Getting Very Dry Over Much Of Ohio

We have been doing pretty well with soil moisture this year in Ohio, but July is letting us down. Temperatures have been hot and rain has been spotty at best. The below soil moisture condition monitoring reports show that drought stress in plants and crops is increasing in many parts of Ohio. Rain is forecast, but not until this weekend. The last two weather systems have been big let downs. I am hopeful regarding rain for this weekend but I am not holding my breath.

24 hour rainfall ending Tuesday morning. Very spotty.

 

 

Soil Moisture Condition Monitoring Weekly Report: Mildly Dry

Station Number: OH-HM-24
Station Name: Cheviot 3.4 W
Report Date: 7/14/2018
Submitted: 7/14/2018 6:29 AM
Scale Bar: Mildly Dry
Description:
 
Only 0.59 inches in July, well below normal, with an average high temperature about 2.4 degrees F above normal, 7 days of 90 or above in July and a peak temperature of 95 degrees. All this has combined to move us well into the mildly dry category. Yards are turning brown. Landscape plants are showing drought stress, especially in sunny areas. Growth has slowed dramatically in local pastures.
 
Categories: General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife

This report is specifically for the Arbor Doctor’s location 3.4 miles west of Cheviot, OH, in the western suburbs of Cincinnati in southwest Ohio. This location is also an official cooperative observation site for the National Weather Service listed as Cheviot 3W.

What is the Condition Monitoring Report? See these links for more information:

Explanation of scale bar>>>

Search condition monitoring reports for the entire US>>>

The Arbor Doctor Is Watering, Are You?

The Arbor Doctor loves his trees, but he is a west side German so he can be a little bit reserved when it comes to writing out a check for water. Still, he knows it’s necessary sometimes. He is watering now. Are you?

Truthfully, it’s been a pretty good year so far. This is the first full scale tree and shrub watering the Arbor Doctor has needed to do in 2018. Yes, it really is! The grass is still green here* but drought stress is evident in landscapes.

It’s been dry so far in July over much of the Cincinnati metro are. Rain deficit + heat = rapid drying rates and rapidly developing drought stress for plants.

Optimistically, it does look like a wetter and even cooler pattern may be setting up for next week and the following week.  At first glance, the weather prediction center’s depiction of US rainfall over the next 7 days appears to show a doe sprinting from New Mexico and Colorado into the Great Lakes region while Barney the dinosaur works his way from the deep south into the Ohio valley. There also appears to be a parrot over Texas and Oklahoma.

OK, I have an over active imagination, although the resemblance is there!

What it really shows is a pretty wet pattern over the US and an active southwest monsoon. Of course, as always, we remind you not to count the rain until it actually falls in your rain gauge, so water, but water responsibly*.

 

*Remember not to cut grass short in hot weather. 3 inches tall  is best for tall fescue.

**1-1.5 inches per week, 1-2 waterings per week, measured in a straight sided can or rain gauge, and only as a supplement to natural rainfall if natural rainfall is short of this amount.