You won't believe what our water forecast says
Good morning from the coulees — the wind's up, the sky's wide, and Lethbridge has something to say.
Look, you know how everyone around here talks about the wind? Well, the water is just as important, maybe more so. The Oldman Watershed Council just released its Spring Forecast for 2026, and it's something we all need to pay attention to, especially living where we do. They've been crunching numbers from the Province and the Canadian Drought Monitor, giving us a pretty detailed picture of what the next few months might look like for our rivers and reservoirs.
### What the Water Tells Us
This isn't just about whether you'll have a good year for your garden up near Henderson Lake or if the farmers out past Coaldale will get enough to make their fields green. It's about the very lifeblood of our city and the region. Our irrigation canals, the ones that stretch out like veins across this landscape and make all this food grow, they depend on this. The Oldman River, snaking through Indian Battle Park and under the High Level Bridge, it isn't just a pretty view from the Galt Museum — it's our water supply.
Here’s the gist of what they're seeing:
* **Snowpack:** The amount of snow still sitting in the mountains, waiting to melt and feed our rivers, is a major factor.
* **Runoff Predictions:** How much of that snow is expected to make it into the Oldman River basin.
* **Drought Conditions:** An assessment of how dry things are already, and what that means for absorption and evaporation.
The Council's forecast is critical for planning, from city water management right down to those quiet moments in the Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden, where every drop of water in those tranquil ponds is precious. We've seen dry years, and we've seen years where the Oldman runs high. Knowing what's coming helps us all prepare, no matter where you are in the city, from the west side bluffs where the university sits to the homes down in the coulees.
For folks here in Lethbridge, this forecast tells us a lot about what kind of summer we might be looking at. Will we need to be extra mindful of water usage? Will the fields outside the city thrive? It’s all connected, like everything else on this land, this *Napi’s Land* as we say in Blackfoot. It’s a good reminder that the sky might be wide open, but what happens up in the mountains dictates so much down here.
Jolene Blackwater, MiTL Sports Desk, Lethbridge.
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