News

Recent rain a temporary reprieve from drought conditions

Recent rain a temporary reprieve from drought conditions

Photo: Saga Communications/Cville Right Now


CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLE RIGHT NOW) – Nearly 2 1/2 inches of rain fell in the Albemarle County and Charlottesville area between Friday and Wednesday morning, according to Accuweather senior meteorologist Tyler Roys, as the U.S. Drought Monitor cast an “extreme drought” description over a larger portion of the region.

The drought monitor now shows the entirety of Albemarle County in “extreme drought” after being just the southern tip the couple of weeks before.

“You think that (2 1/2 inches of rain) should be good, and it is, but it’s a short-term relief,” Roys told Cville Right Now. “The drought has kind of been building for several months.”

The map includes all of Louisa and nearly all of Orange County as “extreme,” and the southern tip of Greene to join all of Fluvanna, Nelson, and Buckingham counties that were “extreme” before.

Looking back at the data, Roys noted between Jan. 1 and May 20, the day before it started to rain, 6.12 inches of rain had fallen on the area.

Typically, he said, the area should have nearly 17 inches of rain fallen over that time period.

The recent rain puts the total at 8.59 inches bringing the area closer to half the average rainfall.

“This is all good news for the crops to really get their roots into the ground, and as we go through the next five-to-seven days, it’s good that we’re keeping heat at bay,” Roys said. “So we’re not talking 90s, near 100, any of that. We’re talking somewhere low 80s into the 70s and really the last chance of rain around ends Wednesday, then we go back to a much drier pattern for a while.”

Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority has continued seeing reservoir levels at capacity, despite the drought monitor data, but the drought has had an agricultural impact with summer crops newly planted in the ground.

There are two way Roys said the area can get right with rainfall amounts.

The preferable way is several days of steady rain where soils can soak the moisture up, or a tropical system which dumps a lot of rain over a day or two, but also causes flooding as well.

Roys said as summer arrives, the former scenario becomes less likely than the latter.

He said summer thunderstorms help, but they are too isolated to do anything long-term especially as evaporation rates increase in the hot summer months.

Latest Stories

21 hours ago in Sports

Chiefs WR Rashee Rice continues serving jail sentence as team begins voluntary offseason workouts

While most of the Kansas City Chiefs participated in voluntary workouts this week, wide receiver Rashee Rice was back in Texas, serving his 30-day jail sentence after violating the terms of his probation for his role in a car crash that left multiple people injured.

21 hours ago in Sports, Trending

MLB owners have proposed a salary cap for the first time since baseball’s 1994-95 strike

Major League Baseball owners made their long-expected salary cap proposal to the players' association on Thursday, a system the union has vowed never to accept, setting the sides on course for a confrontation that threatens the 2027 season and perhaps beyond.

1 day ago in Sports

Baseball players ask for expanded free agency, salary arbitration rights, almost doubling minimum

Baseball players fired the opening salvo Wednesday in what is expected to be long and contentious labor negotiations, asking for expanded free agency and salary arbitration rights along with almost doubling the major league minimum and increasing the money high-revenue teams share with the less-wealthy clubs.