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Uncertain winter in the forecast
El Niño may be talking back to Colorado ski resorts this
winter. The Pacific Ocean warming event has strengthened in recent
months and already appears to have influenced Colorado’s fall
weather, according Klaus Wolter, an atmospheric scientist with the
University of Colorado at Boulder and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. However, Wolter suspects that ski
areas around the state will be cursing rather than praising El
Niño at the end of the winter of 2009-10.
Wolter’s characterized the October snowstorm that hammered
much of Colorado as a scenario that is typical of El Niño
during the fall. The warming phenomenon tends to make for a wetter
than average fall season, according to the scientist.
“Four of the last five El Niños have had a snowy
October here on the Front Range of Colorado,” he said.
“In general, it tends to be wetter than average in the fall
season – September through November – from Arizona
through New Mexico and Colorado into the high plains.”
But Wolter added that this year’s El Niño most
likely will impact Colorado’s winter weather in a way many
skiers won’t like. He noted that high elevations from the San
Juan Mountains north tend to experience drier than average winters
during an El Niño winter. Wolter expects the storm track to
trend mostly to the south and said there should be fewer midwinter
storms in the Colorado Rockies.
“You get fewer storms, and every once in a while
we’ll get hit and those storms can be healthy storms, by all
means, but you shouldn’t expect a lot of powder
skiing,” he said.
But there is also a silver lining, said Wolter. Temperatures
will tend to hover closer to normal and there should be fewer
windstorms, like those that plagued Durango and Colorado last
winter.
If the current El Niño continues to grow into a
“strong event,” then the Southwest could be in for a
wetter-than-normal winter, Wolter said. He added that he
expects the storm track to move back north as winter comes to a
close, and that should bring heavier snowstorms to Colorado if El
Niño is still a factor next spring.
The last El Niño to influence Colorado’s winter
weather was in 2006-07, Wolter said. But that one produced an
unusually snowy midwinter and he said the state should not expect a
repeat of the blizzards that hit just before Christmas and that
lasted through the first weeks of 2007.
Green affordable home breaks ground
An ambitious effort at “affordable green” broke
ground in La Plata County last week. On Nov. 13, Colorado Housing
Inc. and the Regional Housing Alliance of La Plata County started
construction the region’s first net-zero energy affordable
home.
Last Friday, the partnership set off on the construction of an
affordable home that will offset all of the energy it consumes
through renewable sources such as on-site solar thermal and solar
electric panels. CHI and the RHA collaborated on the design of the
single-family home, which will be sold to a local family at or
below 80 percent of the area median income.
The goal of building a net-zero energy affordable home
originated from a request from the Town of Ignacio Board of
Trustees. The lot on which the home will be constructed originally
belonged to the Town of Ignacio. During negotiations with CHI for
the sale of the land, the town explicitly requested that the home
be “built green.”
In order to reach the ambitious goal of net-zero energy, the
home will employ several energy efficient construction methods and
renewable energy systems. The walls and roof will be constructed of
SIPS, (Structural Insulated Panel System), which has 125 percent
the insulation value required by code. The heating system will be a
combination of passive solar gain supplemented with a geoexchange
system tied to in-floor radiant heat. Domestic hot water will be
powered by solar thermal panels with an electric back-up.
Appliances will be powered by solar-electric panels.
At the groundbreaking, Ignacio Mayor George Whitt described the
home as “a house of the future” and went on to say,
“We’ve got a lot of houses to build in this area. We
hope this will rub off on other people who will come by, take a
look at it, and use it as a model.”
CHI Executive Director Julie Simmons thanked the town for its
support of affordable housing and recognized the success of
CHI’s partnership with the RHA. The partnership allowed them
to overcome the two greatest obstacles to building in Ignacio:
recruiting buyers and finding land. “CHI has been trying to
build in Ignacio for eight years,” she said. “This is
the first and hopefully isn’t the last.”
CHI and the RHA are currently screening potential
homebuyers.
Canyons of the Ancients enhanced
The Canyons of the Ancients National Monument grew by nearly
5,000 acres this week, thanks to a major federal purchase.
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack announced that their agencies would acquire seven parcels
of high value conservation land in the West, totaling 5,026 acres.
The largest of them is a 4,573-acre property within the Canyons of
the Ancients National Monument in Colorado.
The acquisition was authorized by the Federal Land Transaction
Facilitation Act of 2000, which established a special fund to
purchase private inholdings in Western states from willing
sellers.
“These land purchases are a very worthwhile and
much-needed investment,” said Salazar. “The properties
being brought into public ownership are remarkable for their
extraordinary natural, scenic, recreational, cultural and
historical value. Their acquisition will benefit the American
people now and in the future.”
The Canyons of the Ancients property accounts for about 25
percent of the private lands inside the Monument and contains 25
documented sites of cultural importance, including Jackson’s
Castle and the Skywatcher Site, a 1,000-year old Ancestral Puebloan
solstice marker. The property is believed to contain more than 700
other as yet undocumented sites of cultural importance.
Hazards removed on Dolores River
Some unwelcome teeth were pulled on the upper Dolores River last
week. Greater Dolores Action rallied a group of community members
on Nov. 11 to remove metal hazards from “car body
alley,” a stretch of the river plagued by hazardous metal and
concrete obstructions.
During the past year, Scott Clow, chairman of GDA, used global
positioning software to map more than two dozen sites in and along
the Upper Dolores where large pieces of metal and concrete pose
hazards to wildlife and recreational users.
Volunteers from the citizens’ nonprofit group began work
on removing the hazards from the river last week. A portion of
funds earned from the 2009 Dolores River Festival were used to
offset costs. Officials from the Colorado Division of Wildlife are
cooperating in the effort, as some of the metal to be removed
upstream of town is in a State Wildlife Area.
Clow noted that members of GDA are excited about being able to
implement what will likely be “Phase One” of the
effort. He concluded that removal of these hazards will make it
safer for boaters, fishermen and all kinds of recreational users
and ultimately improve the area as a fishery.
– Will Sands
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