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Post by jgtheone on Nov 20, 2019 7:37:32 GMT -5
white tails are mildly poisonous but they can't kill you. anyway that's fucking gross lol
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Post by jgtheone on Nov 20, 2019 7:49:41 GMT -5
trust me I know how common they are, I'm expecting to find some tonight.
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Post by jgtheone on Nov 20, 2019 21:49:21 GMT -5
SMASHED HIM OUT OF THE PARK
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Post by Tired on Nov 20, 2019 22:02:48 GMT -5
In an attempt to try and forget that Melbourne has beaten us in heat for November...let's have a look at Jandakot's highs versus Albany (town) over a period of days in November.
Day Jandakot Albany
November 8 31.9C 21.8C November 9 40.3C 24.4C November 10 24.3C 19.0C November 11 30.0C 16.7C November 12 30.2C 18.9C November 13 35.1C 20.3C November 14 38.0C 20.0C November 15 37.7C 21.4C November 16 39.7C 22.0C November 17 28.1C 21.0C November 18 32.1C 22.3C
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Post by knot on Nov 21, 2019 2:44:29 GMT -5
Scored a maximum reading of 31.3° C today!
Cabramurra surpassed its previous record of 27.2° C, as well; now standing at 27.6° C. However, the more long-term sites—i.e. comprising those in the South-West Slopes and the Riverina—failed to even touch their records, let alone surpass them.
Epic contrast with my frigid 4.9° C maximum back on the 9th of November.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 21, 2019 10:33:51 GMT -5
November being awesome as ever One cloud covering basically all of mainland Europe west of Russia at 4 pm CET today. Also covers almost all the seas as well. Lovely.
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Post by nei on Nov 21, 2019 18:22:11 GMT -5
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Post by Babu on Nov 25, 2019 15:10:32 GMT -5
Found this interesting image. Apparently UVA is effectively strongest against a vertical cylinder (standing in as a humanlike shape) when the sun angle is about 50-55°. For shorter wavelengths the peak is higher, at 80°. It's reasonable to assume that longer wavelengths, like total irradiation, would have a slightly lower "perfect sun angle" than UVA. It doesn't say what the height/radius ratio is though.
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Post by knot on Nov 26, 2019 1:35:52 GMT -5
0.7° C with snow flurries! BOM only forecast >1,600 m today.
This marks my 3rd November snowy day this year.
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Post by nei on Nov 26, 2019 12:11:25 GMT -5
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Post by Milwaukee Mass Murderer on Nov 27, 2019 23:02:01 GMT -5
NWS unit conversions aren't working correctly. 6F is cold, but it's not -46C. The dew point is also wrong, but the wind chill is accurate. Also, ice fog with a 29mph (47kph) wind? Blowing snow or heavy snow would make more sense. The area is under a blizzard warning.
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Post by Babu on Dec 6, 2019 7:36:09 GMT -5
Striking cloud formation over land in Finland yesterday. Almost looks like the sky is clesr but the ground covered in snow.
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Post by nei on Dec 6, 2019 22:09:39 GMT -5
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Post by nei on Dec 15, 2019 18:53:44 GMT -5
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Post by nei on Dec 15, 2019 23:27:56 GMT -5
Umeå is around the border of the 50 day line thershold Babu
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Post by Donar on Dec 17, 2019 10:43:12 GMT -5
I wouldn't have thought that I prefer winter here in Aachen over Frankfurt. I have encountered multiple times now that it's sunny and breezy here while a foggy soup at home. It rains a lot here but days on end without sunshine are much rarer than in Hesse...
variable oceanic winters with nearby mountains >>> stable semi-continental winters
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Post by tij on Dec 17, 2019 10:58:25 GMT -5
I wouldn't have thought that I prefer winter here in Aachen over Frankfurt. I have encountered multiple times now that it's sunny and breezy here while a foggy soup at home. It rains a lot here but days on end without sunshine are much rarer than in Hesse...
variable oceanic winters with nearby mountains >>> stable semi-continental winters
Intriguing, forgotten username mentioned how Brittany always had sun breaks during the winter while Northern Italy was perpetually covered in fog during the season. I'm not sure how true this difference holds in other regions like the Pacific NW, appears like places like Kelowna are actually gloomier than the immediate coast during winter, as 'semicontinental' central Europe is compared to truly 'oceanic' W Europe. Unsure why the coast tends to be sunnier despite often having more winter rain than the interior...
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Post by Donar on Dec 17, 2019 11:16:40 GMT -5
Intriguing, forgotten username mentioned how Brittany always had sun breaks during the winter while Northern Italy was perpetually covered in fog during the season. I'm not sure how true this difference holds in other regions like the Pacific NW, appears like places like Kelowna are actually gloomier than the immediate coast during winter, as 'semicontinental' central Europe is compared to truly 'oceanic' W Europe. Unsure why the coast tends to be sunnier despite often having more winter rain than the interior... Radiation fog develops in calm, high pressure situations; valley topographies also help to pool cold air.. Oftentimes it's windy enough in far Western Europe to prevent the formation, also less high-pressure situations there in winter.
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Post by Morningrise on Dec 17, 2019 14:32:10 GMT -5
Two weeks left until the end of the month, then we're halfway through the nastiest part of the year (November through February)! I really hope we have a mild end to the winter this year, February was way too cold this year and last year. Bring on a mild February and a decent March, please!
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Post by Ariete on Dec 19, 2019 10:24:07 GMT -5
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