The Drought of 2025

As I write this it’s raining. It’s pouring. It’s raining cats and dogs and pouring buckets and falling in sheets. And we are glad of it. The rivers and brooks and ponds and wells are finally filling after the longest drought anyone can recall. All summer and into the fall the ground was parched. Thirsty plants were slow to grow, and water levels in rivers and ponds and wells kept dropping. One by one, ponds, brooks, and wells went dry.

There were forest fires on the mainland and the woods were tinder dry all over the province. At the end of July the government declared a province-wide fire ban, with $25,000 fines for numbskulls who ignored the ban. A few days later the province went a step further and closed the woods. No hiking, no biking, no ATVs allowed in the forest. People working in the woods required permits.

The woods ban did affect some tourism operators and disappoint keen hikers. Others were just whinging about their personal rights and freedoms. But many of us living in the woods were glad of the ban. One hundred people can go in the woods and cause no harm, but it only takes one idiot to toss a butt or start a campfire that can destroy our forests, our homes, even our very selves. I could still walk around on my own forested property, but why would I? Why risk being stranded up on the highland slopes if a fire broke out?

Besides, for me summer in Cape Breton is beach season. The silver lining in the lack of rain clouds was a grand beach season. Hot, sunny weather and warm ocean waters day after day. Nova Scotia is blessed with miles of beaches, for walking and swimming and all manner of watery fun for us and our visitors. We are, after all, Canada’s Ocean Playground.

Playing in the ocean in Canada’s Ocean Playground.

But even at the beach we wished for rain. For overnight soakers, or even a post-tropical storm that would bring a drenching and move on, anything. But every forecast of rain fizzled to a drizzle. Now and then showers would bring 10 or 12 mm, but it was soaked up and burned off so quickly it seemed like a wet dream. Sometimes the rain came in thunderstorms – a terrifying forecast with the woods a tinderbox. More than once, I gathered a few important papers and piled them by the door, ready to grab if a nearby tree ignited and I had to flee in the middle of the night.

Apparently one of those lightning strikes did find a target, not far from my place. I was visiting friends when we got word of forest fire on our shore. When fire trucks roared by, sirens screaming, I decided to hightail it home. I passed by where the fire trucks had pulled up and saw smoke billowing out of the woods. It was 3-4 kms north of here. Once again, I piled essentials near to hand and waited. But we were lucky – our local firefighters managed to douse the blaze, which had been smouldering for some time.Thank you firefighters! We so appreciate your work and dedication.

So this drought has been historic, one for the record books. I’m from Calgary, from a dry prairie climate where droughts are part of the normal cycle. But lately it seems that Calgary keeps flooding while both east and west coasts suffer droughts. It’s all topsy turvy as the climate changes and there in no ‘normal’ anymore.

L’il Pond Vanishes

As I wrote in Ups and Downs in the Holler, the water level in L’il Pond rises and falls with the season. In spring it can rise so high with snow melt and rain that it floods into the forest. Over the summer it subsides, a few inches a day, until it stabilizes at the local water-table level. Sometimes there is enough water to go Swimming with Frogs or drift around in a dinghy. Other summers the water is grungy and shallow and only fit for frogs and other aquatic flora and fauna.

Shallow parts of the pond routinely dry out and I’ve transported tadpoles, stranded in a shrinking pool, to deeper water so they have a chance to metamorphose, as I described in Frogs, Globs, and Pollywogs. As summer goes on the lilies grow up, the water drops down until the pond is covered in lily pads – hence L’il Pond, aka Lily Pond.

So the pond almost always gets low in the summer but it very seldom dries out completely. And yet it dried out by mid-September last year, the first time since I moved into my cabin ten years earlier. And then along came 2025 – and blew all the records out of the water.

This year the pond dried out in August. And it stayed dry, all though September and October. Even when it does dry out, it’s usually muddy – the kind of mud that could suck you in and never let you go. But this year even the mud dried out until it cracked. I could walk right out to the deepest section of the pond.

Quite a difference from 2023, when it wouldn’t stop raining. By October the pond had flooded into the forest and I went kayaking among the trees. Or October 2006, when we paddled around on the pond and enjoyed the fall foliage.

Wee Brooks Falls Hike

There is a trail nearby that follows the Little River valley westward, ending at a fork where an unnamed brook meets Little River. My son and I dubbed it ‘Wee Brook’, to match the ‘Little River’ theme. If you cross Wee Brook and follow it upstream into a box canyon it leads to a waterfall. Wee Brook Falls reveals itself one section at a time as you climb upward, twisting this way and that as it tumbles down from a lake, high up on the highland plateau.

I have walked this trail dozens of times, but, as often as not, I don’t cross the brook and so don’t get to the waterfall. Crossing involves stepping on unstable river rocks that are slippy with moss and tend to tumble under your feet. And there is usually a wide gap of fast-running water to cross. I don’t want to ‘fill my boots’ with icy water, or worse, fall and twist a knee, turn an ankle or even smack my skull on a stone. So I err on the side of caution and instead walk upstream on the near side of the brook, until the slope becomes too steep to traverse.

But in mid-October, with the woods ban ended and the colours still blazing, it seemed the perfect time to get to the falls, with the rivers still so low. I walked for half an hour or so until the trail led me to the water at the fork where Wee Brook flows into Little River. And there I stopped – gobsmacked.

I expected the brook to be low, but I was staring at a bone-dry creekbed, just a jumble of river rocks. Even the Little River was mostly dry rockbed, with a narrow stream of shallow water on one side. In all my visits to this place over 22 years I’ve never seen the like.

So, no problem crossing, no boots required, every stone a stepping stone. I crossed and walked upstream. A narrow stream of water surfaced, but so shallow it had gone underground when it reached the fork. After about 10 or 15 minutes I arrived at the lower section of the waterfall. This is usually a broad wall of water, but there was only a narrow stream. I’m showing a photo from 2021 for comparison, but remember – I only cross when the river is quite shallow, so the photo on the right is when water levels are relatively low.

I climbed upward over fallen logs and scrambled up a short, steep slope and around the bend. From here you can see the next section of the falls, before it curves away out of sight again. Here are the 2025 vs 2021 pictures, for the record.

Halloween and the Rains Begin

On Halloween the rains came at last – bad timing for trick-or-treaters but still very welcome. Amounts varied widely across short distances, but my rain gauge recorded 50 mm on October 31st and 15 mm on November 1st. A good soaking. And yet all that appeared in the pond was a shallow mud puddle, mere inches deep and about 5′ across. The water table was so low that 65 mm barely showed. (Note: I’m mixing units because I’m Canadian and that’s what we do.)

Then came another dousing of some 40 mm a few days later. More mud puddles appeared and they began to spread out and join up. But even with over 100 mm of rain, the pond was still a shallow pool with a wide rim of mud.That demonstrates how large a water deficit we incurred during this prolonged drought.

After all that heat and sunshine, we seem now to be stuck in a cycle of rain, rain and more rain. It never rains but it pours? Yesterday, when I started writing this, another 33 mm poured down. So, after 138 mm in the course of a week, the pond has risen to the grassy verge. Much better but still very low – no kayaking through the forest this fall. But the forecast is for lots more rain (be careful what you wish for) so the pond will keep filling and rising. It’s been a long dry spell, but Hallelujah! The great drought is over. Now if only it would stop raining long enough for me to stack my wood, which was bone dry for weeks and is now sopping wet – doh!

Sue McKay Miller
November 7th, 2025

p.s. After I posted this blog we had 125 mm of rain over two days, for a total of 281 mm of rain in 12 days. The pond kept rising and rising until it overflowed and flooded into the woods. But with fresh snow on the mountains, I won’t be kayaking though the forest this year!

The pond on November 12th, 2025, after 281 mm of rain over 12 days.

The Great Groundhog Day Dump

This is the first time I’ve written two blogs in one month, but it’s Leap Day, so why not? I posted Fabulous February on Groundhog Day, a celebration of this much-maligned month. It was an idea I’d tossed around for a while, and 2024 seemed like a good year to finally do it. This is a leap year, plus the Chinese Year of the Dragon began in February. As I was working on the the blog I had no idea that February 2024 would turn out to be memorable for another reason altogether. The month would begin with a huge snowstorm I dubbed the Great Groundhog Day Dump.

On February 2nd a nor’easter stalled offshore and began dumping heavy, wet snow on Cape Breton. And it kept dumping heavy, wet snow on Cape Breton for the next three days. We were buried. This is not the light fluffy flakes that powder skiers dream of – it is very fine, wet, and so densely packed it’s hard to move. It is also hard to measure.

I kept shoveling my deck throughout the storm, finding it hard to move even 20 cm of the white stuff. I record our weather, including snowfall and rainfall amounts, so I measured snow depth every time I shoveled. I also left a couple of blocks untouched so I could verify the accumulation. But the snow was compacting so rapidly under its own weight that those blocks were shrinking even while it was still snowing. I estimate I got 90 cm, or 3 ft, of snow (on top of ~18″ already on the ground). It was wet and finely textured and temperatures were mild, so it compacted into a dense 2′ deep layer covering everything. (Like many a Canuck of a certain age, I switch between metric and imperial units somewhat randomly.)

Those lumps are 4′ tall wood stacks buried in snow. My old truck is the bump at the back.

And we got off lucky. Sydney and environs got a whopping 5 ft (1.5 m) of snow in places. Short people and children could vanish! Drifts were double that and more, not to mention massive plow banks. Chaos ensued. Cape Breton shut down for the week. No school, no transit, and many stores stayed closed. The police begged people to stay home. Those who ventured out got stuck and left their vehicles strewn along the road, hindering clearing efforts. Even snowplows were getting stuck. Or breaking down. Or both.

Cape Breton is a snowy place and it’s not unusual to have deep snow in February, but it is unusual for so much to fall all at once. We get a lot of our snow from nor’easters: low-pressure systems formed when cold continental air carried on the jet stream meets warm Gulf-stream air off the east coast. The moisture-laden system tracks northeasterly and counter-clockwise winds dump copious amounts of precipitation on the eastern seaboard. Once the system arrives southeast of Cape Breton, we get lots of heavy snow – often 1-2 feet. Then the system continues on its merry northeast trajectory and dumps on Newfoundland. But this particular nor’easter got derailed. It somehow slipped off the jet stream and stalled just offshore. It kept churning in circles and dumping snow for days.

This is off the NOAA website and focuses on New England, but Cape Breton is the green blob in the upper right. Once the storm is southeast of Nova Scotia we get northeast winds and wet snow – lots of it.

A historic winter storm deserves a name, but nothing really stuck. Snowmaggedon and its counterpart, Snowpocalypse, were invoked and certainly fit, but neither is original. I heard Frigid Fiona (after Hurricane Fiona) but that’s not quite right because it wasn’t very cold – which was part of the problem. I dubbed it the Great Groundhog Day Dump, which makes the date easy to remember, but that’s not quite right either. Yes, the storm started on Groundhog Day, but it lasted much longer than a day, which was also part of the problem.

The snow finally eased up on February 5th, but we still had to dig out. I was snowbound for a week. Not trapped inside my house (although this happened to a number of people whose doors were blocked by snow) because I (cleverly) have doors that open in and are protected by overhangs. But my vehicle was trapped for a week, even though I had (again, cleverly) parked down at the road ahead of the storm. I have a long driveway, some 350 m., so once the snow gets deep I snowshoe in and out rather than trying to keep it plowed.

With so much snow I feared I’d sink in to my thighs if I waited to break trail so I started while it was still snowing on Saturday. The snow was an odd consistency and I was bogging down unevenly. Down to my knees and then to my ankles and then to my shins, leaving tracks of all different depths instead of a level trail. I didn’t get far before I retreated.

Sunday I was too busy shoveling to snowshoe, but on Monday I tried again. A moose had plowed through the snowbank onto my driveway and punched a meandering set of deep holes into the drive. I was skirting moose holes and my own uneven tracks and still sinking in to different depths. My poles would be there for balance and then vanish into the void. I made it about 1/4 of the way to the road before I gave up. Between the moose and me my trail was an utter mess of uneven holes.

Tuesday came and try, try again. My driveway was dreadful so I climbed 2 feet up onto the bank. I was still sinking in but evenly – better! Moose had plowed a few trenches through the bank so I had to leap across the gaps – exciting! I got halfway to the road – progress!

Later that day I was outside fetching firewood and heard the beep-beep-beep of a reversing vehicle. It sounded like it was right at the bottom of my driveway. Could someone be clearing around my vehicle? Intrigued and motivated, I set out yet again, maneuvering through the obstacle course of pitfalls. And so, four days in and on my fourth attempt, I finally made it to the road. My vehicle was encased in snow, barely visible. But the road in front of it had been cleared – exciting!

The beeping machine had moved farther down the road. It was a front loader, clearing a lane along our side road four days after the storm began. Usually the county plow gets to us within a day or two of a snowfall, but this time the plows skipped side roads. It was a Herculean effort just to keep one lane passable on main roads like the Cabot Trail. So our little road filled with snow until it was too deep and heavy to be plowed. It took a front loader to do the job. Push snow with the bucket, lift and roll the load against the side of the road. Reverse – beep-beep-beep – and repeat. It was very slow going, but buddy was getting ‘er done, one bucket-load at a time.

I was strangely elated to see that front loader slowly clearing our road. I wished I’d arrived a few minutes earlier so I could wave and grin and shout my thanks to the driver. But I doubted he’d appreciate an idiotic pedestrian standing behind him when he went beep-beep-beep into reverse.

On Wednesday the temperatures plummeted. My driveway, a mess of uneven holes, turned into a frozen mess of uneven holes. I realized that my earlier forays had been folly. Had I just waited I could’ve snowshoed out on top of the snow. Sometimes procrastination pays. And hindsight is always 20/20.

My own rig was still encased in snow, almost invisible. I’d parked as far back as I could to accommodate plowing, so there was some 15 feet of 2′ deep compacted snow between my rig and the road. On the plus side, standing atop that snow in my snowshoes meant I could actually reach the roof of my vehicle. It still took over half an hour to clear the roof and hood. Then I took off my snowshoes and walked down the road to visit my neighbour and share storm stories.

A couple of days later I got a call from that same neighbour. Unasked and unbeknownst to me, he spent almost 3 hours clearing the snow around my vehicle by hand, using a scoop. My back hurt just thinking about it. So, eight days after I’d parked at the road, I was free! I snowshoed out and went for a drive. Not far, just a kilometre down the road to thank my neighbour for his hard work and kindness.

And that’s Cape Breton all over. Weather can be challenging here, but people step up and help out. This storm was especially difficult. The snow was too deep and heavy to move with a regular truck-plow setup – it required tractors with snow-blower attachments, bulldozers, front loaders – heavy equipment. Operators, public and private, went non-stop trying to clear roads and driveways, but couldn’t keep up. And equipment kept breaking down. Or getting stuck.

But people pulled together. Hats off to the people who worked endless hours to clear snow. Neighbours helped neighbours, digging out doorways blocked by deep snow, clearing driveways and cars, snowshoeing or snowmobiling in to the housebound with food, medicine, and company. Local CBC radio programs gave us information and a feeling of connection, even in our individual isolation.

Cape Bretoners are renowned for their hospitality, hard work and helpfulness. I have always been helped out my neighbours, from my first winter house-sitting ‘down north’ near Bay St. Lawrence to my years here in the Holler. I didn’t ask my neighbour for help, but he saw a need and got ‘er done.


After freeze up the snowshoeing was great. I did a few fun forays and discovered that Yellowbird, a ramshackle cabin that was on my land when I bought it, had finally collapsed under the weight of the snow. I also saw 3′ deep trenches through the snowy woods, plowed by meandering moose. Snow this deep is a challenge even for these long-legged beasts.

In the end I was storm-stayed for a week but that was fine. I’m a somewhat solitary animal anyhow and had plenty of food because I always stock up for winter. The less I have to haul in by sled, the better. During the yurt years I had to haul everything in, including drinking water. I didn’t have running water or storage space, and the yurt would freeze on cold nights. I wonder how I did it. Winter in my cabin is comparatively easier, but still a challenge. Of course, I’m also older. In fact, it seems I am getting older every year.

I marked a birthday in February, one of the reasons I’m fond of this month. And now, writing on Leap Day, I must say that February 2024 was a doozy. It started with the Great Groundhog Day Dump. We were still digging out when it warmed up and dumped 84 mm of rain on all that snow, followed by a hard freeze. One day I was snowshoeing on and around the banks of the pond. The next day everywhere I’d been was under water as the pond rose to flood levels. And today, on Leap Day, we mark the exit of this marvelous month with crazy mild temperatures, rapid melting, rain and gusty south winds – all to be followed by a rapid hard freeze and then snow squalls to welcome in the month of March. Never a dull moment here in the Holler.

Sue McKay Miller
February 29th, 2024

p.s. I wrote this on Leap Day but didn’t post it until March 1st. Happy St. David’s Day! (It’s a Welsh thing.)

Rain and melt and a hard freeze in one day – the pond is way up and the icicles are way down.