Drought in the Western United States has led to a problem that many did not see coming – until they were buried under piles of the Russian Thistle, a hardy, large spiny weed otherwise known in this country as the tumbleweed. And the drought conditions in Texas and other parts of the west, along with short periods of intense rain, led to a proliferation of these supposedly harmless, if annoying plants. Except that they aren’t – harmless that is:
Rolling clusters of the tumbleweed have created havoc in the drought-stricken areas of the West.
In late January, an invasion of tumbleweeds rolled into Clovis, New Mexico, trapping Wilford Ransom, 80, and his wife, Mary, in their home.
“I looked out the window to see why it got so dark all of a sudden, and they were over 12-feet high, blocking my front and back doors,” the retiree said. “We couldn’t get out.” […]
In Crowley County, Colorado, tumbleweeds have blocked roads, making it difficult for emergency vehicles to reach certain areas, said Cathy Garcia, president of Action 22, an advocacy group made up of government and business leaders in the eastern part of the state.
Oh, and by the way, they create a fire hazard, since they make excellent kindling for brush fires, whether caused by lightning strikes, hikers and campers or merely idiot pyromaniacs. They can ignite also when they come into contact with “heated farm equipment.” And they are currently clogging irrigation ditches, a critical means of transferring water for agricultural uses.
In non-drought periods, cattle usually keep the growth of this invasive species at bay. Unfortunately, ranchers have been removing their cattle from ranges where they would normally graze, because the drought has killed off much of the natural fodder that cattle feed upon. In their absence, just a little rain can create an explosion of tumbleweeds. They don’t need much water to grow, as compared to many native species.
Not surprisingly, many local officials in communities out west are looking for federal and state government funding to combat the problem.
The meeting was called by Action 22, a conglomerate of the rural Southern Colorado counties, and was led by Tobe Allumbaugh, the chairman of the Crowley County Board of Commissioners.
Allumbaugh brought photos of the work being done in Crowley County as crews try to grind and destroy towering piles of tumbleweeds that block roads, cover fences and stack as high as the rooftops of some houses.
On Tuesday, the group informally decided to form a coalition through Action 22 to focus on possible solutions to the problem, while lobbying county commissioners to declare a state of emergency to help get money and resources to the area to clear up the weeds.
“This is an emergency,” said Alf Randall, director of the road and bridge department of Pueblo County. “We’ve been keeping the roads open and kind of under control but we’re not making any headway. When we get into the summer, we’re going to go from emergency to disaster when that burns.”
But just remember what’s really important. Climate change, especially human caused climate change, has nothing whatsoever to do with these terrible droughts, despite what the National Center for Atmospheric Research and many scientists who have studied the issue may claim.
Other climate scientists, acknowledging the role of these weather patterns and natural variability, say climate change exacerbated the 2012 drought partly by helping to keep the jet stream north.
“All these three factors combine to contribute to the dry conditions in Texas and elsewhere in the Southwest,” says Gerald Meehl, senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, a federally funded laboratory. Despite year-to-year fluctuations in these areas, he says, “You have this long-term trend toward dryness.”
Global warming, by raising temperatures, made the 2011 Texas drought “distinctly more probable” than would have occurred 40 to 50 years ago, according to a study led by David Rupp and Philip Mote of Oregon State University.
As a great philosopher (me) once said, “Tumbleweeds happen.” If you don’t like them, or the lack of adequate water resources needed to sustain communities out West, you can always just move. Or pray for rain. Am I right?
I’ll bet they really want the federal government off their backs now, don’t they.
You don’t understand. Federal aid that helps them is their right as a taxpaying American citizen. Federal aid that helps the poors and the blahs is just stealing their hard-earned money and throwing it away on scum.
OK, now I get it.
Since I spent an hour today raking my humble little crop of tumbleweeds into a burn pile and then watching them catch fire with just one match I can attest to their rotten presence. Mine were not native but came up on the tires of the road equipment that graded my driveway a few years ago. They are hateful creatures!
The bad news: There won’t be enough potable water left to drown government in a bathtub.
The good news: The longer they deny that climate change exists – and help prevent political solutions to help mitigate it – the sooner their arid high plains properties will become valuable beachfront property.
This is good. We need more people to feel the effects of climate change. Eventually, they won’t be able to deny it any longer. Of course, that will probably be right before they perish in a tumbleweed fire.
Excellent reporting and topic, Steven D.
Meanwhile in the Southeast, it’s wetter and cooler than normal for now. And that could mean uprooted trees in even mild winds.
If sanity doesn’t return to the political culture in 2014, we are in for some seriously nasty natural consequences that folks are not yet thinking about.
Yes, in the emerging epoch of the new Man-made climate there are going to be many, many adverse changes, all very costly. Who you gonna call, rural Repubs? Uncle Sam, of course!
These sort of rural Western counties tend to vote Repub, which means they have returned, year after year, climate denialists to Congress. Tex-ass being first on the list of course. I’ll wager most of the residents are denialists themselves. But they will never be asked to add 2+2.
As the climate irreversibly changes and turns their part of the world into an unlivable shithole of perpetual drought and wild fires (and now blocked roads!), they’ll never agree that the changes were caused by humans—they will always claim it’s part of a “natural cycle”. And thus we will have the spectacle of pouring federal funds for combating the effects of the new Man-made climate into the very regions whose citizens ensured that nothing be done to address the problem until it was too late. Very sensible…and fair!
All as we await the next super El Nino (likely brewing up even now)—which will shatter all US temp records and turn the southwest into an uninhabitable blazing inferno. Perhaps federally subsidized air conditioning will become a new “right” for our Big Gub’mint-hatin’ rural folk. And federally subsidized water trucking and transport, nothing cheaper than hauling tons and tons of water around! The Pentagon can create and deploy the First Wildfire Division, to be permanently based in West Tex-ass, fully equipped with fire attackin’ helicopters and tanker planes. Jobs, jobs, jobs! (albeit mostly gub’mint ones…)
As soon as Big Gub’mint is all they have to survive, their deeply held political “principles” will, um, “evolve” quite rapidly, the turds.
my condolences, Steven. Very sad to hear of your loss.
I love This Post great info thank u g
facebook amazon paypal hackers
gudtricks
When I talk about man affecting weather it is not the meme run by the UN by an agency designed to generate proof for a premise under which they were established I cite : before any facts were proven. That is why the name is Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change….that is its reason for being ; to promote comprehensive policy based on a premise.
CO2 is actually an unlikely candidate as being a culprit : likely one reason they cannot prove Jack. Things are so hinky the sign of any effect of this trace gas is in doubt – let alone any regular assignable/calculable action.
Certainly the government does not give more than lip service to alarm over warming : http://www.care2.com/causes/proof-that-the-united-states-intentionally-tanked-climate-change-talks.h
tml#comment-6023618
Which is not to let mankind off the hook : just to refine the designation of the culprits.Climate Engineering Weather Warfare https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yZhh2leRJA#t=42
Which is all to short an intro for you to think I am doing more than raving. Heh. This does not include the Sidebar notes…but is a start. http://oldephartte.blogspot.ca/p/oz-to-loose-ministry-of-truth-on-posted.html