Low snowpack, higher temperatures concern California scientists, farmers

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Sheep graze in a vineyard in the Carneros region in Sonoma Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026. (Beth Schlanker / The Press-Democrat)

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While growers across the North Bay welcomed the February rains, scientists have said more rain and snow in the higher elevations in March will be crucial to preserving water resources across the state amid an unusually warm winter.

Back-to-back storms in December moving into the new year helped increase volume, and statewide water storage levels as of March 1 indicate most reservoirs are between 70-80% full, according to the California Department of Water Resources (DWR).

However, rainfall and snowstorms in March will be crucial for improving the season’s outlook, according to watershed scientists. The March 1 Philips Station measurement found that snowpack measured 47% on average for March and 45% of the April 1 average. Statewide the snowpack stood at 66% of average.

“Although the storms we saw in mid-February were some of the coldest and best snow-producing storms we have seen since 2023, they were not enough to get us back to average conditions,” said Andy Reising, manager of DWR’s Snow Surveys and Water Supply Forecasting Unit. “The snowpack is in better shape than it was one month ago, but we only have a month left of our snow-accumulation season and time is rapidly running out to catch up.”

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