Leeward side of Bahariterra archipelago gets rain
Bahariterra is an island nation in the North Atlantic Ocean off the eastern coast of the United States of America near Bermuda and the Azores. Bahariterra is surrounded by warm ocean currents which bring tropical weather to the islands all year round except on the highest mountain peaks where the air is thin and colder and snow falls each year. The independent Island nation consists of the Bahariterran archipelago, a group of two main islands and thousands of smaller ones. The mountains are so tall that clouds cannot get over them because the water droplets in the cloud freeze and fall down as snow and cover the mountain peaks in snow. At lower elevations, it turns into rain a long time before it hits the ground and falls as warm rain. The wind in Bahariterra is almost always coming from a Westerly direction or from the South or Southeast. Because of this, the Northeast side of the islands is significantly dryer and instead of a tropical rainforest there are warm deserts. A man on the leeward side of Tropicbird Island decided to take a system of rainwater drainage ditches and rainwater holding ponds to irrigate 400 acres of land. Now this part of the Bahariterra desert is as wet as Bahariterra's south shore rainforest belt. Some more much-needed rain has arrived today and really replenished the region. Most deserts are highly diverse and have a lot of wildlife but all of the wildlife in Bahariterra's deserts would be just fine if they got as much rain as Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA. Hopefully they become a little more green soon.
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