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Climate of 2005 - February
Washington Drought


National Climatic Data Center, 10 March 2005

Washington has had four consecutive months with much below normal precipitation, resulting in the fifth driest November-February in the 110-year record. This short-term dryness (1-month SPI, 3-month SPI, 6-month SPI) compounds dryness that has been occurring over the last six to seven years (36 months, 60 months). As reported by the National Weather Service, Spokane had the driest February since records began in 1881 with only 0.04 inch of precipitation.

An analysis by the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) (Tom Pagano) identified several snow course and SNOTEL high altitude stations that had March 1 snow water equivalent observations that tied or beat previous nearly 60-year dry records:

Stampede Pass, WA   (2005: 5.1", prev record: 11.1", prev record year: 1977, 
                     total # yrs: 58)
Olallie Meadows, WA (7.1", 18.2", 1977, 59)

Sites that were snow free for the first time in March and have been around for more than 15 years:

Ragged Ridge, WA    (prev record: 2.6", prev record year: 1982, 
                     total # yrs: 19 yr)
Twin Camp, WA       (0.3", 1977, 43 yr)
Lynn Lake, WA       (0.3", 1977, 42 yr) 

Statewide Precipitation Ranks
for Washington , 2004-2005
Period Rank
Feb 3rd driest
Jan-Feb 8th driest
Dec-Feb 9th driest
Nov-Feb 5th driest
Oct-Feb 6th driest
Sep-Feb 12th driest
Aug-Feb 22nd driest
Jul-Feb 20th driest
Jun-Feb 20th driest
May-Feb 27th driest
Apr-Feb 18th driest
Mar-Feb 18th driest
Graphic showing  precipitation departures, January 1998 - present
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Graphic showing  Palmer Z Index, January 1998 - present
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Graphic showing  precipitation, February  1895-2005
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Graphic showing  Palmer Hydrological Drought Index, January 1900 - February  2005
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