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National Water and Climate Center


Want to Know about Soil Moisture on your Farm? Soon, There May be an App for That

March 02, 2015 Wayne Maloney, USDA Office of Communications

“Probably it is one of the most innovative interagency tools on the planet.” So said Dr. Roger Pulwarty, Director of the National Integrated Drought Information System (of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, located in Boulder, CO), in describing the development of a coordinated...

Conservation

Surveyors Learn to Measure Snow, Prepare for Risks in Remote Mountains

February 09, 2015 Anita Brown, Natural Resources Conservation Service, California

If you live in the western United States and you’re sipping a glass of water, irrigating your crops, lighting your home with hydrological-sourced energy, or enjoy skiing or fishing, you’re probably using information made available from USDA’s snow survey program. Snow provides 50 to 80 percent of...

Conservation

Early-Season Forecast Shows Rain - Not Snow - Keeping Pacific Northwest Wet

January 15, 2015 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Something about January’s water supply forecast confused me. Current condition maps of the Pacific Northwest are a discouraging spread of red dots, meaning the snowpack contains less than half the normal amount of water. But water supply forecasts for the same region predict normal streamflow in the...

Conservation

Soil and Climate Data Help Farmers Reduce Severe Weather Risks

October 02, 2014 Ron Francis, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Utah

Utah dairyman Dee Waldron watches the weather closely. He wants clear, up-to-date weather and climate information anytime and anywhere that help him make critical farming decisions, such as when to irrigate, plant and harvest. Waldron operates a dairy and feed grain farm in Morgan County, just east...

Conservation

Final Yearly Snowpack Forecast Divides West into a Wet North and Dry South

June 18, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Every winter Westerners look to the mountains and may not realize they’re peering into the future. More snow cap means more water come spring and summer. Many lives and livelihoods depend on nature’s uneven hand. Thanks to USDA’s National Water and Climate Center, what used to be speculation is now...

Conservation

Western USDA Water Supply Forecast Tracks Melting Snowpack

May 14, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

April storms delivered a mix of rain and snow to the northern half of the West but didn’t provide much relief for the dry southern half, according to the latest USDA water supply forecast. Washington, most of Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and the northern parts of Colorado and Utah, are expected to have...

Conservation
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