The month of January saw sporadic rain/snow across the western US. The image above shows the Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) for the various basins. The Upper Bear is about where the black circle is. You can see the Pacific NW has continued to get the storms with basins in the 100% to 170% of average. This is typical for an El Nino year (I have read) the storms tend to stay up northward. The Bear Lake area is in a transition zone....some storms will come down that far south and others will not.
Below, the graph on the left shows the Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) for the Upper Bear as of January 31, 2024. The basin had a very dry January getting only about 50% of average SWE. But thanks to the storm over the first couple days of February the basin has moved up to about 95% of average.
This sounds pretty good but due to the overall dry early couple of months of the water year the soil moisture is much less than last year at this time, especially at the 8" and 20" levels below the surface. It is moisture at these levels that impacts the snowpack run off more than the surface moisture content. |
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