it is a little dry, but if the map is does truly represent current conditions, why all the anxiety?  The Bullpasture is running dead on the 40 year average for this time of year, if not a little more.

I think it's more of the fact that we are dry, and there is no sign of relief.  Things aren't dire yet, but another week or two with days getting into high 80's and 90's next week and no significant chance of rain makes the small streams dicey.  I checked a western VA mountain precipitation calendar and they received 1 day of rain so far in September and that was .13" of rain.  The Western VA mountains have been very very dry and been missing a lot of the scattered rain we have been getting in the valley. 

Woolly Bugger


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Rain dance

ex - I'm not going to live with you through one more fishing season!
me -There's a season?

Pastor explains icons to my son: you know like the fish symbol on the back of cars.
My son: My dad has two fish on his car and they're both trout!