Dubai Telegraph - US mega drought makes boating rough on Lake Mead

EUR -
AED 4.278489
AFN 76.301366
ALL 96.530556
AMD 444.389335
ANG 2.085119
AOA 1068.154458
ARS 1670.316609
AUD 1.75427
AWG 2.096704
AZN 1.984845
BAM 1.955415
BBD 2.345238
BDT 142.439297
BGN 1.957372
BHD 0.439074
BIF 3456.06653
BMD 1.164835
BND 1.508396
BOB 8.046379
BRL 6.313529
BSD 1.16437
BTN 104.690912
BWP 15.469884
BYN 3.34764
BYR 22830.773166
BZD 2.341828
CAD 1.611422
CDF 2599.912958
CHF 0.937162
CLF 0.02734
CLP 1072.545921
CNY 8.235507
CNH 8.234944
COP 4446.759008
CRC 568.78787
CUC 1.164835
CUP 30.868137
CVE 110.780379
CZK 24.198994
DJF 207.014999
DKK 7.469472
DOP 74.84113
DZD 151.385181
EGP 55.40272
ERN 17.47253
ETB 180.60972
FJD 2.630723
FKP 0.8723
GBP 0.873382
GEL 3.149553
GGP 0.8723
GHS 13.337819
GIP 0.8723
GMD 85.033396
GNF 10119.511721
GTQ 8.919242
GYD 243.610929
HKD 9.068302
HNL 30.667954
HRK 7.538703
HTG 152.42995
HUF 382.163892
IDR 19442.733022
ILS 3.76907
IMP 0.8723
INR 104.795933
IQD 1525.399284
IRR 49054.133779
ISK 149.006189
JEP 0.8723
JMD 186.373259
JOD 0.825914
JPY 180.836077
KES 150.617641
KGS 101.8653
KHR 4665.166047
KMF 491.560932
KPW 1048.343898
KRW 1715.709753
KWD 0.357232
KYD 0.970405
KZT 588.861385
LAK 25249.913875
LBP 104272.296288
LKR 359.159196
LRD 204.939598
LSL 19.73441
LTL 3.439456
LVL 0.704598
LYD 6.329752
MAD 10.752872
MDL 19.812009
MGA 5193.953775
MKD 61.627851
MMK 2446.083892
MNT 4131.091086
MOP 9.337359
MRU 46.433846
MUR 53.664406
MVR 17.950554
MWK 2019.093291
MXN 21.176696
MYR 4.788683
MZN 74.437324
NAD 19.73441
NGN 1689.139851
NIO 42.851552
NOK 11.767103
NPR 167.505978
NZD 2.016522
OMR 0.447885
PAB 1.164465
PEN 3.914028
PGK 4.940241
PHP 68.699705
PKR 326.441746
PLN 4.232667
PYG 8008.421228
QAR 4.244263
RON 5.093014
RSD 117.420109
RUB 89.113003
RWF 1694.158743
SAR 4.371861
SBD 9.5794
SCR 15.722146
SDG 700.652754
SEK 10.953705
SGD 1.509027
SHP 0.873928
SLE 26.791608
SLL 24426.013032
SOS 664.266196
SRD 44.99647
STD 24109.740275
STN 24.495171
SVC 10.187374
SYP 12881.033885
SZL 19.719113
THB 37.125677
TJS 10.683448
TMT 4.076924
TND 3.415727
TOP 2.804644
TRY 49.510866
TTD 7.893444
TWD 36.432793
TZS 2836.374505
UAH 48.875802
UGX 4119.187948
USD 1.164835
UYU 45.541022
UZS 13930.253805
VES 289.561652
VND 30705.060237
VUV 142.19158
WST 3.250066
XAF 655.824896
XAG 0.019865
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.148026
XCG 2.098577
XDR 0.815408
XOF 655.723589
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.700931
ZAR 19.720255
ZMK 10484.920268
ZMW 26.920577
ZWL 375.076512
  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.43

    -0.21%

  • BCC

    -0.9040

    73.356

    -1.23%

  • BCE

    0.3350

    23.555

    +1.42%

  • GSK

    -0.2750

    48.295

    -0.57%

  • RIO

    -0.7450

    72.985

    -1.02%

  • BTI

    -0.9850

    57.055

    -1.73%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    75.57

    -0.45%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    16.1

    -0.81%

  • BP

    -1.2950

    35.935

    -3.6%

  • AZN

    0.1700

    90.2

    +0.19%

  • JRI

    0.0290

    13.779

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    14.49

    -1.1%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.1680

    12.465

    -1.35%

  • RELX

    -0.2050

    40.335

    -0.51%

  • CMSD

    -0.0780

    23.242

    -0.34%

US mega drought makes boating rough on Lake Mead
US mega drought makes boating rough on Lake Mead / Photo: Patrick T. FALLON - AFP

US mega drought makes boating rough on Lake Mead

In the 15 years since Adam Dailey began boating on Lake Mead, the shoreline has receded hundreds of meters, the result of more than two decades of punishing drought that is drying out the western United States.

Text size:

Launch spots that lined the edge of the lake, located outside Las Vegas, have been abandoned, and a single ramp is now the only way to get a boat in the water.

"We used to have more. So everyone's fighting to use one ramp... and still trying to figure out how to get along," said Dailey.

"It's kind of sad, what's going on. But we still come out and try to enjoy it when we can."

Lake Mead is the largest reservoir in the United States, a huge man-made body of water formed by the construction of the Hoover Dam in the early 1930s.

Its 247-square-mile (640-square-kilometer) surface area stores water for tens of millions of people and countless acres of farmland in the southwest.

But it's shrinking at a terrifying rate and now stands at just one-quarter full.

The National Park Service (NPS), which manages access to the lake, has spent more than $40 million since 2010 trying to keep the water open to boaters.

It costs them $2-3 million dollars to reconfigure the boat launch ramp every time the water levels fall another four feet (120 centimeters).

"Declining water levels due to climate change and 20 years of ongoing drought have reshaped the park’s shorelines," the NPS says on its website.

"As Lake Mead continues to recede, extending launch ramps becomes more difficult and more expensive due to the topography and projected decline in water levels."

- Bathtub ring -

A series of NPS signs show the shoreline at various points since 2001. The sign marking the level in 2021 is 300 paces from the water.

In the mud, the receding waters leave behind bottles, cans, fire extinguishers and other detritus that somehow made its way overboard in years gone by.

The rocks that form the hard edges of the reservoir offer a stark illustration of just how far water levels have fallen.

A white band of mineral deposits stains the mountainsides like the ring on a bathtub, showing where the water was at its high point after a flood in 1983.

"We used to water ski race here," Jaxkxon Zacher told AFP.

"And the island -- only the tip... was out 25 years ago. So now we can't even race here anymore. It's dropping drastically."

The growing islands in the middle of the lake point to the uneven topography of the valley that was flooded -- and the hazards that await.

"Every day someone's ripping a drive off, because last week, where there was no rock, it's now a foot down or two feet down so things are exposed," boatseller Jason Davis said.

"You've got houseboats getting beached and stuck, and people are ripping their lower units off."

And with vessels that can retail at hundreds of thousands of dollars, a weekend outing can turn into a costly mistake.

- A new job -

For some people, the risk of an accident and the sheer hassle of having to wait so long to get a boat into the water and then out again at the end of the day means Lake Mead is no longer a viable recreation option.

Below the Hoover Dam, stretches of river remain relatively unscathed by the dropping water levels.

At Willow Beach, across the state line in Arizona, kayakers frolic in the shallows, unloading water pistols on each other as 104 Fahrenheit (40 Celsius) sunshine beats down.

A small marina there offers Steve McMasters a place to stage his pontoon, just a short distance from his home in Boulder City.

"It can be a four-to-five-hour wait on weekends to get your boat out of the water (at Lake Mead), so this is big to have," he said.

"I waited like four months on a waiting list to get it. I got lucky here."

Climatologists say two decades of drought is not unheard of in the western United States, but combined with human-caused global warming, it is transforming the region.

Higher temperatures mean less moisture falls as snow on the Rocky Mountains, and what snowpack does form melts more quickly.

This leaves the Colorado River without the slow and steady feed that supplied it year-round in the centuries and millennia before the region was settled.

In climatic terms, Lake Mead is a baby; in existence for less than 90 years.

But in human terms, it is vanishing at a startling pace.

Jason Davis, the boatseller, says more people need to witness the stark changes for themselves.

"If you haven't come to see these rings, you know, you don't quite comprehend," he said.

And if the water keeps dropping?

"I'll need a new job."

K.Al-Zaabi--DT