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Searched: Report date on 3/18/2026.
Showing 6 Records.    
Report DateStation NumberStateCountyScale BarCategoriesPhotoDescriptionView
3/18/2026  ID-AD-9 IDAda Mildly Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
March 11 - 18, 2026: only a total of 0.06" rain on March 14-15th as waves of storm cells moved through, otherwise dry. Very strong winds associated with this low pressure system in W and SW Idaho. Snow in the highest elevations of foothill and mountains. Continuing very warm temperatures. The back yard has been mowed 2X in the past week. Some of the smaller landscape fruit trees and shrubs are beginning to bloom -- forsythia, quince, and plum. Apricot trees have been blooming for a few weeks....petals are beginning to fall after a couple near-freezing mornings. Honey bees have been busy collecting pollen from early blooming garden flowers and trees/shrubs. Daytime temperatures have been consistently in the 50's or above for more than a week, and much of the winter leaf mulch and old seed stalks will be removed from gardens this week. Airborne pollen counts have been high or very high (mostly cottonwood, elm, and juniper) for weeks already. Flocks of sandhill cranes and snow geese have been reported flying overhead or visiting large ponds in southern and SW Idaho. Anna's hummingbird and many varieties of song birds as well as dove continue to be very active at the feeders. Late winter/early spring weather conditions here are at least 2 or 3 weeks ahead of normal for the area. Little precipitation from the passing storm systems. Little snow at higher elevations.  View
3/18/2026  MI-WY-174 MIWayne Near Normal General Awareness
Spring in Michigan, unpredictable at best.  View
3/18/2026  MO-HL-45 MOHowell Near Normal General Awareness
Agriculture
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
March rains so far are roughly an inch more than the total precipitation we received between Thanksgiving and the end of February. Conditions are much improved as we warm up and Spring winds arrive. Pastures are greening up nicely, keeping our fire risk lowered. Redbuds, elms, and maples are beginning to leaf out. Early blooming flowers were hard-hit by temps in the teens and frost following strong winds that whipped everything, large and small. Recent storms provided enough quick rain to flush the ponds, clearing up the water and submerging the mud rings. Ground moisture is much improved this month even though much of the rainfall was lost to runoff.  View
3/18/2026  NY-WY-11 NYWyoming Near Normal General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
Cloudy and cold with gusty winds and snow, then cloudy and cold overnight with gusty winds and snow. The high temperature was around twenty degrees, and the low around nine degrees Fahrenheit. Songbirds are eating a feederful every day. More small flocks of Canadian Geese are present. Crocuses are blooming. More flocks of small black birds, Red-winged Blackbirds, Grackles and song birds are appearing. The local intermittent stream and nearby trout stream are flowing at spring levels. Some liquid manure is being spread.  View
3/18/2026  NC-WK-185 NCWake Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
1
The photo shows lush, green, grass and flowering Callery pear trees reflective of normal moisture for this season. The tree limbs were fractured during a tornado warning on the eveinng of 3/16/26.  View
3/18/2026  OR-LA-54 ORLane Near Normal General Awareness
Soil is perfect for planting.  View
Showing 6 Records.