April 29, 2008--Forecasters: Good 2006-2007 snowpack means wildfire danger above average (Boulder Daily Camera)
Snowstorms in late 2006 and early 2007 that paralyzed Colorado’s Eastern Plains and forced farmers to drop hay bales from helicopters for snowbound cattle are now contributing to what could be an above-average fire season. Forecasters with the Rocky Mountain Area Predictive Services said tall stalks of grasses that grew with the extra moisture from those storms are now dead across thousands of acres from Colorado’s foothills east of the Continental Divide to western Kansas and Nebraska. Those grasses die and are normally replaced by new grass, but cold, dry weather this year has prevented the annual “green-up” and left the dead stalks towering over the new grass. “All that snowpack (from 2006-07) melted and was absorbed into the soils and we got a lot of grasses from it,” said Tim Mathewson, a forecaster at the Rocky Mountain Coordination Center. “It has become a factor this spring and will become a factor the remainder of the spring.” The danger for the area will remain high between May and August, and may lessen when late summer wet patterns called monsoons move into the area.
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