Drought drenched
Northeast Georgia, western tip of Carolinas the exceptions in federal report. Southern Texas only area in worst category.
Associated Press
Friday, December 19, 2008
A soggy December has helped much of the South recover from a drought that dried up reservoirs and turned crops and lawns to straw for the last two years, but Georgia’s dry spell persists, according to a federal report released Thursday.
A year ago, thousands of square miles across the region were considered in “extreme” or “exceptional” drought, the government’s two worst categories.
But the latest U.S. Drought Monitor shows a wet December has helped dramatically, with none of the region currently in the worst category of drought.
Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas are completely drought-free, although a pocket of severe to extreme drought persists in the western tip of the Carolinas and northeast Georgia, including Lake Lanier, a key component of metro Atlanta’s water supply.
Eastern Tennessee, most of Kentucky and parts of Virginia and West Virginia remain in at least a moderate drought. Southern Texas is the only area in the nation still plagued by exceptional drought.
Forecasters say conditions began improving in the spring and through the fall as more regular rains helped add moisture to soil and dumped more water into rivers. October was dry, but more regular rainfall has spread across the area since then.
An expert at the University of Alabama in Huntsville said heavy December rains finally stopped the drought in Alabama, but it could take time for the region’s streams and lakes to fully recover.
“Even though we’ve had significant rainfall … I think what we lost in those two years of drought was a lot of the base flow that comes to springs and provides flow to creeks and streams,” said Richard McNider, a professor of atmospheric sciences. “It’s not clear yet whether we have had enough to restore those base flows.”
The end of the drought could have come sooner for Alabama sod farmer Pete Winford, who’s had one problem after another on his 250-acre sod farm.
Weeks without rain forced him to irrigate with water from the Coosa River, but Alabama Power Co. sued him last year, claiming he was hurting hydrodynamic power generation.
Then he said homeowners quit buying sod because of watering restrictions and the recession gutted new home construction. A spike in diesel fuel costs made things worse.
“You couldn’t have designed a better disaster for a sod farmer,” said Winford, of Harpersville, located about 30 miles southeast of Birmingham. “It was just one thing piled on top of another.”



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