December 14th, 2024

Large snowpacks thanks to lack of winter chinook winds

By Collin Gallant on April 25, 2018.

Medicine Hat News

Runoff and standing water across southern Alberta this spring are not the result of heavier than normal snowfall, but rather a lack of drying chinook winds over the winter and early spring, according to Agriculture Alberta.

A statement issued this week notes that snow packs on prairie land are larger than usual at this time year despite near-normal levels of winter precipitation.

A lack of breaks from colder weather “significantly delayed spring melt,” said Ralph Wright, the ministry’s agro-meteorological manager.

In southern Alberta, where some counties are dealing with localized flooding this month, lingering snow was estimated to be at one-in-50-year highs. Separately, Alberta Enivronment estimates the snow pack is about 45 per cent larger than usual for mid-April.

“Interestingly enough, these unusual snow packs were not the result of extremely excessive over-winter precipitation accumulations, but rather more so, due to the absence of brief warming trends brought on by chinook winds that typically lay the land bare.”

That includes southern portions of the county of Newell, the Municipal District of Taber and western Wheatland County.

The areas surrounding Medicine Hat in northern Cypress County range from mostly normal to moderately high. The southern reaches range from high to very high (considered a 25-year high). The extreme southeast corner of the province is also considered in the 50-year wettest range.

Forty Mile has seen the coldest spring in 50 years, while Medicine Hat is considered to see a spring as cold as this one every 12 years or so.

The statement comes just two weeks before the ministry is set to release its first crop report of the 2018 growing season.

The Saskatchewan provincial crop report is set to begin on May 5.

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