Here we go again.
The wet, cool spring that boosted optimism that the drought was over has given way to a hot, dry end of summer that is leaving trees, lawns and plants in dire need of watering.
"The rain we had in the spring doesn't count now," said Kent Honl, master arborist at Rainbow Treecare. "I'm seeing a lot of trees with yellowing leaves. They're shedding their foliage to conserve moisture."
The drought that we thought had ended is now officially back.
The first six months of the year were among the wettest in the 119 years Minnesotans have been keeping such records. By the end of June, only a couple of areas in the northwestern part of the state were still reporting dry conditions, and in mid-July, the U.S. Climate Prediction Center issued a rosy projection that the entire state would be drought-free by Halloween.
But that prediction turned out to be more trick than treat. The weather tables have turned, combining a late-season heat wave with rainfall that's been about 3 inches below normal since July 1. The U.S. Drought Monitor report released last week classified 53 percent of the state — including the Twin Cities — as being in moderate drought and another 26 percent as overly dry.
The bottom line: Keep those hoses handy.
Don't let the calendar fool you. There's a commonly held belief that once the prime growing season is over, we don't have to worry about tending to our plants until next spring. That's completely false, said garden writer Deb Brown. In fact, the opposite is true: If you want the plants to still be around next spring, you'd better tend to them now.