Dry Southwest, Uncertain Summer
(Michael Benanav for The New York Times)
Severe drought has left northern New Mexico's mountains with little snow cover.
IT was a beautiful day in the Santa Fe National Forest. Mike and Kathy Serk, hikers from the suburbs of Santa Fe, N.M., were taking a break along the Raven's Ridge Trail, sitting on fallen logs in a pool of sunlight for a leisurely lunch of sandwiches and potato chips. Around them, towering spruce trees and pale green aspens swayed gently in a mountain breeze. Songbirds flitted among the branches. Nearby on the clear, dry trail, hikers and mountain bikers occasionally passed by.
But something was out of kilter.
These conditions were perfectly normal for mid-June, but this was the first week of March. The trail should have been buried beneath several feet of snow.
This year snow and rain have largely passed the Southwest by. The period from November through March was the driest in Santa Fe and Albuquerque since record-keeping began in 1892. Statewide in New Mexico, this was one of the driest seasons on record. Arizona set new records for winter drought, with Phoenix recording no rainfall for a stretch of 143 days and some Tucson residents reduced to watering the cactuses in their gardens. A smattering of spring storms have done little to make up for the missing moisture.
The Serks and New Mexico's other seasoned nature lovers know well what drought like this portends in a national forest, and they are getting their outdoor time while they can....No one has said officially that this forest will be shut down. No one has announced, or yet decided, that its trails will be off limits this summer to backpackers and campers or its rivers closed to rafters and kayakers. But the signs are clear enough. Drought means fire danger, and when that danger is high enough, the public is barred. Forest Service officials are predicting an early start to this year's wildfire season, which could be severe....
http://travel2.nytimes.com/2006/04/28/travel/escapes/28drought.html