Washington Forms Healthy Snowpack After Snowiest February in 20 Years
By Glen Farley, King 5 News
A good snowpack means more water for farmers who need irrigation this summer, as well as municipal water supplies. It can also help mitigate wildfire season.

Snowpack in the mountains of Washington state is so high, it’s like having a winter and a half, according to experts, which means good news for farmers and others who rely on that snow melting off this spring.
As of March 2, snowpack in the Olympics stood at 164% of normal – based on the snow water equivalent. Much of the central Cascades were at 145% of normal, and the eastern slopes of the Cascades were at 123% of normal, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service, which tracks snowpack under the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The story of snowpack isn’t so much about how deep the snow gets, but more about how much water it holds once it melts away during the spring.
A healthy snowpack means more water, which matters for farmers who need irrigation, not to mention municipal water supplies that depend on melting runoff. A good and lingering snowpack can also help mitigate wildfire season.
It was the summers following some of the lowest snowpacks recorded in 2014 and 2015 that saw record fire seasons in the state as measured by acres burned.
This is not a record winter, but it’s a good one, according to Nick Bond, a climatologist for Washington state.
“It’s up there. It’s up there in the upper 15 or 20%, especially in Washington state,” said Bond. “We’ve done relative to normal, better than most of the U.S. – California, where it’s still a bit below normal. The Rockies aren’t in that great a shape.”