Summer rainy season sets up across Four Corners region

This Monday, June 13, 2022, photo provided by Wendy Pettay shows flames twinkling on a mountain on the outskirts of Flagstaff, Arizona. More favorable wind aided firefighters battling the blaze on Tuesday. (Wendy Pettay via AP)

This Monday, June 13, 2022, photo provided by Wendy Pettay shows flames twinkling on a mountain on the outskirts of Flagstaff, Arizona. More favorable wind aided firefighters battling the blaze on Tuesday. (Wendy Pettay via AP)

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — Some Arizona residents were battered by flooding last year when the summer rainy season known simply as the monsoon unleashed on mountains that have been scorched by flames — a concern again this year for residents in the throes of a particularly ferocious wildfire season.

With the seasonal weather pattern starting June 15, many are concerned with flooding as wildfires reduce more of the ponderosa pine forests surrounding Flagstaff in northern Arizona to ash.

The monsoon can be a mixed bag — cooling sweltering cities like Las Vegas and Phoenix but bringing the risk of flooding to mountain towns and low-lying deserts alike. It carries a promise of rain but doesn't always deliver. And even when it does, the moisture isn't shared equally across the Four Corners region and beyond.

The monsoon largely left the region parched in 2019 and 2020 but had a remarkable reversal last year when some cities logged the wettest summers on record.

photo

This Monday, June 13, 2022, photo provided by Krissie Maxwell shows smoke from a wildfire on the outskirts of Flagstaff, Arizona, swirling in the air. Favorable weather has aided firefighters battling the wildfire. (Krissie Maxwell via AP)

The outlook this year calls for equal chances of below, above and normal precipitation, although that could change when a new seasonal outlook is released June 17, climatologists said.

Already, conditions are setting up for moisture to move into northern Arizona and other spots later this week that can aid firefighters but also bring dry lightning that could spark more blazes.

"A lot of beneficial ingredients come with this," said Brian Klimowski, who heads the National Weather Service in Flagstaff. "That's relative humidity that will tend to suppress the fire behavior and, of course, hopefully some rain. But not too much rain. We all know the threat and the risk of post-burn flooding."

Temperatures will warm a bit June 17 and winds will come up in northern Arizona, potentially creating more active behavior on two wildfires burning on the outskirts of the city before moisture rolls in, he said.

Fire crews have corralled about one-third of the larger fire, which has charred more than 35 square miles since it started June 12. Another wildfire in a more remote area has burned nearly 8 square miles with no containment yet.

Evacuation orders were downgraded June 15. While the fires have calmed somewhat and largely are moving away from homes, Coconino County officials urged residents who don't have flood insurance to buy it now. Officials are testing sirens this week in one area prone to flooding, and stocking up on sand bags and concrete barriers to lessen any potential damage, but they won't know the extent of the risk on the latest wildfires until the area can be surveyed.

"It's not realistic that we can stop flooding," the county's public works director, Christopher Tressler, told residents June 14.

The U.S. monsoon is characterized by a shift in wind patterns that pull moisture in from the tropical coast of Mexico. It sets up differently in other parts of the world, including India, northern Australia and Africa where people celebrate the first rain of the season, said Joel Lisonbee, a climatologist and drought information coordinator with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In Arizona, about half the rain that falls during the year comes during the monsoon, said state climatologist Erinanne Saffell. Still, the U.S. Southwest is trending toward hotter, drier weather because of climate change.

Those conditions, along with fierce winds, led to a busy wildfire season across the U.S. West this spring. In all, federal officials say more than three dozen large fires have burned more than 1,875 square miles. Over 6,700 wildland firefighters and support personnel are assigned to incidents across the country.

New Mexico has the largest wildfire burning in the U.S., a blaze that has scorched more than 523 square miles and another marching through another corner of the state.

The weather service warned of potentially critical fire danger this week in Colorado's South Park region and eastern plains. Some local governments on June 15 banned outdoor fires.

In southwest Alaska, a 220-square mile wildfire has been moving through dry grass and brush in the largely treeless tundra away from an Alaska Native village. A front expected to move in June 16 will bring southeast winds that will reduce the threat to St. Mary's.

Temperatures were hot in California's interior June 15, but incoming low pressure was expected to cool things down and bring a chance of mountain showers and thunderstorms in the north by the weekend. Forecasters noted a chance of localized fire weather in the eastern Sierra Nevada because of dryness and gusts from the approaching system.


Associated Press writers John Antczak in Los Angeles; Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Mark Thiessen in Anchorage, Alaska; and Jim Anderson in Denver contributed to this report.

Donate to nhonews.com Report a Typo Contact
Most Read