Other data on the Washoe ET site provide a more complete picture of why a half an inch of rain in a week did little to change the picture. Our estimated potential evapotranspiration (the amount of water returned to the atmosphere by the combined evaporation and by plant transpiration) for May is 4.0 inches, 8 times more than what has come so far as rainfall. That means that even if our storms are high duration, low intensity storms, the soil is dry because evapotranspiration moves a lot of water from the soil profile into the atmosphere. It would take a lot of rainy days to replenish soil moisture enough to change the National Drought Monitor Map.
For more information about our drought and how to cope with it, visit www.LivingwithDrought.com. Good resource for a wide range of interests.
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