Author Topic: Redington Monsoon I  (Read 422 times)

jbeegoode

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Redington Monsoon I
« on: July 01, 2022, 09:18:35 AM »
When we got back from our road trip last summer, the wettest monsoon ever was in full swing. When it rains, go to Redington Pass where the water flows. It was wonderful, we went back again and again. I have enough stuff from our visits to make more than one story/trip report and still not make it redundant.

It needs to rain around here. I'm itching to hit the falls.

https://thefreerangenaturist.org/2022/07/01/redington-monsoon-i/#more-12466

Jbee

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nuduke

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #1 on: July 03, 2022, 09:44:20 PM »
Once again, I try to be there vicariously, reading your blog and pictures and experience perhaps a tiny frisson of such pleasure as you describe.  I remain, as ever, verdantly envious! :D
John

jbeegoode

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #2 on: July 04, 2022, 07:33:52 PM »
We got rain last Thursday, none since. The temps will be going way up by the end of the week. And no rain in sight. I may head up into the mountains. It should begin daily monsoon the first week of July...but no. There is concern.  The climate has changed so much since 1989. I long for the water up there at Redington, writing these posts has me a bit "verdant."

Anyway, there will be several more posts about Redington with many pics in the coming weeks. 
Jbee
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nuduke

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #3 on: July 10, 2022, 10:10:29 PM »
Looking forward to it.  We have heard so much about it over the years, I just want to visit Redington myself!  No prospect this year!
Your mention of the late/no monsoon suggests the effects of global warming and the ongoing drought in the SW US.
I read that the first four months of 2022 were the driest on record in California, and about to enter its dry season. Much of the Southwest and Plains have been much drier than usual. California had its driest start to a year since the late 19th century, raising increased drought and wildfire concerns. Reservoirs are at record lows and Lake Mead nearing "dead pool" levels it appears.  There's going to be rationing in San Francisco and Los Angeles before long I reckon.  As I have remarked before, California is the 5th or so largest GDP in the world and 14% of the US GDP.  If they can't produce the crops, the whole world will feel the effects.  And yet I don't hear the US government doing anything significant.  Is there stuff happening to try and combat the droughts that have been accumulating since about 2012?  Can they do anything?  When we visited in 2014 there was much talk about the low level of the reservoirs and lakes and the prolonged drought.  It improved a bit in the intervening years but again, reports are that the last 3 or 4 years have been worryingly dry.
Am I right?  Or can anyone from the US shed light on the situation?  AZ is drier still...is there a drought there as well?  I wouldn't like to see you, Jbee and DF having to wash from a bucket and recycle your pee!
John

jbeegoode

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #4 on: July 11, 2022, 11:53:40 PM »
It is no commonly called a "non"soon. Used to be a mon-sooner-or-later. Before that, it was a scheduled monsoon.

During the first twenty-plus years in Tucson, my parents had a house in the foothills of the Catalinas looking down into the valley of Tucson and then clear to Mexico. Mom would plan and time dinner so that we could watch the black wall of water and incredible lightning storms during dessert on the front porch. Monsoon would arrive during the first week of July and continue for 6 or 8 weeks. A predictable daily occurrence.

In the spring of 1989 every heat record was shattered for three months every day. The monsoon began to get erratic, come earlier, later, last months longer, come from different directions and other forms of sporadic. Finally, the summer of 2020 brought no monsoon. In an entire year, we got not even a handful of sprinkling rains. This is scary. Things die off, wildlife suffers and numbers decline. Last year the monsoon rainfall all-time record was produced. History gave a few droughts and wet periods, volcanic activity sometimes, but here, everything suddenly lost any previous climate patterns in 1989.

I got a job meeting people at the airport from all over the world during a struggle period of single dad life, mid or late 1990's. Every person that I talked to, told me how the weather changed in 1989 where they lived. It has only gotten more erratic and extreme. It's like one of those circus performers who spins plates on sticks. The plates wobble more and more before they fall off. The jet streams, etc., starting from the arctic, have been looking like those plate patterns. The weather has followed suit. North there is crazy wet and cold and as that happens, we're getting the opposite. All of the reports here have been consistent. When I'm naked in the sun and you all are in blizzards or something.

There is drought, the dammed lakes have huge white bathtub rings, fires are sweeping everywhere. Many of my favorite places, from past trip reports are simply not there anymore. Huge venerable century's old trees that I have known, gone.

The government of the United States is a two party system, controlled on money interests. There is a fusion of corporate wealth controlled by a few and the government and those who operate it. The definition of Mussolini fascism.There are hundreds of millions being spent on think tanks, and influence to maintain and consolidate that immense power. The result is lip service and control by an oligarchy. We are lobsters in a pot as the heat slowly rises and helpless to make the change. Other issues get precedent often, some created. Crisis puts the greatest crisis in the shadows. Don't expect much from this government. Only local governments are stepping up, but they are often only distractions. Maybe, when an even bigger catastrophe strikes home to jar the populous to pitch forks for a couple of weeks, until it passes....

 In the summer of 2020, sitting in the valley looking up at an entire mountain range burning up, while there is a non-soon for the first time in recorded history, gives a sense of helplessness.

We were going to do a story about a trip to Lake Powell, but the whole damn thing is closed, going empty. People are down there checking out the archeology that was buried by the dam. The ruins are now back!

We won't be washing from a bucket very soon, but we don't have grass here, except golf courses. Water ain't cheap around here. The last free flowing rivers will dry up completely like the rest. Fire will be out of control, as our hiking/camping forests disappear. We can always bathe in the sauna, burning old palates and crates.

Right now, it's 105F out there. The heat index is 103F!  Some days, we have been experiencing things like 3% humidity! Some monsoon! It is 18% humidity this afternoon. We got some rain last week, a storm blew in and then out in a bout a half an hour. The mountains got more than that, so the fire danger is slightly less.

I have to go find something to laugh about, now. Yea, it sucks and will get worse. There is a teasing chance of rain in a few days, but the heat is too much to pull it up here.
Jbee



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jbeegoode

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #5 on: July 13, 2022, 06:13:40 AM »
To add to my lengthy dissertation off the top of my head, above, you may find this other planet problem interesting:

Here's what Phoenix is doing about climate changes. We have a similar problem. They have been historically a pretty consistent 6 or 7 degrees Fahrenheit than us. Their elevation is about 500 feet lower than Tucson. BUT, there is more, as it is a huge sh--t hole of urban asphalt, etc. The urban made heat makes it more than 10 degrees hotter than the desert, especially at intersections where three or four lanes of cars are lined up stopped, idling, waiting for lights.

Anyway, Tucson is about the size that Phoenix was back in the 1970's, now. We will have more of these problems as we grow.

This road reflective seal is something new. I just heard of it last week.

The guy Joaquin Murrietta, in the video, actually lives in Tucson. He has been my consultant and been over to my house about the rainwater harvesting that we’re doing on my property. I’m doing trees and desert plants for a meditation garden for the sweat. He has a whole slew of water-saving strategies at his place. Outdoor shower and composting toilet, pizza oven, etc.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pD9VA6369ts

So, there comes a time when just being naked helps, but no cigar.

Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

nuduke

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #6 on: July 15, 2022, 10:41:49 PM »
So the desert weather is indeed taking its toll in AZ.  Sounds as if it might get tough for you all if the hot weather continues.
Keep cool my friend.
John

Peter S

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #7 on: July 16, 2022, 10:22:51 AM »
Challenging Arizona over here - we’re being forecast 104F over the next few days. I guess that means pretty normal for you, JBee, but over here the media are in panic-overdrive. It’s not the sort of weather we’re used to …
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jbeegoode

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Re: Redington Monsoon I
« Reply #8 on: July 16, 2022, 09:20:21 PM »
For one, we've got a dry heat.Your humidity can make the index jump. Our dry air can sometimes even make it drop a couple of degrees.
Two 104F used to be a couple of days each year in June, here, but it has become like a new normal to hit 105F plus multiple days. One-oh-five on the National Weather Report has an icon declaring 105F as "extreme heat." To me anything 105F or over is just too hot, stay indoors, hang in and out of a cool pool, until the temp drops 20F to 30 degrees in the evening, until late in the morning.

Three, many of your homes all aren't prepared for heat as we are.

104F must be knocking down some old records. That sucks. That's radical weather, the new norm most years. For a place that thinks 75-80F is hot, you all must be sweltering.

There is a greater chance of monsoon this Tuesday and after that lower temperatures, which allow the rains to draw up here from Mexico. That's down to 99F to 102F, however. We need big storms, flash floods, to get Redington back up and running.

Think, I'll go outside and pray for rain some, as I water my poor plants (a common occurrence within our population). Everyone pretty regularly gets religion around times like this.
Jbee
« Last Edit: July 16, 2022, 10:51:20 PM by jbeegoode »
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