Showing posts with label monsoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monsoon. Show all posts

July 7, 2014

Water Extremes: Too Little; Too Much; Too Slow; Too Fast

High & Dry

Thunderstorm Gathering at Sunset - Infrared Exposure - Trona, CA - 2010 (photographer about to get drenched) | Photo: Osceola Refetoff

By Christoper Langley
www.kcet.org


The marks of water, and its absence shape the story of human presence in the desert. I have lived in the desert for more than forty years, having been converted to desiccation.

In the desert I suffer from "rain hunger" nearly all the time. When a moisture-laden front makes it over the mountains, it is a gift from the gods, a time for a celebratory walk through puddles. In the Iranian desert, the Sarhad, where my Peace Corps site of Khash is located, it rained once in two years while I was there. It was not much but all the children had umbrellas, which immediately appeared for the short downpour.

The desert suffers from extremes: too little; too much; too slow; too fast. In my hometown of Lone Pine, the summer forecast is hot day after day. The rainiest month is in the winter, often February. However the most exciting rains come in August, or sometimes July, when the monsoonal flows out of Mexico sweep across the dry valleys, filling the air with moisture. We wait for the giant thunderheads, glowing and pulsing with electricity like great translucent jellyfish in the ancient seas that once covered these lands. They pulse and glow over the Inyo Mountains to the east towards Death Valley and the high desert beyond.

The towering cumulonimbus move in, first with the cold winds that sweep down in front of the storm, then with intensifying thunder and finally a downpour that comes in sheets of driving rain. All hell breaks loose in a release from the persistent waiting for the rains that have taken several summer months to arrive.

The thunder shakes everything in front of it. The rain pounds like a stampede of racing feet ever harder and faster. I rush out to see the storm, feel the icy rain on my face. Quickly I am soaked to the skin. Later I stand mesmerized at the front window as the storm obscures the landscape to the east in veils of rain.

Slowly the storm abates. The land falls into a satiated peace. Now the land smells sweet and perfumed, by the wet sage and the more bitter rabbit brush, and invasive Russian thistle. The air has cooled significantly, and there will be a good night's sleep.

Two storms from the past come to mind. First there was the microburst that came on a July afternoon. It had been sultry all day, pregnant with promise, yet still as death. The sky darkened and the heavens let loose an explosion of water for half an hour. Three inches of rain, more than half a year's worth, fell in that thirty minutes. The paved areas gave up the rush. Patios regurgitated water though sliding doors into living rooms. Desert highways flooded with brown water. Large arroyos were cut across the desert as water flowed downhill picking through the hillocks. Those marks are still there. The highway gagged and choked, and silt and boulders were left behind. These are called "debris flows."

What was startling was that if you went a mile north or south of town, it was more like half an inch of rain. Go further and it was dry.

One time a woman drove on the dry Highway 395 as a flash flood built up in the canyons above. The debris flow swept across the pavement without warning. They found her car rolled over and over about 400 hundred feet beyond the pavement, her drowned and abraded body even further away on dry sand.

The desert here suffers from flash brush fires that sweep across the land burning the resin ripe desert plants with brilliant heat. Just after the 4th of July, the Inyo County seat of Independence suffered from one of these fires. Driven by the winds, desultory in their direction, what appeared a controlled fire suddenly raced drunkenly across the landscape. The result was a barren land burned to black ash, hidden roots, and unanchored sandy soil. Add a summer downpour high in the Sierra and it is a recipe for disaster.

A year later, almost to the day, a microburst of clouds shedding tropical water became trapped in a canyon of the Sierra just west of town. A giant wall of water, dirt and boulders rushed down Ask Creek where there were many cabins and houses. Fifteen houses disappeared or were filled with silt waist high. No one drowned although one resident was rolled a while in the cavorting water. The scars remain still from the flash flood that swept across the highway.

Matching the rain that vents its anger against the desert landscape is the rain that doesn't fall to earth. This is virga. It is rain falling in sheets or lines that evaporate before hitting the surface of the earth. Above the virga there is a dark bellied cumulus cloud. Rolling thunder and a flash of lightning announces the forming of virga, but it also comes without a grand entrance.

Virga has a cold heart, often beginning at high altitudes as ice crystals. The falling to earth begins slowly as these crystals slide into thickening air. Compression heating of the air first melts the ice crystals then evaporates them into vapor.

Desert water has many secrets. Most people who die in the desert suffer and die of dehydration. That is the harsh story of the desert water, and its absence. Mary Austin wrote, "To underestimate one's thirst, to pass a given landmark to the right or left, to find a dry spring where one looked for running water - there is no help for any of these things."

We'll tell that tale another day.

High & Dry surveys the legacy of human enterprise in the California desert. Together, writer/historian Christopher Langley and photographer Osceola Refetoff document human activity, past and present, in the context of future development.

September 11, 2012

Storms flood parts of Vegas, Navajo land, Calif. desert communities, Utah town

University of Nevada students Ryan Klorman, left, and Markus Adams relax on inflatable pool toys in floodwater in a parking lot at UNLV in Las Vegas on Tuesday. (John Locher / Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP)

By NBC News
wire services


Residents in four Southwest states were drying out Wednesday after thunderstorms flooded Las Vegas streets, stranded Navajo families in northern Arizona, left two mobile home communities in Southern California deep in water and caused a dike to fail in a Utah town.

In the Las Vegas area, the Tuesday storms delayed flights, snarled traffic and prompted helicopter rescues of stranded motorists. A golf course worker was reported missing and a search for the man resumed Wednesday, NBC affiliate KSNV-TV reported.

Television news video showed school buses inching along roads after school east of downtown Las Vegas, and muddy water up to the lower sills of windows of stucco homes in other neighborhoods.

In southeast Las Vegas, authorities urged the residents of about 45 homes damaged by flooding to leave in case electrical fires are sparked.

Dozens of cars were swamped by water up to their headlights in a parking lot outside the Thomas & Mack sports arena at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Firefighters responded to more than 20 calls about people in stalled cars .

A Las Vegas police helicopter was dispatched during the height of the storm to pluck several people from swamped vehicles on roadways.

More than 1.75 inches of rain were reported in downtown Las Vegas. The rainfall amounts put the region on pace to exceed the 4.5 inches of rain it normally gets in a year.

Tuesday was also the wettest September day on record in Las Vegas, weather.com meteorologist Nick Wiltgen reported.

Calif. mobile home parks hit hard

In California's Coachella Valley, a thunderstorm on Tuesday dropped more than the average annual rainfall there in one night alone, settling for six to eight hours over Mecca and Thermal, desert towns 150 miles southeast of Los Angeles.

In Thermal, the downpour flooded the Desert Mobile Home Park better known as Duroville, a community of mostly migrant workers with about 1,500 people, including 900 children, that has long been the subject of legal fights as Riverside County officials attempt to relocate residents.

More than a foot of water stood in the southern end of the park, knocking out power to about 800 people for much of the day.

"None of us had ever been through anything like this," said Tom Flynn, the court-appointed receiver for Duroville. "That much water in a dilapidated mobile home park was something to see."

The lack of power knocked out electric motors on both of the park's wells, leaving no fresh water until one was revived and county workers brought several tons of bottled water.

The park has no paved streets or drainage, and health officials were concerned about overflow from two ponds that serve as the community's sewers.

Between 60 and 80 people had evacuated from the park and were spending the night at a high school. "The poorest of the poor were hit the hardest," Flynn said.

St. Anthony's Mobile Home Park in Mecca also was affected, but fared better than Duroville. Video clips showed residents wading through knee-high water and cars creeping through flooded residential streets.

The storm dropped 5.51 inches of rain near Mecca and 3.23 inches of rain near Thermal, meteorologist Mark Moede said. The average annual rainfall in arid Thermal is just shy of 3 inches, he said.

"That's an amazing amount of rain," Moede said. "It's unusual anywhere to get a storm that sits stationary for five to eight hours."

Arizona and Utah flooding

On the Navajo Nation reservation in northeastern Arizona, many of Tuba City's roads were underwater and residents stuck in their homes. State Route 264, one of two main arteries in and out of town, was closed after a bridge washed out about a mile outside of the community, Tuba City Chapter Manager Benjamin Davis said.

Flooding was reported in some homes but no residents were displaced, Davis said.

Meanwhile, a dike that broke during heavy morning rain flooded nearly four square blocks in the southern Utah city of Santa Clara. More than 30 homes and business were evacuated after the break.

City Manager Edward Dickie said the dike along a retention pond sent a deluge of water into downtown.

"It didn't just breach. It broke. It's gone," he said, adding that the flooding quickly receded as water drained into rivers and creeks.

Such a wide area across the Southwest was hit, Wiltgen told NBCNews.com, because moist, unstable air interacted with a disturbance in the upper atmosphere.

"The disturbance helped to trigger the scattered thunderstorms that popped up across a broad swath of the Southwest," he said, "and these storms translated that very moist air into flooding downpours."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

August 26, 2008

Woman killed in flash flood in San Bernardino County identified

by Richard Brooks
Press-Enterprise


The motorist killed during last night's flash flooding near the Colorado River was a 51-year-old woman from Big River, according to San Bernardino County coroner's officials.

Rosemary Sebring Genc was pronounced dead soon after being pulled from her 1990 gold Honda Accord. A county road worker said he saw her drive into a flooded area at 9:15 p.m. Monday near Rio Vista Road and Tenaya Court. The water pushed the car to the edge of the roadway where it overturned in a wash, trapping the woman underwater, coroner's investigators said.

Flash flooding in the same general region also closed portions of Highway 95 from Vidal Junction south to Interstate 10 in Blythe. At 3 a.m., heavy rain had limited visibility to 20 feet in some places, according to the California Highway Patrol website.

With forecasts of possible thunderstorms and flash flooding through this weekend, officials point to the apparent drowning death as an example of the dangers of driving through floodwaters.

"Turn around. Don't drown," says the written warning issued Tuesday.

"Despite repeated warnings, some people continue to risk their lives by driving through running water," county analyst Roni Edis said in a written statement. "Be aware of flood hazards, no matter where you live."

August 8, 2008

Flooding catches vehicles in Amboy







By Jason Pesick
San Bernardino Sun





Intersection of Amboy Road and National Trails Highway at the red bubble (A).


AMBOY - About a half dozen vehicles got stuck in the water at Amboy Road and National Trails Highway earlier tonight.

Flash flooding in the area caught the cars at about 7 p.m., said a San Bernardino County Fire Department dispatcher.

No one needed to be rescued, and all of the vehicles were able to get out by the time officials arrived.

It Was 'Crazy' Out There

Storm left stores flooded, drivers stranded, mother and son hurt by lightning

By MAGGIE LILLIS
Las Vegas REVIEW-JOURNAL


Boys play in floodwaters Thursday after a storm dumped varying amounts of rain over the southern valley.

After weeks of do-nothing clouds and teasing humidity, the valley was pounded by a storm cell Thursday that forced road closures, stranded motorists and left a Henderson boy and his mother injured by a lightning strike.

More than 3 inches of rain fell in some mountain areas, but only about 0.16 inches accumulated within the valley, the National Weather Service in Las Vegas reported.

Meteorologists at the weather service's offices experienced the brunt of the storm without some of their radar equipment, which was struck by lightning during the action.

But the heavy rain added only a few drops to the annual total, which now stands at 1.04 inches.

"Normally at this time of year we are at 2.92 inches. We are definitely below the average," said meteorologist Edan Lindamen.

The powerful storm swept across the southern part of the valley, flooding businesses and creating swift-water rescue situations for emergency responders in Henderson and elsewhere.

State Route 160 was closed for about an hour after 3.05 inches of rain fell near Mountain Springs. Backups also occurred on U.S. Highway 95 and on Boulder Highway, where some spots were under 2 feet of water and stranded motorists had to be rescued.

The storm didn't just make its mark with rising floodwaters and muddy debris.

A lightning strike in Henderson knocked a 4-year-old boy unconscious and left his mother with temporary numbness on one side of her body.

Henderson Deputy Fire Chief Steve Goble said the woman and her son were watching the rain from the front lawn of their home near Green Valley Parkway and Warm Springs Road when lightning struck nearby about 3:20 p.m.

Goble said the "ground surge" apparently knocked the boy out and caused the woman to experience some paralysis on one side of her body. But both of them "came out of it" as they were treated at the scene by paramedics, he said.

They were sent to the hospital for observation.

Henderson firefighters also rescued a 12-year-old boy from a wash near Patrick Lane and Stephanie Road. Goble said the boy was pulled from the water unharmed.

"The report was he was skateboarding down there," Goble said. "He was having a good old time, until the water came."

The Henderson Fire Department received several other reports of people in the water, but no other rescues were needed.

The storm also brought a flurry of reports of fallen trees, electrical fires and "four or five dozen stranded vehicles," Goble said. "It's been crazy."

Businesses also got caught up in the storm.

The Circle K convenience store and gas station near Tropicana Avenue and Andover Drive closed for a few hours when an inch of water crept inside. Employees said this has happened five or six times in the past as they swept about a foot of cloudy water around racks of potato chips and newspapers.

Officials with the Clark County Regional Flood Control District said their gauges reported almost 2 inches of rain falling within 30 to 40 minutes in areas near Henderson.

The weather service in Las Vegas said more storms are possible today. Conditions will start to dry out by the weekend, it said.

August 6, 2008

Wind rips off roof








By Jimmy Biggerstaff
Hi-Desert Star







MORONGO BASIN — Heavy rain in Twentynine Palms and the Joshua Tree National Park Monday caused road closures, washouts and wind damage to several structures.

A powerful and well-formed dust devil took the roof off a house on Ocotillo Road in Johnson Valley about 2 p.m. Monday, including plywood and cross members on one side. The home’s carport also was damaged.

John Jones, a local emergency medical services volunteer, was about a mile away from the meteorological oddity, and confirmed it was not a tornado. Jones described the funnel as about 250 feet high and 300 feet wide.

The thermal originated from the ground, not from clouds, Jones said.

Johnson Valley’s fire station sustained damage to a light fixture and television antenna.

Megan Blaney, a public information officer with the San Bernardino County Fire Department, said the emergency operations center [EOC] in Rialto was activated in response to an emergency declaration by the City of Twentynine Palms.

The EOC was still active Tuesday afternoon.

Robert Eland, the field representative for county supervisor Brad Mitzelfelt, was at work in Twentynine Palms Tuesday assessing damage to help determine how San Bernardino County could best help Twentynine Palms with clean-up and recovery efforts.

Park closes road, camps

Strong thunderstorms across the north central area of Joshua Tree National Park damaged a number of park facilities. The storm forced park officials to temporarily close a number of park facilities. Roads and camping areas affected by the closures are open to day-use hiking.

Due to flash flood damage, the following park facilities are closed until further notice:

The Indian Cove Area, including;

  • Indian Cove Road south of Indian Cove Ranger Station

  • Indian Cove Campground

  • Indian Cove group campsites

  • Rattlesnake Canyon Day Use Area
Additionally, Park Route 12 is closed from the park’s North Entrance south five miles to the Pinto Wye Junction.

While 0.77 inches of rain were recorded at park headquarters in Twentynine Palms, rangers estimate that storm-affected areas in the park may have received from 3 to 5 inches of rain

Torrential floodwaters were observed crossing one section of park road just south of the North Entrance, resulting in the complete loss of 30 feet of roadway, according to Joe Zarki, the park’s public information officer.

The North Entrance Road will be closed for about 48 hours while temporary repairs are made, Zarki wrote in an e-mail Tuesday.

In the Indian Cove area, floodwaters scoured steep drop-offs along the edges of about one-third of the road leading to Indian Cove Campground and significant flood damage occurred in portions of the campground as well.

Park service officials estimate it will take about two weeks to make the necessary repairs before the Indian Cove Campground and Indian Cove Road can be reopened for public use.

The park’s other main entrances, the West Entrance, five miles south of the community of Joshua Tree, and South Entrance, near Interstate 10, remain open for public use.

Park trails are open, but hikers and equestrians should exercise caution as many trails have not yet been assessed for flood damage.

“Please observe all road closures,” Zarki said. “These have been put in place for your safety.”

August 4, 2008

Strong storms pound San Bernardino County







The Associated Press
San Jose Mercury News







TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif.—Strong storms have pounded the area around Twentynine Palms in San Bernardino County, causing widespread flooding, road closures and power outages.

KCDZ-FM in Joshua Tree reports heavy rain began pelting the area around noon Monday. The station says firefighters rescued a woman whose vehicle got stuck in water and mud on Morongo Road at Indian Trail near the back gate of the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center.

The station says strong winds blew the roof off of a carport in Twentynine Palms. Lightning strikes also left parts of Twentynine Palms, Amboy, Yucca Valley, Johnson Valley and Landers without power. Southern California Edison crews are working to restore service.

July 11, 2008

Arizona monsoon brings scattered rain to San Bernardino deserts and mountains




By Melissa Pinion-Whitt
San Bernardino Sun




A monsoon moving through Arizona dropped some rain on parts of the San Bernardino Mountains and desert cities Thursday, and more rain could come today.

Essex, an area west of Needles, measured .32 inches of rain between 7 a.m. Thursday and this morning, according to the San Bernardino County Flood Control District.

Other areas reporting rain in the same period were Morongo Valley, .14 inches; Fawnskin, .16 inches and Yucaipa, .12 inches.

A 40 percent chance of rain is expected in Twentynine Palms, surrounding desert areas and the San Bernardino Mountains today. The showers may move through the area as early as 11 a.m., according to the National Weather Service.

The chance of showers will continue tonight before 11 p.m. and decrease through the weekend.

Temperatures today will be 92 degrees in San Bernardino, 87 in Twentynine Palms and 78 degrees in Big Bear.