Submitted by Starfox_2020 t3_11ipctb in Washington
Rocketgirl8097 t1_jb21h5r wrote
Reply to comment by Karuna56 in I’m very fascinated by the geographic diversity of WA alone by Starfox_2020
Technically though, we have no deserts. We have too much precipitation to be classified as such. What we have is shrub-steppe. And none of it is high elevation. About 1600 ft ASL at most. Southeastern part of Oregon - now that's high desert. 4500 ft ASL at Burns.
OhCrapImBusted t1_jb2i8c1 wrote
Where I live (Pullman, WA) my house is 2450 ft ASL. There is a definite drop on HWY 26 around Hooper (historical route of the Palouse River), but it goes back up quite a bit after Washtucna. From there to Kittitas its extremely dry, and isn't viable for farming without irrigation.
It may not be "High Desert" by definition, but it is Desert nonetheless.
Rocketgirl8097 t1_jb2lo4o wrote
It is desert-like. It is not desert. It is shrub-steppe. There are grasses, sage, phlox, and many other plants that grow naturally. You don't have that in a desert. The only deserts in the u.s. are the Mohave, Great Basin, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan.
OceanPoet87 t1_jb2s7mr wrote
Much of Central WA is semi arid, you're right... no desert. I'm in a shadowed area somewhat, but even going 10-20 miles west, the precipitation drops dramatically as you go towards the basin.
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