Written by Sig Silber
Updated at 3:25 pm EDT August 6, 2021 to update the Week 3 – 4 Forecast which is generally favorable for some drought relief. But it is not forecast to come come soon enough for the Northern Tier. We discuss the issues of the Northern Tier with respect to certain crops in our article as we have for some weeks now. It is tragic.
As usual we cover a lot of ground. The long report tonight is the International Agriculture Supply and Demand Report. In many cases, U.S. prices are determined at least to some extent by world agriculture markets. Brazil is of particular interest. As usual, we review U.S. Crop Progress with a focus on crops that group in the northern tier which is suffering mightily from drought. We provide information on Flash Drought and we have an interesting video by a New Mexico Rancher whom I know and who knows what he is doing in an area that is not ideal for ranching or growing feed for animals. We cover all our regular topics including the intermediate-term weather forecast.
WASDE stands for World Agriculture Supply and Demand Reports. The Drought Situation in the U.S. remains the same quantitatively with the areas impacted changing a bit as the drought rotates to the northern tier.
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Flash Drought.
There was a study done at the end of last year and a Webinar this week that I think was based on that study.
I will present some slides from the report but they are not very satisfying. For those with a real interest in this topic, probably it is best to read the report or bettey yet watch the video of the webinar. But here are some pages from the Report.
I have the Report from that study which you can access here and I have the link to the recording of the webinar which you can access here. It is just under one hour. But you can also access the recording from the below. [important note: if you ever click on a video and it starts in the middle, there is a bar at the bottom of the screen that allows you to move it back to the starting point. That bar is also useful if you want to repeat part of the video or skip part of the video – something to keep in mind.]
Regional Conditions
We might as well show the situation for the California Reservoirs here.
And it is always useful to look at the last seven days. I have stopped showing the Snow Water Equivalent as there is now essentially no snowpack of any significance. So rainfall is what counts now.
I think we have all gotten sick at looking at the water year to date which by now does not change unless there was a Noah’s Ark event. So I am not showing it.
ENSO Situation
We will cover that in more depth next week but I though we should start thinking about it so I have included the following graphic that I am allowing to continue to update.
Let’s look at the current drought situation.
Here we look at four time periods: one week, one month, six months, and a full year.
Drought Discussion (The Regional links are live and will take you to the drought map for that Region)
This Week’s Drought Summary
Abundant monsoonal precipitation again spread from the Southwest as far as eastern Nevada, southern Idaho, southern and western Wyoming, and western Colorado. Totals exceeding an inch were common, and 2 to 4 inches doused some of the higher elevations, especially across the central Rockies and Intermountain West. Most other areas of dryness and drought recorded at least light precipitation, but totals were not enough to significantly improve dryness and drought from the Plains eastward. Conditions deteriorated in several areas where there was little or no rainfall, specifically the northern Plains from eastern Montana through western Minnesota, from central Kansas and adjacent Colorado northward into Nebraska, across northeastern Arkansas, over the central Virginias, and in the climatologically dry areas of the Far West. Temperatures fluctuated during the week, with unusual heat covering central and southeastern parts of the country early in the period, but restricted to near the Gulf Coast by the end of the period. On the other hand, abnormally hot conditions slowly developed in much of the West after a relatively mild start (due in large part to monsoonal rainfall).
Northeast
Areas of dryness and drought in far northern New England again improved on the west side across northernmost New York and northern Vermont. But farther northeast, a few weeks of deficient precipitation have engendered increased moisture deficits in northern Maine despite several tenths of an inch falling this past week. Extreme drought (D2) persisted in west-central Maine. Dry areas around Cape Cod and in Pennsylvania remained unchanged, but the subnormal rainfall in the central Virginias prompted the introduction of abnormal dryness across most of West Virginia and adjacent western Maryland, where deficits of 2.5 to locally 4.0 inches have developed over the past couple of months. Finally, short-term moisture deficits prompted the introduction of abnormal dryness in west-central Delaware and northeastern Maryland.
Southeast
Similar to conditions in West Virginia and adjacent Maryland, abnormal dryness expanded significantly in western Virginia following several weeks of deficient rainfall, expanding into parts of western North Carolina as well. A small area of moderate drought was introduced in west-central parts of the Virginia where three-month rainfall totals were almost 6 inches below normal. In sharp contrast, most other parts of the Southeast have received abundant rainfall of late, and there is no dryness noted south of North Carolina.
South
Scattered patches of dryness can be found in the South, but they are few and far between. One to two months of subnormal rain prompted new, small areas of abnormal dryness (D0) in northeastern Tennessee and part of northeastern Arkansas. The latter area has seen 30 to 65 percent of normal precipitation in the past month. A small new D0 area was also introduced in the eastern Red River Valley while dryness slightly expanded in Oklahoma and remained intact across lower reaches of the Big Bend. Other areas remained free of significant dryness.
Midwest
There was a mixed bag of conditions this past week, with heavy precipitation observed in southern and eastern parts of the Midwest while little of none hit the upper Midwest. But even in the wetter areas, rainfall was generally insufficient to produce notable changes, except in parts of western Wisconsin, eastern Michigan, and a few other isolated areas. However, conditions deteriorated significantly across Minnesota and northern Iowa, most notably in several large patches in Iowa and adjacent Minnesota, where extreme drought (D3) was introduced. Most of these areas recorded 4.5 to 6.0 inches less than normal rainfall during the past 60 days, and up to 8.5 inches short of normal since early May.
High Plains
Abundant rainfall associated with the Southwest monsoon fell on the western half of Colorado, prompting widespread 1-category improvement. Exceptional drought (D4) is now confined to northwestern parts of the state and a small region in central Colorado. Areas farther north an east recorded less precipitation, allowing dryness and drought to remain intact or intensify. There was little change across Wyoming, but D0 and D1 classifications expanded from northeastern Colorado and Kansas northward into Nebraska. Deteriorating conditions were also noted across North Dakota, where drought has been evident since at least spring. Exceptional drought (D4) expanded substantially to cover much of the state’s interior.
West
This has been a region of extremes for a few weeks now. Abundant monsoonal rainfall has affected Arizona and New Mexico for about a month, and recently heavy rains expanded as far northward as eastern Nevada, southern Idaho, Utah, and the adjacent fringes of the High Plains Region. July 2021 was the wettest month ever in Tucson, Arizona, where more than 8 inches of rain fell. This stands in sharp contrast to the approximately 0.5 inch of rain that fell last July. A 5-day stretch in late July saw more rain than the entire year of 2020. Across southeast Arizona, 13 flood warnings were issue for a least a brief time in a small area during 2020. So far this summer, 83 such warnings have been issued. Still, while the monsoon has been very beneficial across southern and central sections of the West Region, the protracted length and severity of the drought there still has most of this region in Severe Drought (D2) or worse, with a large area of D3 and D4 covering Utah and most of Nevada. Across the northern and western tiers of the West Region, conditions have been far drier, and with frequent rounds of abnormal heat, drought conditions and impacts continue to increase. Eastern Washington, central Oregon, and now parts of Montana are in Exceptional (D4) drought, with 1-classification deterioration noted across the entire state of Montana last week. The dryness and periodic intense heat have abetted the development and spread of large wildfires. So far this year, roughly the western half of the country has endured almost 17,000 large fires which have scorched about 2.5 million acres of land.
Caribbean
On Puerto Rico, scattered moderate to locally heavy rains once again evaded most areas of dryness and drought, which remain unchanged from last week.
The weather across the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) during this USDM week (07/28/21-08/03/21) was influenced by a mid to upper-level ridge and dry air compounded by a Saharan dust layer, with the week bookended by Tropical Upper Tropospheric Troughs (TUTT). One TUTT moved across the region early in the week while the second approached the area near the end of the week. The TUTT cells induced a surface trough which pulled in moisture and created showers. A few of the showers were locally heavy, but most resulted in below-normal weekly rainfall totals.
Satellite-based (IMERG) estimates of 7-day precipitation (QPE) revealed roughly half an inch of rain for the islands. But radar-based estimates of QPE for the 7 days ending at 12z on Tuesday showed locally an inch to 2 inches of rain over northwestern portions of St. Croix and St. Thomas islands.
Seven-day rain gauge totals ranged from a third to half an inch of precipitation across St. John. On St. Croix, over 2 inches (2.74 inches) was measured at the CoCoRaHS station at Frederiksted 2.9 NNE, while the rest of the stations recorded a fourth to half an inch. The CoCoRaHS station at Charlotte Amalie West 4.2 WNW measured 1.31 inches of rain for the week, while the rest of the stations on St. Thomas reported a third to three-fourths of an inch.
The stations at Rohlsen AP and East Hill (on St. Croix) and King AP (on St. Thomas) were drier than normal for the week, for July, and for the year to date. Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) values on St. Croix ranged from D1 (short-term time scales) to D3 (last 12 months), with D1 values on St. John at the 9-month time scale. Groundwater levels on all three islands did not show improvement: the USGS Adventure 28 well on St. Croix continued to decline but at a slower rate, while St. John’s USGS Susannaberg DPW 3 well this week rose slightly for a couple days, then resumed its decline. Pond levels on St. Croix were relatively low. SPI values on St. Thomas were not at drought levels, but the USGS Grade School 3 well on St. Thomas continued to decline this week. Consequently, Severe Drought (D2-SL) continued on St. Croix, Moderate Drought (D1-L) continued on St. John, and Abnormal Dryness (D0-L) continued on St. Thomas.
Pacific
Alaska was a mixed bag this past week, with D0 and some D1 conditions improving in central parts of the state while abnormally low precipitation allowed D1 to expand northward and southward from east-central Alaska.
In Hawaii, rainfall over the past two weeks pushed July totals to around normal in many windward areas of the state, Abnormal dryness was removed form most of Kauai, and improvements were also noted in windward sections of eastern Maui and Hawaii Island. In contrast, drought intensified on western Oahu, interior northern sections of Hawaii Island, and a few other isolated areas. Dryness has abetted a large brush fire in the south Kohala District that has consumed 40,000 acres, and there are reports of very poor forage stressing livestock on Maui.
A monsoon trough brought abundant rain to northwestern portions of the U.S.-Affiliated Pacific Islands (USAPI) during this USDM week (07/28/21-08/03/21) while a surface ridge generally kept rainfall totals low across southwestern Micronesia. A couple circulations, and divergence aloft associated with an upper-level low, enhanced the monsoon precipitation over the Marianas. Weak surface troughs migrated across Micronesia, and an Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) began setting up over the Marshall Islands (RMI) and Kosrae State in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). A frontal boundary passed over American Samoa, bringing showers during what otherwise would have been a dry week.
Satellite-based estimates of 7-day precipitation (QPE) are available from two products: one using mainly infrared (IR) sensors (NESDIS GOES-R AHI) and the other incorporating microwave sensors (GPM IMERG). These QPE products showed widespread 2 to locally 8 inches of rain across the Marianas and over an inch for American Samoa. Northern portions of Palau and the FSM received an inch or more, while southern portions had less than half an inch, according to the satellite QPE. The RMI and eastern portions of the FSM had patches of 1-2 inches with locally more.
Rain gauge reports (based on data received) confirmed this overall pattern: wet (above the weekly minimum required to meet most water needs) this week in the Marianas, American Samoa, Majuro, Wotje, and Kosrae, but dry (below the weekly minimum) most everywhere else. In the Marianas, weekly rainfall totals ranged from 2.64 inches at the Saipan IAP to 6.07 inches at Guam and 7.67 inches at Dededo. In American Samoa, an inch or more was recorded at Pago Pago (1.89 inches) and the automated stations at Siufaga Ridge (1.21) and Toa Ridge (1.01). In the RMI, 2 inches or more was reported at Wotje (2.00) and Majuro (2.54), and in the FSM, Kosrae had 2.48 inches. D-Nothing continued at these stations/islands.
Weekly rainfall totals in the dry areas included about an inch and a third in Palau at Airai (1.41) and the Koror COOP station (1.31). Across the FSM, the dry reports ranged from 0.20 inch at Woleai (with 3 days missing), 0.25 inch at Chuuk (with 1 day missing), and 0.26 inch at Kapingamarangi, to 1.22 inches at Pohnpei and 1.33 inches at North Fanif (with 2 days missing) and Yap WSO. While this week was dry, previous weeks and/or July were wet, so D-Nothing continued across Palau and the FSM. An analysis could not be made for Fananu due to missing data.
At the dry stations in the RMI, weekly rainfall totals ranged from 0.15 inch at Jaluit to 0.72 inch at Kwajalein and 1.52 inches at Mili. Ailinglaplap reported only 0.56 inch for the week. D0-S continued at Ailinglaplap and Jaluit. This week was the fifth consecutive dry week at Ailinglaplap and July was the third consecutive dry month. July had only 2.69 inches of rain. July 2021, June-July 2021, and May-July 2021 all ranked as the driest such periods in the 37-year record. At Jaluit, this week was the 8th consecutive dry week and July had only 3.22 inches of rain; July 2021 ranked as the second driest July in 38 years, June-July ranked as the fourth driest, and May-July ninth driest. D-Nothing continued at the rest of the RMI stations where this week was wet (Majuro and Wotje), or previous weeks were wet, or July was wet. An analysis could not be made for Utirik due to missing data.
Looking Ahead
PlaceholderDuring the next 5 days (August 3 – 9, 2021) the heavy monsoonal rains that have soaked a large part of the southern Rockies and interior West should ease up, with significant totals exceeding 0.5 inch restricted to some higher elevations. Farther north, moderate to heavy rains are expected in the upper Midwest and most of the Great Lakes region. Between 1.5 and 3.0 inches are expected at most locations from the northeastern quarter of Iowa through northern Illinois and much of Wisconsin. Meanwhile, light to moderate rains are forecast northwest Washington, part of east-central Idaho and southwestern Montana, the east-central Great Plains, most of southern Texas, the central Appalachians, portions of eastern Ohio, and northwestern Maine. Elsewhere, only isolated areas of light to moderate rain are anticipated, with little or none expected through much of the Great Plains, the lower Mississippi Valley states, and the lower elevations in the southwestern quarter of the contiguous 48 states. Above-normal temperatures will accompany dryness in most of the northern and western parts of the Nation, particularly at nighttime. Daily minima should average 6 to locally 9 degrees F in parts of the southern Rockies and Intermountain West, with near normal temperatures restricted to much of California and the relatively drought-free Southeast. Daytime high temperatures will be near to somewhat above normal through most areas of dryness and drought, with the largest anomalies (+6 to +10 degrees F) exacerbating the dryness in the central Plains
The CPC 6-10 day extended range outlook (for August 10 – 14, 2021) favors subnormal precipitation through a large part of the country, but not with high confidence. But everywhere from the Southeast coastal plain and Florida northward and westward through the Gulf Coast region, the central and western Mississippi Valley, The Plains, all but the southernmost Rockies, California from the Cascades and Sierra Nevada eastward, and the Pacific Northwest. Monsoonal moisture may increase again in southern areas, with above-normal precipitation slightly favored in the southern half of Arizona and part of New Mexico. Odds also favor above-normal precipitation in the Great Lakes region, Ohio Valley, Northeast, and the dry areas in Alaska. Subnormal temperatures are expected to accompany the increased precipitation in Alaska, but a vast majority of the contiguous states should average warmer than normal. Odds exceed 60 percent (compared to climatological odds of 34 percent) from the central and northern Plains eastward, topping 80 percent from the central Appalachians through the Northeast. Only parts of southern Texas and southern Arizona do not have enhanced chances for above-normal temperatures.
Soil Conditions
Pan Evaporation. Did not find that graphic this week.
The result of the drought is very dry soil conditions in some areas. There is also some very wet areas.
Last Week | This Week |
Drought Outlook
Since we are entering fire season it is time to be showing the wildland fire potential outlook. These will update automatically shortly after the month changes which is very soon.
Crop Progress Reports
When we have a NASS Executive Briefing, and we do not this week, one way to look at this report is that it adds another more recent week of information. This report is issued every week and the Executive Briefings are every couple of months and provide a lot of historical information.
Crop | Crop Progress | Crop Condition |
Corn | Percent Silking and Dough OK | Better last year. Mostly due to the Dakotas and Minnesota having poor conditions. |
Soybeans | Blooming and Setting Pods good. | Not so great. Mostly due to the Dakotas and Minnesota.. |
Cotton | Squaring a bit slow, and Setting Bolls ok | Very good |
Winter Wheat | Harvested good | NA |
Spring Wheat | Harvested good* | Very poor in all states where Spring Wheat is grown |
Sorghum | Headed good, and Coloring OK | Very good |
Rice | Headed a bit slow | OK |
Oats | Harvested ok* | Very poor compared to last year in the Dakotas, Texas and Minnesota. |
Barley | Harvested good* | Very poor North Dakota, Washington State, Montana, and Minnesota. |
Peanuts | Pegging OK | OK |
Sugar Beets | NA | NA |
Sunflowers | MA | NA |
Pasture and Range | Somewhat Poor |
*Some of the harvested may be in preparation for replanting. This is speculation on our part based on the reports we provided in recent weeks and the continued drought along the northern tier.
Additional Information can be found here. Pretty much it is the same information as shown in the above tables but at the end there is some information on the methodology used.
NASS Reports The NASS Reports can be found here.
Intermediate-Term Weather Forecast
Showing from left to right, Days 1- 5, 6 – 10, 8 – 14, and Weeks 3 – 4 You can click on these maps to have them enlarge. Also, the discussions that go with these forecast maps can be found here (first two weeks) and here (Weeks 3 and 4).
First Temperature
And then Precipitation
The Week 3-4 Discussion is always interesting so we include it in the article. Since we are publishing this week on a Thursday, we will have to add it later probably Friday afternoon…it is released fairly late in the day. Similar discussions for the 6 -10 Day and 8 – 14 Day Forecasts are available here.
Week 3-4 Forecast Discussion Valid Sat Aug 21 2021-Fri Sep 03 2021
ENSO-neutral conditions continue to persist with near average sea surface temperatures (SST) observed across the tropical Pacific. While the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO) was active early in the week, it has since become inactive with forecasted RMM indices showing broad uncertainty between models, and ultimately becomes inactive at the start of the forecast period. The temperature and precipitation forecasts for the Week 3-4 period are based primarily on dynamical model guidance. Long-term trends were also a factor, as well as the evolution of the Week-2 forecast.
Several of the dynamical models (CFS, GEFS, JMA, and the SubX multi-model ensemble) are in reasonable agreement with respect to the 14-day average of forecasted 500-hPa circulation patterns over the CONUS and Alaska. An equal weighted blend of tools shows ridging south of Alaska, along the west coast of the CONUS, and over the Northeast, and troughing to the north of Alaska and over the southwest CONUS. Maxima for the 500-hPa height anomalies vary among model forecasts with regard to location and amplitude for the ridge over eastern CONUS, with models in more agreement about the placement and amplitude of the western ridge. Troughing in the southwest may be influenced by tropical cyclone activity present for the eastern Pacific.
As a result of the aforementioned ridging and decadal trends, the temperature forecast tilts toward above normal probabilities for much of the northern half of CONUS and southern Alaska. Along the west coast, model probabilities were near 50 percent leading to a forecast of equal chances for the area. The highest probabilities for above average temperatures are forecast for the Northern Plains and Northern Rockies. Models indicate below normal temperatures in the southwest, which may be influenced by changes in drought conditions and increased soil moisture in the area. Below normal temperatures are again favored along much of the Southern Plains and Southeast. Highest probabilities for below average temperatures are along the Texas and Louisiana coast. Despite robust model agreement, attribution of this below average signal is not evident in large scale teleconnections such as ENSO, MJO, or decadal trends. Forecaster experience, as well as persistence and recent skillful verification, point toward soil moisture and periodic troughing as the most likely explanation for the signal in this region.
The precipitation forecast for the Week 3-4 forecast period also reflects the predicted ridging and decadal trends as well as agreement between statistical and dynamical model guidance. Enhanced probabilities for dry conditions are favored in southern Alaska and the Pacific Northwest. Enhanced monsoon precipitation is again favored in the Southwest with highest probabilities across Arizona. Above average precipitation is forecast for the Southeast and surrounding regions. Guidance did not indicate a strong signal for tropical cyclone activity in the Gulf or Atlantic. As such the enhanced precipitation signal may be associated with the predicted troughing over the Southwest and potential tropical cyclone activity in the eastern Pacific. Much of the guidance over the northern central and northeastern CONUS indicated equal chances.
Along the Interior Basin and Western Alaska below normal temperatures are favored along with above average precipitation for the North Slope. Above normal temperatures are favored along the Aleutians, South Coast, and Panhandle, as well as below average precipitation in those same regions.
Near-normal sea surface temperatures have recently been observed in the region surrounding Hawaii. Dynamical model guidance from the SubX suite favors above normal temperature and below normal precipitation for all the islands in the forecast period.
Sustainable Agriculture.
This is an interesting video. There is a local group in New Mexico. NMHealthSoils.org. It is affiliated with similar groups in other states. I know the rancher who is the focus of this video. He is a retired NRCS Soil Scientist so he is not your average rancher. He has a pretty good sized operation and he grows his own feed for this cows. For whatever reason he does not show up in the video. Those asking questions do. The audio starts off a bit hard to hear but that clears up quickly. This organization produces a lot of videos and you can find them at the url I provided.
It is about 50 minutes long and he is a successful rancher. Last week we presented a successful farmer who thought that growing things at 5000 feet was an accomplishment and it is. I suspect Charles is well above 7,000 feet but I am not sure. He seems to be just where the vegetation turns to sage.
One of the concepts discussed in this video is soil horizons but no graphic was provided. So I thought I would do just that.
Energy News
Nothing to Report
International
Going into more depth. This is the July Report and the August Report will be out soon but I thought the July Report was quite interesting.
Science Feature
No Science Feature this week. But Flash Drought could be considered a science topic.
Environmental News
Nothing to report this week.
Major Sources of Information Used in this Weekly Report. We will not be using them all each week but the reader is welcome to refer to these resources.
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Sequence of drought occurrence and impacts for commonly accepted drought types. All droughts originate from a deficiency of precipitation or meteorological drought but other types of drought and impacts cascade from this deficiency. (Source and more information: NDMC)
Source: National Drought Mitigation Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln