We have light snow falling here south of Houston right now, mixed with rain - nothing is sticking yet. Funny thing is we had a couple of inches of snow this time last year as well and lets not forget that we had a white Christmas just a few years back.
The news media is collectively having kittens and I'm sure there'll be some news bimbo standing outside in parka doing a "live" segment :rolleyes: If any of this sticks the auto/body shops in town will make out like bandits - everytime this happens there are thousands of banged up cars as people seem to think that they can still drive 80 mph over all of our bridges and overpasses - that ice up instantly if the temps stay below freezing for too long.
And now we have activist scientists that are doctoring their research to support the cause ??? Is is possible to strip a PHD from someone ;D Maybe Algore should give back is Nobel prize ??? :rolleyes:
I guess it's time to migrate south so as to avoid the encroaching ice sheet :rolleyes: :P
As of last weekend, I had a rose bush still blooming in Cincinnati.
I kind of like it.
Boston reported record high temperatures for this time of year.
Snow predicted here for early this afternoon but at 38 right now it's a little too warm.
Where are you at Dave? They're saying the same thing in the Detroit area but it's beautiful and sunny right now. November was nicer than September and October around here. I just took the insurance off my convertible two weeks ago and tucked it in for winter. I actually could have waited a little longer.
Rick
In Rocky Mountain National Park near me (elevation 7,500 to 14,200 feet) some of the cold weather plants are dying and being replaced with warmer weather plants. Definitely change going on there.
In Fort Collins (5,000 feet) it was Zero this AM and may hit 30 today. Around here it can be 50 one day and 30 the next.
too bad global warming has become such a hot political topic falling nicely along party lines down. i know that winters are not nearly as cold now as they were 30 even 20 years ago here in atlanta.
Careful what you say nofi :o. The minute you start talking about .....it changes :P.
Michigan winters were getting really mild for several years a decade or so ago. Everyone my age was wondering if all that snow we saw when we were kids just seemed so big because we were so small then. Kinda thought it was my imagination ???. It wasn't. The last few years have been good ole' fashioned Michigan winters with lots of snow right up to my frozen Michigan ass.
Rick
Maybe global shift is a better way of putting it. I know that we're down to 2 seasons lately around here - Summer and Winter.
Right now it's 38 by my thermometer - the weather service has it at 35 with a predicted low of 28 and we still have light flurries on and off. Tomorrow the high is supposed to be 55. That's Texas weather for you.
Pilgrim, we have friends in Woodland Park, not sure of their elevation but they are at a very high altitude, and they've had snow in July.
Our weather folks are talking alot about the "El Nino" winter this year, so it'll likely be dry and cold with little precip.
THe weather experts said that an "El Nino" year would keep hurricanes out of the Gulf of Mexico this last season - thank God they were right.
Quote from: Lightyear on December 04, 2009, 11:18:44 AM
THe weather experts said that an "El Nino" year would keep hurricanes out of the Gulf of Mexico this last season - thank God they were right.
True, but they're also saying that the weather in Florida is going to be exceptionally stormy going into the winter and spring.
We got some flurry activity here in Southwest Austin, but nothing stuck. Too warm at 37 degrees.
I have taken pictures of my thermometer outside the kitchen window reading 40 below for the last several years, and I have no doubt I will do it again this year. For our friends who adopted the other system, that is where they are the same.
I have a friend who is an environmental scientist, and he has been moaning about the politicalization of the whole school of thought for years now. It tends to get in the way of the lack of research and analysis. Global warming is a theory that gets disproven and proven every week depending on where you are. Roman structures in Britain typically had no chimney or fireplace, although they knew how to build them. At that time the future UK was typically milder in winter than several centuries later. Why did it change? We have theories.
All I know is that I seem to freeze
my *ass off every year to the same "degree"
when I go out to get the Christmas tree.
My friend in Houston lives in a subdivision that decorates
to the nines, and attracts tons of drive-by traffic. He's late
getting his lights up this year.
Never saw even a flurry here, warmed up to 42.
Every time I hear someone whinging about the cold, I am reminded of 2 events...
1) a Polish security engineer I worked with would reply, "This is not cold, we get minus 30 at home..."
2) an East German long-distance trucker (3 1/2 million kilometres estimate - I'm only at around 1.25 million miles of driving since '82) driving a Dutch truck recounted a story about one trip to Russia from China - when getting directions through Siberia he was told, "Drive one day that way, find right turn, drive half day, and you are there..." the temperature was minus 50 Celcius
-30C = -22F
-50C = -58F
How cold does it get in Stjofon Big-land...? ;D
Quote from: jmcgliss on December 04, 2009, 02:31:31 PM
All I know is that I seem to freeze
my *ass off every year to the same "degree"
when I go out to get the Christmas tree.
My friend in Houston lives in a subdivision that decorates
to the nines, and attracts tons of drive-by traffic. He's late
getting his lights up this year.
Do you know the name of the subdivision?
"Conform or be cast out..." ;D
Quote from: Lightyear on December 04, 2009, 04:43:08 PM
Do you know the name of the subdivision?
Fernbrook Lane; not sure of the subdivision's name. Are you nearby?
Probably not - the name of the street doesn't ring a bell. What most of us call Houston is the typical sprawl of dozens of towns and cities - in our case 60+ miles in any direction. There is subdivision in my area that mandate that you MUST decorate for Christmas - glad I don't live there.
Grrr... don't get me going on HOAs and ridiculous deed restrictions. >:(