No escaping fallout from climate change and severe weather

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Editor’s note: This is San Antonio Report Editor Robert Rivard’s final summer travelogue. His regular column resumes Sunday.

Rainfall in Taos and northern New Mexico, locals say, is the best in at least five years. Afternoon thunderstorms, some intense and prolonged, were a daily experience during our week of fly fishing, river rafting, hiking, and cultural exploration.

Yet even on the clearest of days, the curtain of haze that enveloped the Sangre de Cristo mountains was evidence that Oregon’s catastrophic Bootleg Fire reached far beyond the state’s borders. Smoke and contaminants from wildfires in Canada and the West Coast now reach the entire country, as seen in this New York Times map.

We experienced more than itchy eyes and throats in New Mexico this past week. Even with the rains, temperatures soared an average of 10 degrees above normal, hitting 90 degrees many days. My son Nicolas and I were fly fishing the Cimarron River on one such day when our guide noted that water temperatures had risen to 72 degrees by mid-afternoon, putting the trout at risk if stressed. We packed up and returned to our lodging.

The following day my wife Monika, Nicolas, and I set out on the 4.2-mile, out and back Williams Lake Trail in the Taos Ski Valley in the Carson National Forest. The moderate to intermediate hike was meant, in part, to test my progress 48 days after knee replacement surgery. The trail starts at 10,200 feet and ends at 11,100 feet. I gained a full appreciation on the way up of the thinner air at that altitude. We didn’t get started until midday, and many hikers passed us on their way down. At the top, we were alone at the lake when a sudden storm enveloped us with crashing thunder and lightning, and a downpour that quickly turned into a hailstorm. Small pebbles grew to marbles and then larger as we took shelter. Temperatures plunged into the low 40s. As the hailstorm finally began to diminish, we followed our rescue dog, Cacteye, down the mountain in double time, soaked to the bone, making our way through inches of accumulated hail.

Robert Rivard and Cacteye head for shelter as a hail storm intensifies at high altitude. Credit: Courtesy / Monika Maeckle

Such mountain storms are not uncommon, of course, and can’t necessarily be attributed to climate change, but severe weather and unexpected weather events are becoming increasingly common, seemingly everywhere, including the unusual “cold front” that came through San Antonio in our absence.


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