Summer rains bless Wayanad

Wayanad had received the lowest rains during the last monsoon.

Update: 2017-03-17 19:50 GMT
The failure to conserve water aquifers and river basins has added to the water crisis of the state, explain biologists and weathermen.

KALPETTA: Copious summer rains have quenched the thirst of the parched Wayanad district.   The region has received 107 mm  rainfall  so far  whereas it had received no rain in the corresponding period last year,  according to the data of the Regional Agricultural Research Station (RARS), Ambalavayal.  The highest rainfall was on March 5 (37.6 mm). RARS director Dr P. Rajendran told DC that the entire district had received good summer rains, warding off the fear of a drought and helping coffee plantations as it is the flowering season.  The pepper farmers may not benefit as the harvest is on.  

Wayanad had received the lowest rains during the last monsoon. The district had witnessed an early summer with the water sources drying up by the end of January. The jungle zones suffered massive fire mishaps  except the Wayanad wildlife sanctuary.  More than 20, 000 acres of forests were consumed by wildfires in the adjacent Bandipur wildlife sanctuary. Wayanad wildlife warden P. Dhanesh Kumar told DC that for the time being the fear of a wild conflagration was over.  “The water bodies in the jungle have been replenished,”  he said and added  that the sanctuary had been  saved for another month.  

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