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Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: franksolich on August 05, 2008, 06:40:27 AM

Title: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: franksolich on August 05, 2008, 06:40:27 AM
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x3730414

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debbierlus  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:01 PM
Original message

Does anyone else think this is the strangest summer weather they have ever seen?   

I live in Western MA, and this is a WEIRD summer.

It hasn't been hot. It has been warm and often humid. But, the really weird thing is the constant threat of showers and thunderstorms. I have never seen so many thunderstorms in a summer (or lightening storms, one went on all night).

It hasn't been raining all the time, but it rains nearly every day in downpours.

The weather is just weird. The skies are beautiful, but they are like nothing I have ever seen in a summer sky. It feels like we are turning into a rain forest.

My husband says it is the ice caps.

It is so strange, and so different, it is frightening.

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ColbertWatcher  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:03 PM
Response to Original message

1. I have noticed the change out here in SoCal (LA) too...

...dare I say it, but it seems Los Angeles is finally experiencing weather!

It's been more humid here lately than it's ever been in my long, long memory.

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pdxmom  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:04 PM
Response to Original message

2. Oregon has been strange. Much cooler than usual, but when it's hot, it's hot. It's almost like we're either in the 70's or in the 90's.

Yesterday morning at 6 AM, the temperature was 43. Today, at 5:00 PM, it's 90.

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here_is_to_hope  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:11 PM
Response to Reply #2

10. Seriously...
   
I am out on the Coast and it has not been over 60 in weeks, no Sun to speak of...

Something is afoot!

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Pastiche423  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 11:21 PM
Response to Reply #10

25. Yep. It's been the coldest summer I've spent in CB
   
The ocean winds do not help.

Damn.  Talk about a ****ing inconsiderate primitive.

What is "CB"?

To me, that might indicate "Council Bluffs, Iowa," but I don't think that's what's meant.

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Purveyor  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:07 PM
Response to Original message

4. Lower mid-michigan has been pretty much normal this year.

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MorningGlow  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:08 PM
Response to Original message

7. We've had a lot less rain here (WNY)
   
It's been just as hot and humid as ever, but we haven't had as many rainy days as we've had in past summers. We have had some thunderstorms, some severe, but not out of the ordinary. What we've been missing are the icky, cool, drizzly days--and I'm okay with that!

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Selatius  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:09 PM
Response to Original message

8. I call them "popcorn thunderstorms." They exist in very warm, wet, unstable atmosphere.
   
What you describe basically sounds like the weather I see around here...the Mississippi Gulf Coast. In the summer, they pop up in the afternoons pretty often because the sun heats the atmosphere causing convection currents that sometimes carries the moisture into the atmosphere, spawning those thunderstorms. In the tropics, they're the norm in places like the Amazon or the Congo.

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debbierlus  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:16 PM
Response to Reply #8

13. We always get some of these in the summer - this is just relentless   

It is strange because the downpours are SO intense (sheets upon sheets upon sheets)...

It is happening almost daily.

No hot weather.

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Sisaruus  Donating Member  (123 posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:25 PM
Response to Reply #13

15. northern CT downpours this weekend
   
I'm in northern CT on weekends - west of the CT river. I was noticing the intense downpours this past weekend - just as you described: sheets upon sheets upon sheets. With much darker daytime skies than I remember in past years.

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smoogatz  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:10 PM
Response to Original message

9. We had a cold late spring and early summer here in west-central WI.
   
Since then it's been pretty normal, after several years of hotter and drier than average. But yeah--we were just out on the Cape, and it was crazy humid out there for much of the week. I've spent numerous summers on Cape Cod, and never experienced that kind of windless humidity there.

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MadMaddie  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:11 PM
Response to Original message

11. Washington State...Seattle area....I say we were in Fall like 4 weeks ago.

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uppityperson  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Tue Aug-05-08 04:44 AM
Response to Reply #11

31. goodness, come on over to PT, been hot over here, garden's finally growing
   
the spring was very long, finally got nice over here.

You know, if I were my fellow alum Skins, I would ban the use of acronyms and abbreviations on Skins's island.

It makes the primitives look just really stupid.

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rzemanfl  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:12 PM
Response to Original message

12. I was born 61 years ago today near Chicago, it was 104 degrees.
   
There is always weird weather, but that doesn't mean that global warming is not a fact.

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Canuckistanian  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:18 PM
Response to Original message

14. Same weather here in Canada
   
I think that today was the first day in about a week that we haven't had a drop of rain.

And it been like this since the beginning of June.

I'm not complaining, I haven't needed to water my garden and it's doing great.

But this isn't normal for a July going into August (we'd normally have a few week-long "droughts" in summer).

In fact, I'd say the weather was becoming more like the prairies - hot, dry days with rainstorm every night.

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aikoaiko  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:27 PM
Response to Original message

16. Actually, for SE GA its back to normal, hot and humid and afternoon showers.
   
Past couple of summers have been too dry.

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MonteLukast  Donating Member  (577 posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:28 PM
Response to Original message

17. 21 days in a row 90+ degrees in Denver.
   
On June 12, the Highline Canal near Windermere Drive was 2 1/2 feet deep. Yesterday, it was totally dried out.

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AllieB  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:30 PM
Response to Original message

18. I agree about the thunderstorms. We had a doozy yesterday North of Boston.
   
It was really hot here in early June when I was out of the country-a week of heat indexes over 100. From then on it's been oddly tropical like Florida with almost daily thunderstorms or rain showers. Today was a nice exception. It was 85, sunny and DRY!

I remember as a kid having a summer where we had a lot of thunderstorms, but not like this.

The bonfire burns on and on and on, and surprisingly, the words "Bush" or "Rove" are absent.

One closes these excerpts with the carpetbagging maternal ancestress:

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Raven  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Tue Aug-05-08 07:05 AM
Response to Original message

34. Hi Deb. I'm not far from you...in SW New Hampshire. This has been more of an Alabama summer than a New England summer. As you probably know, central NH got a tornado that stayed on the ground for an hour and a half last week and ripped through 9 towns going south to north. That is really unheard of. Couple this with the awful winter we had last year...2 major snowstorms a week in February and March...and all of them with a significant component of ice... I'd say we're warming up alright!
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: Tucker on August 05, 2008, 06:45:42 AM
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debbierlus  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:01 PM
Original message

Does anyone else think this is the strangest summer weather they have ever seen?   

I live in Western MA, and this is a WEIRD summer.

It hasn't been hot. It has been warm and often humid. But, the really weird thing is the constant threat of showers and thunderstorms. I have never seen so many thunderstorms in a summer (or lightening storms, one went on all night).

It hasn't been raining all the time, but it rains nearly every day in downpours.

The weather is just weird. The skies are beautiful, but they are like nothing I have ever seen in a summer sky. It feels like we are turning into a rain forest.

My husband says it is the ice caps.

It is so strange, and so different, it is frightening.

What's the typical weather pattern for a North Atlantic border state? It sounds pretty normal to me.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: LC EFA on August 05, 2008, 06:49:33 AM
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pdxmom  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:04 PM
Response to Original message

2. Oregon has been strange. Much cooler than usual, but when it's hot, it's hot. It's almost like we're either in the 70's or in the 90's.

Yesterday morning at 6 AM, the temperature was 43. Today, at 5:00 PM, it's 90.

Funny , I thought that premise of the whole Global warming cooling Climate change thing was that there was a constant defined climate in perpetuity ... who'd have thunk it might vary decade to decade...

Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: Happy Fun Ball on August 05, 2008, 06:56:07 AM
Damn.  Talk about a ******* inconsiderate primitive.

What is "CB"?

To me, that might indicate "Council Bluffs, Iowa," but I don't think that's what's meant.

Coos Bay, OR (looked at the profile)
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: JohnnyReb on August 05, 2008, 07:01:27 AM
JohnnyReb is going to sit back, sip some ice tea and watch the "climate change" today.

DUmmies don't work. Why do they worry about the weather? The government is going to take care of them. And if and when the climate does kill us all off, like the cockroaches, they'll be the last to go.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: USA4ME on August 05, 2008, 08:58:00 AM
And if Obamassiah wins the weather will be perfect, birds will be singing, plants will be growing, and unicorns will roam freely.  Too predictable.

.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: Lord Undies on August 05, 2008, 10:31:44 AM
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rzemanfl  Donating Member  (1000+ posts) Mon Aug-04-08 08:12 PM
Response to Original message

12. I was born 61 years ago today near Chicago, it was 104 degrees.
   
There is always weird weather, but that doesn't mean that global warming is not a fact.

Yep, sorry, it pretty much does.  If things haven't changed, that kinda confirms nothing is changing.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: jukin on August 05, 2008, 10:55:30 AM
Just because there is more and more evidence of global warming being disproved, it doesn't mean the government shouldn't tax us more.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: ScubaGuy on August 05, 2008, 10:57:25 AM
Let's see what we have here:

Some days really hot, some not so hot.  CHECK
Periods of no or little rainfall - CHECK
Numerous localized thunderstorms - CHECK
Violent Thunderstorms - CHECK
Tornadoes - CHECK

In my non-expert opinion I would say this is sure sign that it's summer in the USA.

Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: thundley4 on August 05, 2008, 11:17:56 AM
Last night, during the Cubs game at Wrigley Field, (Mecaa to true baseball fans), They evacuated certain areas of the stands and moved people to the concourse areas.  There were tornado warning sirens going off in Chicago.
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: NHSparky on August 05, 2008, 11:25:34 AM
Let's see what we have here:

Some days really hot, some not so hot.  CHECK
Periods of no or little rainfall - CHECK
Numerous localized thunderstorms - CHECK
Violent Thunderstorms - CHECK
Tornadoes - CHECK

In my non-expert opinion I would say this is sure sign that it's summer in the USA.



Amen.  I live across the state from the last quote in the OP.  I remember the tornado and have seen its effects a few times driving between home and Concord, etc.  It was an F-1/F-2, depending upon what town you were in.  Bad, but not unheard of.  This state has had F-4's recorded.  Not recently, mind you, but they do occur.

And looking at the average temperature data, I'd say we've been right around where we should be--not too hot, not too cold, kinda hovering around that historical average.  Wow, whoda thunk it?
Title: Re: primitives paranoid about summer climate
Post by: Lauri on August 05, 2008, 11:25:59 AM
Let's see what we have here:

Some days really hot, some not so hot.  CHECK
Periods of no or little rainfall - CHECK
Numerous localized thunderstorms - CHECK
Violent Thunderstorms - CHECK
Tornadoes - CHECK

In my non-expert opinion I would say this is sure sign that it's summer in the USA.




it seems to stump them every damn summer..  :mental: