Not all areas of Colorado are dry. Most of the state is high up in the mountains. But the far-eastern section is very dry because that section is part of Tornado Alley and yes, the dry, flat areas get a lot of tornadoes during the summer. But also, Colorado has a very complex climate and the weather patterns ALWAYS change every year.
Colorado has 48 different streams named Dry Creek.
colorado
dry places like Texas and Colorado
The Rockies store their baseballs in a humidor, which is a humidity controlled room so the balls do not dry out because the city is located so high above sea level.
Alamosa, Colorado is located in the San Luis Valley that has a dry climate with long cold winters and short cool summers.
It has been sucked dry by the municipalities.
The region is the Great Plains but the state would be Colorado
Colorado is originally a Spanish word. So, that's how to spell it.
The Colorado River looked red so people called it Colorado which is Spanish for red.
No, Colorado environmentalists maintain it as buffer zone or exclusion zone so that nothing can Californicate Colorado.
Yes, there are two major rivers in Colorado. They are the Colorado River and the Arkansas River.
There are many areas where the US is dry, but the largest general area is the Western United States, which has overall very low humidity (although of course along the coast there is some). I grew up in Colorado, and have traveled extensively in the West, and the air is very dry overall. It was hard to travel east to New York when I moved there. I thought the humidity would kill me. It did not, but it kind of felt like it. As for dry ground areas, Death Valley in California is very dry, and the Nevada-Arizona-New Mexico-Utah-Colorado area has a huge desert, although just edges of Utah and Colorado, which are mostly higher elevation and get a lot of snow.