By Mike Ekberg, manager of water resources monitoring and analysis Note: At MCD, we track water movement into and out of Great Miami River Watershed over long periods of time, spanning decades. The records generated by our observer precipitation stations, stream gages, and observation wells allow MCD staff to examine long-term trends in water resources. Water enters the watershed as precipitation (rain, sleet, hail, and snow), and it exits the watershed through evaporation, plant transpiration, and runoff. 2020 will go down in history as anything but a normal year. And that goes for our region’s precipitation, too. The Great Miami River Watershed started the year wet, with four of the first five months experiencing above-averageprecipitation. And then the tide turned, and the watershed saw drier-than-normal conditions for five of the last seven months. Drought conditions existed in parts of the watershed from early July until mid-August and returned to parts of the watershed in mid-September, lingering until late October.October was uncharacteristically wet, averaging 5.02 inches of precipitation or 2.06 inches above average. Despite the many drier months, total precipitation for the year was 2.26 inches above normal for a total of 42.56 inches, continuing a long-term trend of increased annual average precipitation.
Average Annual Precipitation Increasing The chart below shows how the 30-year average annual precipitation for the watershed has changed since 1945. Note the upward trend in precipitation that began sometime around the late 1980s to early 1990s.