Trending Today ...
Navigating your difficult circumstances

Dear Editor, Every human being faces everyday challengers.

Fundraising drive launched for memorial bench honoring Cancer

KINGMAN — The Kingman Cancer Care Unit has

Kingman High School Reunion 2026
Bulldog Nation will gather this fall in Kingman

KINGMAN – Bulldogs will be barking all around

Lessons from Paul: Strength against temptation

My favorite cartoon character is Garfield. Perhaps it's

Responsible growth requires responsible leadership: Part 1 of

Dear Editor, The Kingman Miner’s series of question-answer

Finch named to Spring 2026 President’s List

KINGMAN – Cole Finch of Kingman (86401) was

Thank you for reading The Standard newspaper online!

Rainfall recap for county

MOHAVE COUNTY – Mother nature draws the curtain on 2025 with uneven precipitation totals across the tri state region. 5 of 7 area communities included within the forecast area of the Las Vegas office of the National Weather Service enjoyed above average annual rainfall.

Bullhead City and Laughlin welcomed precipitation totals more than one inch above annual averages. Bullhead City recorded 7.03 and Laughlin measured 6.51 inches in 2025, while the neighboring Colorado River communities typically log about 5.19 inches per year.

2025 rainfall totals are also above average for Needles (4.57 vs. 4.19) Las Vegas (5.08 vs. 4.05) and Wikieup (8.97 vs. 8.23).

Conversely, 2025 precipitation is below average for Lake Havasu City and Kingman (6.39 vs. 7.86).

“It varies. Usually it’s more consistent,” said Chris Outler, lead meteorologist with the Las Vegas office. “Of course, precipitation is tied pretty closely to elevation.”

Regional rainfall was inconsistent in 2025.

“In general, especially for the fall, it’s been a pretty wet fall. It was a fairly dry summer, so it’s kind of a mix for the year,” Outler said. “It was a fairly wet spring. Overall it kind of averages out to be within the realm of fairly normal, but then we have these abnormalities within the different seasons.”

Outler said his office does not have a precipitation projection for all of 2026, but expects the current warm weather trend to persist, generally favoring dry conditions into the spring and early summer.

Outler said monsoon season thunderstorm activity has been in decline.

“Especially since 2020, even maybe 2019, we’ve had really fickle monsoon seasons. There was one or two years mixed in that were kind of interesting, but as a whole they’ve been underwhelming,” Outler said. “Every monsoon has a character of its own, but the past few years have kind of been disappointing.”