I heard far, far more gunshots when I lived in a small town in Michigan than I have living in Inglewood, CA. Granted, the vast majority of the former were hunters or target shooters, don't think the ones I've heard here were looking to bag an 8-point buck.
We had such a wet start to the season too (at least in SoCal), too bad it couldn't hold out.
We're looking at a week of sunshine and temps pushing up to (and over) 80°F in the LA area by next weekend.
Yeah - mind you, reservoir levels and whatnot are MUCH better than the previous few years, so it shouldn't be as bad if things persist. I'm mostly concerned at the lack of rain in the northern part of the state. Hope the trees stay alright.
This is honestly one of the most impressively accurate winter weather forecasts I've seen in Oklahoma. There's always a tiny margin of error between "maybe some cold rain" and "half a foot of snow" and "hellish civilization-ending ice storm."
Man, that sucks. That system that moved into the LA area yesterday dumped a decent amount of rain in some communities. I was up in the UCLA area and there was a lot of mild street flooding. But no more rain for 2+ weeks is not good.
Man, that sucks. That system that moved into the LA area yesterday dumped a decent amount of rain in some communities. I was up in the UCLA area and there was a lot of mild street flooding. But no more rain for 2+ weeks is not good.
My layman's understanding is that right now there's something in the upper atmosphere which is causing a low pressure system to sit on top of the pole, which is leading to a high pressure system to sit outside it, which is preventing any of the rain from coming in. I haven't looked into it, but that might actually be good news for arctic ice levels, though? I know earlier this year was the first time in a long-ass time that literally all of Alaska had below-average temps for the date.
WeaverWho are you?What do you want?Registered Userregular
Weather here in Texas has been pretty nice for my vacation. Still got just a little bit sunburned out at the wildlife ranch.
+2
Options
Blackhawk1313Demon Hunter for HireTime RiftRegistered Userregular
Tornado ripped through Nashville, Middle Tennessee area overnight, 8 dead was the last I saw and a bunch of buildings destroyed. We actually have a bunch of family there but MiL just confirmed she talked to all of them and they are OK so I can stop worrying on that front at least.
Tornado ripped through Nashville, Middle Tennessee area overnight, 8 dead was the last I saw and a bunch of buildings destroyed. We actually have a bunch of family there but MiL just confirmed she talked to all of them and they are OK so I can stop worrying on that front at least.
The death toll is up to 19 now.
So the severe thunderstorm warning that preceded the tornadoes was issued at 12:10AM. The first tornado warning was issued at 12:35AM, the first report of a tornado on the ground was 12:38AM and the first report of damage came in at 12:41AM, people just didn't have time to respond (if they were even awake) as the storm system progressed rapidly.
Posts
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/enso/polar-vortex-going-make-you-put-sweater-be-afraid-be-very-afraid
No RRR this year, at least, but it's not boding well. Fingers crossed for late Feb/March, I guess.
We're looking at a week of sunshine and temps pushing up to (and over) 80°F in the LA area by next weekend.
Yeah - mind you, reservoir levels and whatnot are MUCH better than the previous few years, so it shouldn't be as bad if things persist. I'm mostly concerned at the lack of rain in the northern part of the state. Hope the trees stay alright.
A summer cold in winter,
I don't understand.
This is honestly one of the most impressively accurate winter weather forecasts I've seen in Oklahoma. There's always a tiny margin of error between "maybe some cold rain" and "half a foot of snow" and "hellish civilization-ending ice storm."
Well done, meteorological models.
And your university maintains all activities~
That's a~~
FUCK YOU FRIDAY
Better than the rest of CA.
Outlooks are showing us high and dry through the rest of Feb.
Climate change you crazy.
How are you British and Irish people doing?
Fun side effect: a BA flight made it from New York to London in 5 hours, over an hour faster than usual, pushed by the Orkan.
Technically not yet, but California's going back into a drought. And is probably going to have a super bad fire season again.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/feb/10/rain-deluge-in-eastern-australia-set-to-extinguish-nsw-bushfires-this-week
My layman's understanding is that right now there's something in the upper atmosphere which is causing a low pressure system to sit on top of the pole, which is leading to a high pressure system to sit outside it, which is preventing any of the rain from coming in. I haven't looked into it, but that might actually be good news for arctic ice levels, though? I know earlier this year was the first time in a long-ass time that literally all of Alaska had below-average temps for the date.
PSN:Furlion
y'a pu de saisons!
Rain and snow for SoCal tonight and tomorrow, including thunderstorms with the potential for hail and waterspouts.
Take back your rain and snow, plzthx
signed, Montreal
ordinary April weather
.... oh, it's February
Fuck global warming
Edit: for context, that's about 20°F over the normal average temperature for this time of the year.
If you meet a red cedar on the road, kill it.
You're not a fan of huffing plant cum?
The death toll is up to 19 now.
So the severe thunderstorm warning that preceded the tornadoes was issued at 12:10AM. The first tornado warning was issued at 12:35AM, the first report of a tornado on the ground was 12:38AM and the first report of damage came in at 12:41AM, people just didn't have time to respond (if they were even awake) as the storm system progressed rapidly.
Wow, that is absolutley terrifying.
The death toll is now up to 22 confirmed, at least 140 injured.