2017-01-20

Thursday’s rain was heavy at times, but it was only a proverbial drop in the large bucket needed to end the drought that began in early 2016.

The graphic below shows the 24-hour rainfall totals through 10 p.m. Thursday. Many areas picked up significant rainfall.



For example, Muscle Shoals began the day with a 1.12 inch rainfall deficit for 2017. By Thursday night, that deficit was pretty much erased.



Huntsville also saw marked improvement. Before the rain arrived Thursday morning, the city was running up a rainfall deficit a little more than 2 inches for the first month of 2017. By 10pm, that deficit was halved.



But it’s a short-term gain that is a fraction of what is needed to alleviate a long-term pain that developed in March of 2016. Much of northeastern Alabama and south-central Tennessee are still experiencing serious drought conditions, and it will take another 10 to 12 inches of rain in this region before conditions improve.

And though conditions are improving west of I-65, the Shoals still ended 2016 with a nearly 10 inch rainfall deficit.

Thursday’s rain is certainly welcomed, but it will take several more super-soaker weather events in order to make a dent in the Valley’s drought.

DROUGHT INFORMATION STATEMENT

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HUNTSVILLE AL

1220 PM CST THU JAN 19 2017

…DROUGHT CONDITIONS REMAIN UNCHANGED ACROSS THE AREA SINCE LAST

WEEK…

SYNOPSIS…

ACCORDING TO THE DROUGHT MONITOR VALID TUESDAY…JANUARY 17TH

2017…D3 DROUGHT CONDITIONS ARE OCCURRING GENERALLY ALONG AND SOUTH

OF A LINE FROM VALLEY HEAD…TO FORT PAYNE…GUNTERSVILLE…

ARAB…CULLMAN…AND SMITH LAKE. NORTH OF THIS LINE…SEVERE DROUGHT

/D2/ CONDITIONS COVER MUCH OF NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTHWESTERN ALABAMA.

HOWEVER…ABOUT THE WESTERN THIRD OF COLBERT COUNTY AND THE

NORTHWESTERN TWO-THIRDS OF LAUDERDALE ARE IN MODERATE DROUGHT /D1/.

THE ARE OF MODERATE DROUGHT ALSO INCLUDES SMALL PORTIONS OF FAR

NORTHERN LIMESTONE AND MADISON COUNTIES. A VERY SMALL AREA OF

ABNORMALLY DRY CONDITIONS /D0/ IS SITUATED IN NORTHWESTERN LAUDERDALE

COUNTY.

IN TENNESSEE…MODERATE DROUGHT CONDITIONS CONTINUE TO DOMINATE IN

FRANKLIN…LINCOLN…AND MOORE COUNTIES. HOWEVER…D2 DROUGHT

CONDITIONS WERE IMPROVED TO D1 CONDITIONS IN PARTS OF SOUTHERN

FRANKLIN COUNTY…AND NOW ONLY A SMALL SE PORTION OF THE COUNTY

REMAINS IN D2 DROUGHT STATUS.

NOTE: PRECIPITATION AND OTHER CONDITIONS (STREAMFLOWS, SOIL

MOISTURE, ETC.) THAT DETERMINE DROUGHT DESIGNATIONS EACH WEEK FOR

THE U.S. DROUGHT MONITOR ARE BASED ON DATA THAT END AT 6 AM CST EACH

TUESDAY. SO…ANY PRECIPITATION THAT FALLS AFTER THE 6 AM CUTOFF IS

NOT FACTORED INTO DESIGNATIONS FOR THAT WEEK…BUT WILL OF COURSE BE

FACTORED INTO THE DROUGHT MONITOR DESIGNATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING

WEEKLY ISSUANCE. ALSO…THE DESIGNATION OF DROUGHT IS A MULTI-

FACETED PROCESS THAT INCLUDES NUMEROUS DATA FROM A VARIETY OF

PHYSICAL SYSTEMS ON DIFFERENT SPACE AND TIME SCALES…WHICH INCLUDE

PRECIPITATION…SOIL MOISTURE…STREAMFLOWS…VARIOUS DROUGHT

INDICES…AND GROUNDWATER…TO NAME A FEW.

SUMMARY OF IMPACTS…

STATE AND LOCAL DECLARATIONS: THE ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC AND

COMMUNITY AFFAIRS (ADECA) OFFICE OF WATER RESOURCES HAD PLACED ALL

ALABAMA COUNTIES IN THE HUNTSVILLE COUNTY WARNING AND FORECAST AREA

IN A ‘DROUGHT EMERGENCY’ LATE LAST YEAR THROUGH EARLY THIS YEAR.

HOWEVER…THE LATEST DROUGHT DECLARATION FROM ADECA ISSUED

JANUARY 11TH PLACED ALL OF THE COUNTIES IN THE HUNTSVILLE COUNTY

WARNING AND FORECAST AREA (CWFA) IN A DROUGHT ADVISORY. THE EXCEPTION

IS CULLMAN COUNTY WHICH IS NOW IN A DROUGHT WARNING. THESE

IMPROVEMENTS IN CLASSIFICATION IS A REFLECTION OF THE IMPACT OF

RECENT RAINFALL IN LATE NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER ON SOILS AND

STREAMFLOWS.

THE TENNESSEE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY /TEMA/ REMAINS IN A STATE

OF EMERGENCY DUE TO THE DRY CONDITIONS AND WILDFIRES THAT HAD TAKEN

PLACE…ESPECIALLY IN SOUTHEASTERN PARTS OF THE STATE. WHILE

WIDESPREAD DUTY PERSONNEL ARE NOT CALLED TO DUTY…ONLY SPECIFICALLY-

NEEDED PERSONNEL ARE REQUIRED.

AGRICULTURAL IMPACTS…

SINCE THE PRIMARY GROWING SEASON HAS NOW ENDED IN THE REGION…CROP

AND PROGRESS CONDITION REPORTS ARE NOT CURRENTLY BEING ISSUED FROM

THE USDA NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS SERVICE. THESE REPORTS ARE

NOT EXPECTED TO RESUME UNTIL APRIL. NEVERTHELESS…D3 AND D4 DROUGHT

CONDITIONS DURING THE GROWING SEASON LAST YEAR RESULTED IN DISASTER

DECLARATIONS FOR ALL OF THE COUNTIES IN THE HUNTSVILLE COUNTY WARNING

AND FORECAST AREA AS PRIMARY NATURAL DISASTER AREAS DUE TO DAMAGES

AND LOSSES CAUSED BY THE RECENT DROUGHT. THIS INCLUDES THE COUNTIES

OF COLBERT…CULLMAN…DEKALB…FRANKLIN (AL)… FRANKLIN

(TN)…JACKSON…LAUDERDALE…LINCOLN…MADISON…MARSHALL…MOORE…

MORGAN…LAWRENCE…AND LIMESTONE.

FIRE DANGER IMPACTS…

CURRENTLY…THERE ARE NO BURN RESTRICTIONS FROM THE ALABAMA FIRE

COMMISSION (AFC). NEVERTHELESS…THE AFC ADVISES ANYONE CONDUCTING

OUTDOOR BURNING TO FOLLOW SAFETY PRECAUTIONS. ANY FIRE MORE THAN A

QUARTER ACRE IN SIZE OR WITHIN 25 FEET OF A FORESTED AREA REQUIRES A

PERMIT FROM THE AFC.

THE STATE OF TENNESSEE RESCINDED THEIR BURN BAN ON DECEMBER 19TH

2016. THERE ARE NO COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE BURN BANS CURRENTLY

IN PLACE IN THE STATE. HOWEVER…A DEBRIS BURNING PERMIT FROM THE

TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE DIVISION OF FORESTRY IS REQUIRED

THROUGH MAY 15, 2017 TO BURN LEAF AND BRUSH PILES FOR RESIDENTS IN

FRANKLIN…LINCOLN AND MOORE COUNTIES. CITIZENS MAY OBTAIN BURN

PERMITS BY GOING TO WWW.BURNSAFETN.ORG.

DUE TO RECENT RAINFALL…THE KEETCH-BYRAM DROUGHT INDEX (KBDI)

AVAILABLE FROM THE U.S. FOREST SERVICE WILDLAND FIRE ASSESSMENT

SYSTEM SHOWS THAT VALUES HAVE DECREASED MARKEDLY. VALUES ACROSS

THE MAJORITY OF THE AREA STILL BELOW 200.

OTHER IMPACTS…

DURING THE HEIGHT OF THE DROUGHT LAST FALL…LOCAL NEWS REPORTED

THAT MANY HOME FOUNDATION REPAIR BUSINESSES IN NORTHERN ALABAMA WERE

BUSY BECAUSE DRY CONDITIONS HAD CAUSED LARGE CRACKS AND OTHER DAMAGE

TO HOME FOUNDATIONS. ALSO…COUNTY OFFICIALS ESPECIALLY IN

NORTHWESTERN ALABAMA REPORTED THAT LARGE NUMBERS OF CRACKS HAD

APPEARED ON ROADWAYS DUE TO THE DROUGHT. THIS INCLUDED PORTIONS OF

THE NATCHEZ TRACE PARKWAY IN NORTHWESTERN ALABAMA AND ADJACENT AREAS.

THERE HAVE ALSO BEEN SPOTTY REPORTS OF OTHER ROADWAYS IN THE

CENTRAL/EASTERN PORTIONS OF THE COUNTY WARNING AREA /CWA/ THAT HAVE

EXPERIENCED ISSUES/DAMAGE DUE TO THE DROUGHT.

CLIMATE SUMMARY…

OVER THE PAST WEEK…TEMPERATURES HAVE AVERAGED WELL ABOVE NORMAL

ACROSS THE AREA. IN FACT…TEMPERATURES ON MOST DAYS HAVE BEEN AROUND

20 DEGREES OR MORE ABOVE NORMAL. SEVERAL RECORDS TEMPERATURES HAVE

BEEN SET OR TIED SINCE JANUARY 12TH. PRECIPITATION HAS BEEN BELOW

NORMAL DURING THE LAST WEEK. PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS RANGED FROM LESS

THAN ONE TENTH OF AN INCH IN PARTS OF NORTHEASTERN ALABAMA TO AROUND

ONE HALF INCH IN WESTERN PARTS OF CULLMAN AND SOUTHEASTERN PARTS OF

FRANKLIN COUNTIES IN ALABAMA. NORMAL WEEKLY RAINFALL FOR THIS TIME OF

YEAR IS AROUND 1.25 TO 1.50 INCHES.

OVER THE LAST 30 DAYS…PRECIPITATION HAS GENERALLY BEEN ABOUT ONE

TO THREE INCHES BELOW NORMAL IN NORTHEASTERN ALABAMA AND SOUTHERN

MIDDLE TENNESSEE…WITH VALUES AROUND THREE TO FOUR INCHES BELOW

NORMAL IN PARTS OF NORTH CENTRAL ALABAMA…FROM CULLMAN COUNTY NORTH

AND WESTWARD TO LAWRENCE AND LIMESTONE COUNTIES.

LONGER TERM PRECIPITATION DEFICITS ALSO STILL REMAIN. AT 90-DAY TIME

SCALES (GOING BACK TO MID OCTOBER)…RAINFALL DEFICITS ARE STILL

AROUND SIX TO EIGHT INCHES IN MUCH OF CULLMAN COUNTY AND IN SOUTHERN

MARSHALL COUNTY…AND FOUR TO SIX INCHES IN MUCH OF THE REMAINDER OF

NORTHWESTERN ALABAMA AND GENERALLY SOUTH OF THE TENNESSEE RIVER IN

NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTHEASTERN ALABAMA. ON LONGER TIMESCALES OUT TO

SIX MONTHS…PRECIPITATION DEFICITS ARE WORST IN NORTH CENTRAL AND

NORTHEASTERN ALABAMA…GENERALLY FROM LAWRENCE…MORGAN AND CULLMAN

COUNTIES…THROUGH MARSHALL COUNTY AND INTO SOUTHERN JACKSON AND

WESTERN DEKALB COUNTIES. DEFICITS IN THIS AREA ARE STILL AROUND EIGHT

TO TWELVE INCHES IN MANY AREAS…WITH SOME SPOTS OVER 12 INCHES BELOW

NORMAL.

REGARDING TEMPERATURES…

MEANWHILE…TEMPERATURES HAVE AVERAGED WELL ABOVE NORMAL FOR MOST OF

THE LAST YEAR WHICH HAS HELPED LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT AND

SUSTENANCE OF DROUGHT CONDITIONS. THE RECENT METEOROLOGICAL FALL

(SEPTEMBER THROUGH NOVEMBER) RANKS AS THE WARMEST ON RECORD AT

HUNTSVILLE AND MUSCLE SHOALS AND SECOND WARMEST AT SCOTTSBORO. 2016

FINISHED AS THE WARMEST YEAR ON RECORD AT HUNTSVILLE…AND 2ND

WARMEST AT MUSCLE SHOALS…WHILE RANKING AS THE WARMEST ON RECORD OR

IN THE TOP FIVE WARMEST AT SEVERAL OTHER SITES IN THE AREA.

TEMPERATURES DURING JANUARY SO FAR HAVE AVERAGED MUCH ABOVE

NORMAL…ALTHOUGH DAILY TEMPERATURES HAVE WAVERED SHARPLY FROM ABOVE

NORMAL TO BELOW NORMAL AND THEN BACK TO ABOVE NORMAL RECENTLY.

PRECIPITATION/TEMPERATURE OUTLOOK…

TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO AVERAGE ABOVE NORMAL THROUGH THE NEXT

WEEK…WITH DAILY HIGH TEMPERATURES MAINLY IN THE 60S. OVERNIGHT

LOW TEMPERATURES WILL BE VERY MILD…IN THE 50S…THIS WEEKEND.

THEN…A COOLER AIRMASS MOVING INTO THE REGION WILL BRING MORNING

LOWS IN THE 40S FOR MUCH OF NEXT WEEK. STILL…THESE TEMPERATURES

WILL BE AROUND 10 TO 15 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL FOR MANY LOCATIONS.

OVERALL…PRECIPITATION TOTALS FOR THE NEXT WEEK ARE LIKELY BE ABOVE

NORMAL NORMAL AS SEVERAL SYSTEMS IMPACT THE REGION FROM TODAY THROUGH

NEXT THURSDAY.

THE OUTLOOK FOR WEEK TWO /JAN 26TH – FEB 1ST/ FROM THE CLIMATE

PREDICTION CENTER MODERATELY FAVORS BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND

PRECIPITATION FOR THE PERIOD.

THE LATEST SEASONAL OUTLOOK FOR (FEBRUARY THROUGH APRIL) SLIGHTLY

FAVORS ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION FOR

THE REGION. THE LATEST SEASONAL DROUGHT OUTLOOK VALID FOR THE PERIOD

FROM JANUARY 19TH THROUGH APRIL 30TH INDICATES THAT THOUGH DROUGHT

CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN BUT IMPROVE ACROSS MOST OF THE

REGION…WITH DROUGHT REMOVAL LIKELY FROM FAR NORTHWESTERN PORTIONS

OF ALABAMA.

HYDROLOGIC SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK…

RIVER AND CREEK STREAMFLOWS HAVE NEVER FULLY RECOVERED SINCE THE

BEGINNING OF THE DROUGHT…ALTHOUGH CONDITIONS CERTAINLY HAVE WAVERED

OVER THE LAST FOUR TO SIX WEEKS. NEVERTHELESS…RIVER AND CREEK

STREAMFLOWS HAVE FALLEN ONCE AGAIN DUE TO RECENT BELOW NORMAL

PRECIPITATION. MOST 7-DAY AVERAGE STREAMFLOWS ARE NOW BELOW THE 20TH

PERCENTILE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. FOLLOWING ARE 7-DAY STREAMFLOWS

ALONG SOME OF THE STREAMS AND CREEKS IN OUR AREA…

MULBERRY FORK……2ND PERCENTILE

SIPSEY CREEK…….2ND PERCENTILE

BIG NANCE CREEK….4TH PERCENTILE

CYPRESS CREEK……4TH PERCENTILE

PAINT ROCK RIVER…6TH PERCENTILE

BIG WILLS CREEK….7TH PERCENTILE

BEAR CREEK………10TH PERCENTILE

FLINT RIVER……..10TH PERCENTILE

ELK RIVER……….14TH PERCENTILE

LAKE AND RIVER LEVELS ALONG THE HEAVILY REGULATED TENNESSEE RIVER

SYSTEM HAVE LARGELY BEEN UNAFFECTED BY THE DROUGHT CONDITIONS OVER

THE LAST YEAR AND ARE OPERATING WITHIN OR NEAR NORMAL POOL LEVELS.

HOWEVER…TIMS FORD LAKE CONTINUES TO OPERATE ABOVE THE NORMAL GUIDE

CURVE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. LEWIS SMITH LAKE IS ALSO OPERATING NEAR

THE NORMAL POOL LEVEL FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR.

ACCORDING TO THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER…THE LATEST DAILY SOIL

MOISTURE RANKINGS AS OF JANUARY 11TH…INDICATE A CONTINUANCE OF LOW

SOIL MOISTURE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. PERCENTILE RANKINGS ARE AS LOW

AS THE 1ST TO 5TH PERCENTILES IN AREAS FROM SOUTHERN DEKALB TO

EASTERN CULLMAN COUNTIES…GENERALLY WITHIN THE CURRENT D3 DROUGHT

AREA. SOIL MOISTURE PERCENTILES CLIMB GRADUALLY TO THE

NORTHWEST…BUT ARE STILL ONLY AS HIGH AS ABOUT THE 20TH PERCENTILE

IN FAR NORTHWESTERN ALABAMA AND SOUTHERN MIDDLE TENNESSEE.

THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GROUNDWATER WELL SITE IN CULLMAN COUNTY

SHOWS THAT GROUNDWATER LEVELS FELL BELOW THE DAILY MEDIAN VALUE

DURING THE MARCH TO LATE APRIL PERIOD AND HAVE SINCE REMAINED BELOW

AVERAGE SINCE THAT TIME. WATER LEVELS DROPPED FROM SEPTEMBER TO LATE

NOVEMBER…AND THEN REBOUNDED A LITTLE IN EARLY DECEMBER…DUE TO

HEAVY RAINFALL FROM LATE NOVEMBER INTO EARLY DECEMBER. VALUES THEN

REMAINED NEARLY STEADY BUT HAVE CLIMBED A LITTLE DURING THE LAST

COUPLE OF WEEKS DESPITE THE OVERALL BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION.

STILL…WATER DEPTH IS ABOUT 10 FEET BELOW NORMAL AT THE WELL SITE.

GROUNDWATER LEVELS AT THE MONITORING SITE IN LAWRENCE COUNTY DECLINED

RAPIDLY FROM EARLY SEPTEMBER TO LATE NOVEMBER…BUT ROSE SHARPLY

AFTER RAINFALL IN LATE NOVEMBER AND EARLY DECEMBER. WELL DEPTH VALUES

ARE JUST A LITTLE BELOW THE MEDIAN VALUE FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR.

THE OUTLOOK FOR SOIL MOISTURE AND STREAMFLOWS OVER THE NEXT WEEK IS

FOR IMPROVEMENT DUE TO THE EXPECTED RAINFALL.

NEXT ISSUANCE DATE…THE NEXT DROUGHT STATEMENT WILL BE ISSUED

THURSDAY…JANUARY 26TH.

&&

RELATED WEB SITES…

/USE LOWER CASE/

U.S. DROUGHT MONITOR WEB PAGE…HTTP://DROUGHTMONITOR.UNL.EDU

CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER…
http://WWW.CPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV

FOR INFORMATION ABOUT ALABAMA DROUGHT DECLARATIONS…VISIT
http://WWW.ADECA.ALABAMA.GOV/DIVISIONS/OWR/PAGES/DEFAULT.ASPX

FOR INFORMATION FROM THE ALABAMA FORESTRY COMMISSION…VISIT
http://FORESTRY.ALABAMA.GOV/

WILDFIRE INFORMATION FROM THE ALABAMA FORESTRY COMMISSION…
http://FORESTRY.ALABAMA.GOV/FIRE_TOTALS.ASPX?BV=1&S=4

RADAR ESTIMATED PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS CAN BE OBTAINED FROM…
http://WATER.WEATHER.GOV/PRECIP

STREAMFLOWS ARE OBTAINED FROM THE USGS AT…
http://WATERWATCH.USGS.GOV/INDEX.PHP

LAKE LEVELS FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER LAKES CAN BE OBTAINED FROM
http://WWW.TVA.COM/LAKEINFO/

USGS GROUNDWATER WELL SITE INFORMATION FOR ALABAMA…
http://WATERDATA.USGS.GOV/AL/NWIS/CURRENT/

?TYPE=GW&GROUP_KEY=COUNTY_CD

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS…

SOME DATA USED IN THIS STATEMENT WERE PROVIDED BY THE U.S.

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE…THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY…THE

TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY…AND THE STATES OF ALABAMA AND

TENNESSEE.

QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS…

FOR QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS ON THE DROUGHT…CONTACT:

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HUNTSVILLE

320A SPARKMAN DRIVE

HUNTSVILLE AL 35805

PHONE: 256-890-8503

SR-HUN.WEBMASTER@NOAA.GOV

$$

KDW

Show more