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[Rant follows.]. Cliff Mass is a tenured professor at UW, but his perspective is often VERY incomplete / biased (especially if he can get a dig at the Seattle Times or NPR) for an "objective scientist". Last spring, in several blogs, he significantly downplayed drought possibilities in the Yakima system (see here for example), largely for the same reasons as his recent blog for summer 2026. An examination of the actual data proves that Professor Mass' predictions were far F*#$*ing wrong!!!! Several sources record that by the end of summer, Yakima reservoir water levels were HISTORICALLY low (see here and here and here). As a result non-senior water rights holders received only 40% of their allotment. Yakima river flows were half of the long-term median from July through November 2025 (see here) and water temperatures were much warmer than is typical late in the summer (see here, albeit from near Richland). I fished the Canyon for a week in October 2025 and it was lower than I have ever seen it during this period. In addition to low flows and warm water, huge cobble shallows that should have been producing algae to feed stream insects and then trout were high and dry. Loss of productivity has consequences.![]()
The Most Valuable Precipitation of the Year
This blog provides updated forecasts and comments on current weather or other topicscliffmass.blogspot.com
Plus they have drained most of the reservoirs around here. Recreation and associated business could take a beating.Washington cascades snow pack: 53% of normal
Oregon cascades snow pack: 35% of normal
Unless we have a wet summer, this does not bode well.