The following article written by Dan Chapman with the Atlanta Journal Constitution related to drought was in the November 8th edition of the AJC.  UGA CAES Agricultural Climatologist is quoted in this article.

 

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DROUGHT

Region from North Georgia to Florida in historic drought

And the outlook for the next three months looks equally bleak.

No rain for weeks. Streams flowing at historically low levels. Wild fires raging. A drier- and warmer-than-usual winter predicted.

The Chattahoochee and Flint river basins, running from North Georgia to Florida, are in “historic and exceptional drought,”state and federal climatologists said Tuesday. And the outlook for the next three months looks equally bleak.

“ Things will continue to degrade across the area,” said David Zierden, the climatologist for the state of Florida. “This year we will probably have more record streaks without any measurable rainfall than any other year.”

Zierden joined weather experts from across Florida, Georgia and Alabama for their bimonthly Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) River Basin Drought Assessment webinar. The updates, like the weather, get worse and worse.

Cartersville, for example, hasn’t had measurable rain in 49 days. Pastures have dried up across North Georgia. Cattle have been culled. Hay is imported from South Georgia or Tennessee.

“And the soil is so dry you can’t even plant a fall crop,” said Pam Knox, a University of Georgia climatologist. “If you plant seed in the ground, it (won’t) germinate.”

Gordon County has banned outdoor fires, like many Southeastern U.S. counties. Firefighters on Tuesday battled a 20-acre fire in Paulding County with smoke visible near Dallas, Rockmart and Yorkville. Alabama, overall, records 40 new fires daily.

The drought is killing streams. Paul Ankcorn, a hyrdologist with the U.S. Geological Service, says half of Georgia is in a “severe hydro-logic drought.” Gauges along the Chattahoochee River near Cornelia and Dahlonega show record-low flows, as do gauges along the Flint and other streams.

A Sweetwater  Creek gauge, near Austell, recently recorded its lowest daily average flow in 110 years.

No relief is on the horizon. The La Nina weather pattern, comfortably ensconced atop the Northern Hemisphere, isn’t likely to change over the next three months when, typically, the replenishing winter rains arrive.

Georgia officials will talk with utility directors today and Thursday to determine whether the state’s drought warning should be raised to Level 2. By week’s end, metro Atlantans may be able to water only twice weekly.