Arizona
Related: About this forumMonsoons make deserts bloom in the US Southwest, but climate change is making these summer rainfalls
If youve never lived in or visited the U.S. Southwest, you might picture it as a desert that is always hot and dry. But this region experiences a monsoon in the late summer that produces thunderstorms and severe weather, much like Indias famous summer deluges.
And this year, it generated a lot of rain.
July 2021 was the wettest month since record keeping started at the Tucson, Arizona, airport in 1895, with 8.06 inches (205 millimeters) of rainfall equivalent to 70% of what the city receives in an average year. This years monsoon is the third-wettest ever in Tucson, with 12.80 inches (325 millimeters) of rain.
It was completely the opposite in 2020: Tucson had a dry non-soon, with less than 2 inches of rain. These conditions and record high temperatures fueled Arizonas largest wildfire season in a decade, including the Bighorn Fire, which decimated over 60% of the forest in the Catalina Mountains north of Tucson.
With our drought and our now erratic, feast-or-famine monsoons, our water supply is on life support.
It is time we in Arizona start really looking for solutions. I have one. It will take reworking the 1922 Colorado Protocol completely.
My opponent only wants tax cuts for Big Ag, but the rest of us knows Big Ag dies without water. It's the Big Business "Locust" Mentality; pillage until there is nothing left, then pillage another area.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/monsoons-make-deserts-bloom-in-the-us-southwest-but-climate-change-is-making-these-summer-rainfalls-more-extreme-and-erratic/ar-AAP2mRR?ocid=winp1taskbar
in2herbs
(3,127 posts)finale dropped 0.9 inches of rain in my area. It's not the rain we need to overcome the drought as much as the snow pack and we're just not getting the snow pack. I think 2022 will be an eye opener from a lot of people in AZ if/when the water restrictions are put into place. Even though I don't know all the details of the 1922 Colorado Protocol, isn't there a large portion of the water rights that are owned by the Native Americans? If so I hope they stick to their guns and demand their rights, but won't it make it almost impossible to rework the Protocol? In the town where I live everyone else in AZ gets water before we will. I understand that Phx won't be as affected with rationing because they have larger underground storage tanks and a more modern purification system.
I hope tax cuts won't go to Nestle. That company is very dangerous. to the world!
Hope you continue to make positive progress to get your wife home.
AZLD4Candidate
(6,285 posts)theirs. This was done under legal and political duress, but that's what we've done. I live on the Tohono o'Odham Nation in Sells.
All the water is either private wells or water towers.
The Colorado Protocol divided the Colorado River water among six states. You can read more about it on my campaign website.
Budi
(15,325 posts)...that washed down the flooded creek this summer.
Water hadn't even receeded when the second flood hit.
Dale in Laurel MD
(751 posts)but didn't realize they had an airport in 1895.
(Seriously, Tucson is one of my favoriteplaces in the world.)
AZLD4Candidate
(6,285 posts)I didn't realize that too. But if you go into it, it does have a 1960s feel to it.