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VAIL, CO - DECEMBER 7:  Many runs lack snow at Vail Ski Area on December 7, 2021 in Vail, Colorado.  The current snowpack at most Colorado resorts is dismal but a weekend storm could bring relief to areas for more snow and increased snowpack in the high country. Winter weather alerts are posted for many mountain regions of Colorado as a potent storm is forecast to move across the state between now and Saturday morning. The storm could drop upwards of 3 feet of snow and will pack winds of 50 mph bringing winter into areas that havenÕt had snow or moisture in months. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
VAIL, CO – DECEMBER 7: Many runs lack snow at Vail Ski Area on December 7, 2021 in Vail, Colorado. The current snowpack at most Colorado resorts is dismal but a weekend storm could bring relief to areas for more snow and increased snowpack in the high country. Winter weather alerts are posted for many mountain regions of Colorado as a potent storm is forecast to move across the state between now and Saturday morning. The storm could drop upwards of 3 feet of snow and will pack winds of 50 mph bringing winter into areas that havenÕt had snow or moisture in months. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
Conrad Swanson - Staff portraits at ...
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Colorado didn’t see enough snow this winter to fully recover from the ongoing megadrought and now what snow the state did see is melting too quickly, experts say.

“If we continue on at the rate we’re at we’re looking at probably a complete meltout by the end of May or beginning of June,” Becky Bolinger, of the Colorado Climate Center, told The Denver Post.

That’s too soon. By several weeks, she said. So drought conditions are likely to worsen, exacerbating what officials are anticipating could be the worst wildfire year in Colorado’s history.

Already fire restrictions appear to be more common than normal. And experts have questioned whether Colorado is prepared for another devastating wildfire like the Marshall Fire, which burned through a record number of homes and businesses in December.

As an example of the melt out, Bolinger pointed to the San Juan Mountains in the southwest corner of the state. The snow there has been melting at a “ridiculous” rate, she said.

“They should still have about 8.5 inches of snowpack,” Bolinger said. “And they’re at 2 (inches).”

Mountains in northern Colorado are faring a little better, Bolinger said, but ultimately the earlier melt out means that water will be absorbed quickly by the parched soils or evaporated. More drawn-out melt outs, which usually last until mid-June, stretch the water supply more efficiently, recharging the state’s dry waterways and plant life.

Windy and sunny conditions in April, combined with low humidity levels led to high levels of evapotranspiration, Russ Schumacher, director of the Colorado Climate Center, told a group of climatologists Tuesday morning. That amounts to a “thirsty atmosphere,” which forces surface water to evaporate further.

As snow melts, some of the state’s waterways — like the Colorado, Gunnison, Rio Grande and San Juan rivers — might see a short-lived uptick but ultimately below-average flows in water, Bolinger said. The severity of those conditions will depend on whether Colorado sees more colder temperatures and additional snow in the coming weeks.

“And neither of those are on the horizon,” Bolinger said.

The melt out also comes on the heels of an extremely dry April, which set records along much of the Eastern Plains, Zach Schwalbe, manager of the Colorado Agricultural Meteorological Network, said in the group climatologist discussion.

Not only does the lack of moisture and early melt out increase the risk for wildfires across the state but it also cuts into Colorado’s $47 billion agricultural industry.

Looking at current trends Bolinger anticipated that the state’s drought conditions will only worsen heading into the summer.

“I hope that I am wrong but that is my expectation,” she said.