Sailors rejoice after snowy winter raises Great Salt Lake
Sailors rejoice after snowy winter raises Great Salt Lake
After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. That’s thanks to an abnormally wet winter that has raised the lake 6 feet from last November’s historic low. (July 7) (AP video: Brady McCombs and Rick Bowmer)
Bob Derby, right, and Randy Atkin, left, adjust sails to turn their boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin unfurls a sail while boating on the Great Salt Lake on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
FILE - Empty docks are visible at the Antelope Island Marina due to record low water levels on Aug. 31, 2022, on the Great Salt Lake, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
Historic snowpack this winter increased the Great Salt Lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record lows set and refilled the docks at the Antelope Island State Park Marina on June 15, 2023, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
FILE - Olof Wood walks across reef-like structures called microbialites, exposed by receding waters at the Great Salt Lake, Sept. 6, 2022, near Salt Lake City. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Sail boats are hoisted back into the Great Salt Lake Marina on June 6, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin sails on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin looks out as the sun sets while sailing his boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
People sail on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Boaters return to the Great Salt Lake Marina on April 16, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Two men swim in the Great Salt Lake on Saturday, April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Open-water swimmers are among those rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man rows on the Great Salt Lake on April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man looks over the Great Salt Lake on June 7, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
People sail on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A young person runs through the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Kelsey Isis performs during a gathering of dancers and performers at sunset on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
The sun sets on the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Thanks to an abnormally wet winter that has raised the lake 6 feet from last November’s historic low, sailboats and activities are back. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Tyler Oborn fire spins at a gathering of dancers and performers on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Oborn, who also works at a pontoon boat tour company, said the lake’s rise has given communities that rely on it new life. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. That’s thanks to an abnormally wet winter that has raised the lake 6 feet from last November’s historic low. (July 7) (AP video: Brady McCombs and Rick Bowmer)
Bob Derby, right, and Randy Atkin, left, adjust sails to turn their boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Bob Derby, right, and Randy Atkin, left, adjust sails to turn their boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin unfurls a sail while boating on the Great Salt Lake on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin unfurls a sail while boating on the Great Salt Lake on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
FILE - Empty docks are visible at the Antelope Island Marina due to record low water levels on Aug. 31, 2022, on the Great Salt Lake, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
FILE - Empty docks are visible at the Antelope Island Marina due to record low water levels on Aug. 31, 2022, on the Great Salt Lake, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
Historic snowpack this winter increased the Great Salt Lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record lows set and refilled the docks at the Antelope Island State Park Marina on June 15, 2023, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Historic snowpack this winter increased the Great Salt Lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record lows set and refilled the docks at the Antelope Island State Park Marina on June 15, 2023, near Syracuse, Utah. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
FILE - Olof Wood walks across reef-like structures called microbialites, exposed by receding waters at the Great Salt Lake, Sept. 6, 2022, near Salt Lake City. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
FILE - Olof Wood walks across reef-like structures called microbialites, exposed by receding waters at the Great Salt Lake, Sept. 6, 2022, near Salt Lake City. After years of sailboats being hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake amid fears they might not return, sailors are back this summer. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Sail boats are hoisted back into the Great Salt Lake Marina on June 6, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Sail boats are hoisted back into the Great Salt Lake Marina on June 6, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin sails on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin looks out as the sun sets while sailing his boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin looks out as the sun sets while sailing his boat through the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
People sail on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Boaters return to the Great Salt Lake Marina on April 16, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Boaters return to the Great Salt Lake Marina on April 16, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Two men swim in the Great Salt Lake on Saturday, April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Open-water swimmers are among those rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Two men swim in the Great Salt Lake on Saturday, April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Open-water swimmers are among those rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man rows on the Great Salt Lake on April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man rows on the Great Salt Lake on April 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man looks over the Great Salt Lake on June 7, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A man looks over the Great Salt Lake on June 7, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Workers, hobbyists and residents who rely on the Great Salt Lake are rejoicing this year after winter’s snow melted and led to a 6-foot rise at the lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
People sail on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
People sail on the Great Salt Lake on June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve to long-term drought projections facing the Great Salt Lake. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A young person runs through the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
A young person runs through the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Kelsey Isis performs during a gathering of dancers and performers at sunset on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Kelsey Isis performs during a gathering of dancers and performers at sunset on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. People are rejoicing after the winter’s snow melted and increased the lake’s elevation beyond last year’s record low. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
The sun sets on the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Thanks to an abnormally wet winter that has raised the lake 6 feet from last November’s historic low, sailboats and activities are back. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
The sun sets on the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Thanks to an abnormally wet winter that has raised the lake 6 feet from last November’s historic low, sailboats and activities are back. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Tyler Oborn fire spins at a gathering of dancers and performers on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Oborn, who also works at a pontoon boat tour company, said the lake’s rise has given communities that rely on it new life. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Tyler Oborn fire spins at a gathering of dancers and performers on the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake on June 15, 2023, in Magna, Utah. Oborn, who also works at a pontoon boat tour company, said the lake’s rise has given communities that rely on it new life. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
ON THE GREAT SALT LAKE (AP) — A brisk wind caught a Kevlar-fiber sail, sending it snapping as Bob Derby and Randy Atkin pulled lines to turn Red Stripe, their 25-foot boat, through the briny waters of the imperiled Great Salt Lake.
Little could be heard beyond the low hum of trucks wheeling past a copper smelter on the lake’s shoreline — a respite from the bustle of Salt Lake City and its booming suburbs that push farther into Utah’s deserts and farmland each year.
Randy Atkin unfurls a sail while boating on the Great Salt Lake on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Randy Atkin unfurls a sail while boating on the Great Salt Lake on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, near Magna, Utah. Sailors back out on the water are rejoicing after a snowy winter provided temporary reprieve. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
“Everything that happened today drifts off behind you and there’s nothing like it,’” said Derby, a 61-year-old veteran sailor battling cancer. “There’s no better therapy than being on the lake.”
It’s a feeling old friends Derby and Atkin weren’t sure they’d experience again.
The Red Stripe’s return comes after it and hundreds of other sailboats were hoisted out of the shrinking Great Salt Lake as water levels plummeted in recent years, leaving docks along the lake’s parched southern shore caked with dried mud. The harbormaster at Great Salt Lake State Park’s marina, Dave Shearer, wondered whether he’d see their return before he retires.
But a record winter of snow has melted and run down through the creeks, streams and rivers that feed the lake, raising its peak level this season about 6 feet (1.8 meters) from last year’s record low — enough to let sailors crane their boats back into the water and convene their beloved Wednesday races where cold beer and banter are as important as who wins.
With their return, they’ve joined many others — farmers, skiers and nearby homeowners — in rejoicing over the surprise rise of the Great Salt Lake amid long-term megadrought.
“There’s finally some life back in the marina,” said Tyler Oborn, who guides pontoon tours on the lake and enjoys fire-dancing on its shoreline.
But it’s not clear it will last.
The Great Salt Lake faces a supply-demand imbalance: As climate change-fueled drought decreases the amount of water that cascades down through the region’s mountains and rivers, appetite for water is increasing from booming towns along the Wasatch Front as well as the farmers whose livelihoods hinge on their fields of alfalfa and onions.
“Everybody talks about the lake being up, but it’s coming from a historic low. That was an unbelievable catastrophe,” said Derby, who works for a medical device manufacturer. “Now it’s just like a moderate disaster. I worry that everybody declares victory, says the Great Salt Lake has been saved and that we can stop worrying about conserving water.”
The diminished Great Salt Lake isn’t the boating mecca or vacation destination it was decades ago, when its footprint was about twice the size it is now. But it remains a lifeblood for Utah’s economy, sustaining a $1.5 billion-a-year mining industry that extracts minerals including magnesium and table salt, an $80 million brine shrimp industry for fish feed and a $1.4 billlion ski industry that markets itself with the fluffy “lake effect” snow that the geography supplies.
Brigham Young University ecologist Ben Abbott, who authored a January study that warned the lake could dry up within five years, said every foot of lake level rise helps — especially in suppressing hazardous dust from the exposed lake bed. But 6 feet — and images of boats going back in the water — shouldn’t calm the sense of urgency for Utah to take action that could guarantee the lake’s survival, he said.
“Back on a crashing plane is not where we want to be,” Abbott said. “We should be viewing this big winter as a lease on life and an opportunity to get our long-term conservation measures in place.”
Before the bump from this winter’s record snow, dire warnings like Abbott’s made saving the Great Salt Lake a top priority for Utah politicians. State and local officials offered millions in incentives to encourage farmers to conserve and pushed education for homeowners and municipalities. But they’ve avoided considering draconian policies beingimplementedelsewhere in the drought-stricken West: water rationing, zoning requirements or fines for overuse.
“Mother Nature really helped us out,” Republican Sen. Scott Sandall said earlier this year, during Utah’s legislative session. “We didn’t have to pull that lever for emergency use.”
If the great lake resumes its decline, it could mean collapse of the ecosystem. Without enough water flowing to the lake, the reefs that nurture species such as brine fly and shrimp will be decimated, in turn affecting the larger species that feed on them, including pelicans and other migratory birds. And every bit of exposed lakebed means more arsenic-laced dust available for wind to pick up and carry to nearby homes, schools and office parks.
For now, Derby and other sailors are relishing the opportunity to unfurl their sails and reconnect with friends over crisp breezes and corny jokes.
“It’s so nice, it’s beautiful,” said Atkin, looking up at the sails. “You feel the power of the wind a little bit, how bad can it be?”
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