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"When it does finally turn warm and the snow starts melting, it will be like filling a thimble with a fire hose," said Julander. "It's going to come down pretty much uncontrolled." A big melt-off in a short time frame would make situation dire. In Wyoming, communities are already placing sandbags in anticipation of potential flooding. Last year, the state got a wakeup call when flooding damaged bridges, roads and homes and required the Wyoming National Guard to deploy 400 soldiers to help. In Montana, Gov. Brian Schweitzer declared a flood emergency for one county in the northeastern part of the state where spring melt has caused flooding along the Milk River, particularly near the city of Glasgow and where the river meets up with the Missouri River. In California, the wettest winter and spring in more than a decade is great news on various fronts. It prompted state officials to boost the amount of water available to agencies that supply 25 million California residents and almost a million acres of farmland, with Gov. Jerry Brown officially ending the state-imposed drought declaration. Winter sports enthusiasts, in some locales, are still enjoying an amazing season. Several ski resorts around Lake Tahoe extended their seasons beyond the usual April 1 close date when
4 feet of snow fell in a single night in March. Squaw Valley intends to keep its lifts open through June. More than 61 feet of snow has fallen in the Sierra Nevada this season -- second-most on record to the 65 feet that fell on the high country in 1950-51. "It's our longest season ever," Donner Ski Ranch spokesman Diogo Custodio enthused. "If we need to stay open until July 4, we will." By then, Arizona hopes the monsoon season will have kicked in to alleviate severe drought conditions in the southern part of the state. Federal land managers have yet to impose fire restrictions in Arizona, but it's a different story in New Mexico. Three of the state's five national forests have imposed at least some restrictions. The Bureau of Land Management is cracking down in the southern half of the state and nearly a dozen county and municipal governments have imposed their own restrictions. "Every time we have a La Nina weather pattern, we see similar conditions to what we have this spring," said Dan Ware, a spokesman for the New Mexico State Forestry Division. "The difference this year is the dryness." There have been few spring days in New Mexico without red flag warnings, he said, and everyone is complaining about the wind and lack of rain.
[Associated
Press;
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