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Boise City, OK Hits 222 Straight Days W. .25 Inches Max. Daily Rain Total - Drier Than Dust Bowl Era

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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-05-11 08:43 AM
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Boise City, OK Hits 222 Straight Days W. .25 Inches Max. Daily Rain Total - Drier Than Dust Bowl Era
Edited on Thu May-05-11 08:44 AM by hatrack

At the Sharp Ranch, outside Boise City, Okla., no grass is in sight.

BOISE CITY, Okla. — While tornadoes and floods have ravaged the South and the Midwest, the remote western edge of the Oklahoma Panhandle is quietly enduring a weather calamity of its own: its longest drought on record, even worse than the Dust Bowl, when incessant winds scooped up the soil into billowing black clouds and rolled it through this town like bowling balls.

With a drought continuing to punish much of the Great Plains, this one stands out. Boise (rhymes with voice) City has gone 222 consecutive days through Tuesday with less than a quarter-inch of rainfall in any single day, said Gary McManus, a state climatologist. That is the longest such dry spell here since note-keeping began in 1908.

The Dust Bowl of the 1930s, caused in part by the careless gouging of the earth in an effort to farm it, created an epic environmental disaster. Experts say it is unlikely to be repeated because farming has changed so much. Boise City recovered from the Dust Bowl and has periodically enjoyed bountiful years since. But this drought is a reminder of just how parched and unyielding life can be along this wind-raked frontier, fittingly called No Man’s Land, and it is not clear how many more ups and downs Boise City can take. “The community is drying up,” Mark Axtell, the area’s only funeral director, said on a walk through the cemetery, where brown tufts of buffalo grass crunched underfoot.

In the last decade, Boise City lost almost 16 percent of its population, according to the 2010 census. Just 1,312 people live here now — far fewer than the 3,000 who bought the first lots in 1908, only to discover that they had been hoodwinked. The land was inhospitable, and promises of railroads, water and trees (Boise is from the French “le bois,” meaning trees) were a fraud.

EDIT

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/us/04dust.html?_r=1
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AlecBGreen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-05-11 10:44 AM
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1. those poor people
there are few feelings worse than watching a whole herd of thirsty cows (i.e. all your capital) bawl at empty water troughs. Heartbreaking. I hope the weather will turn in their favor.
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