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Post by ππΏMΓΆrΓΆnππΏ on Sept 29, 2018 23:01:45 GMT -5
From an interesting weather perspective, I'll rate this a C+ but realistically, it's a D- as that amount of snow is just ridiculous. From the wikipedia article: In the winter of 1949/1950 as much as 885.1 inches (22.48 m) of snow fell, while the less complete snow cover records show cover as high as 192 inches or 4.88 meters occurred during another particularly unsettled winter in 1981/1982.[26] The heaviest daily snowfall was 37.0 inches (94.0 cm), which occurred as recently as February 28, 1971; 20 in (51 cm) or more in one storm has occurred in both June and September. Hard frost is possible even into the summer, and the average window for freezing temperatures is August 19 through July 7, while for measurable (β₯0.1 inches or 0.25 centimeters) snowfall, October 1 through June 15.
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Post by Steelernation on Sept 29, 2018 23:04:44 GMT -5
E. At least most of that winter precipitation is snow, the excessive snowfall would be annoying but far better than excessive rainfall. The bigger issue is the length of the winters and the short crummer.
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Post by Beercules on Sept 29, 2018 23:49:34 GMT -5
F
horrible
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 30, 2018 2:59:06 GMT -5
I don't want to drown or being forced to evacuate due to the place turning into a glacier each winter.
F- by default.
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Post by irlinit on Sept 30, 2018 4:01:09 GMT -5
F
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Post by Crunch41 on Sept 30, 2018 19:33:48 GMT -5
E. Too much snow! Average snow depth reaches 121" at the end of March--10 feet or 307cm. Snow usually melts off in June, sometimes July. It looks like the latest melt was July 22nd, 1983, and the maximum depth that year was 252" (21 feet, 640cm) wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/cliMAIN.pl?or1946Summer is decent but short and not warm. Winter is way too long and way too snowy. I like snow but not when it's up to the 2nd story windows.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Sept 30, 2018 19:36:38 GMT -5
Piss poor bag of fucken SHIT. F.
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Post by AJ1013 on Sept 30, 2018 22:48:06 GMT -5
F. Snow cover year round is a no-no.
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Post by knot on Oct 1, 2018 2:54:15 GMT -5
A, by maritime standards; epic winter snowfall, but unfortunately no summer snowfall
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Post by Palider on Oct 4, 2018 16:56:45 GMT -5
E. Way too snowy and summers are not warm enough.
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Post by nei on Oct 4, 2018 17:38:37 GMT -5
F. Snow cover year round is a no-no. It melts eventually; think it has 2 snow free months. My avatar of a bicycle against really tall snow was from crater lake late June
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Post by AJ1013 on Oct 4, 2018 17:39:15 GMT -5
F. Snow cover year round is a no-no. It melts eventually; think it has 2 snow free months. My avatar of a bicycle against really tall snow was from crater lake late June Crater lake had feet of snow when I was there in July.
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Post by nei on Oct 4, 2018 17:41:17 GMT -5
It melts eventually; think it has 2 snow free months. My avatar of a bicycle against really tall snow was from crater lake late June Crater lake had feet of snow when I was there in July. Iβll dig up the snow free season length by year when I get a chance. Obviously, it has to melt by the end of the summer or itβd be glaciated
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Post by AJ1013 on Oct 4, 2018 17:41:25 GMT -5
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Post by Steelernation on Oct 4, 2018 17:47:25 GMT -5
The lake was snow free except a few small patches on the sides when I was there in July 2016. The mountains above has scattered snow patches but not much either.
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Post by Crunch41 on Oct 4, 2018 21:32:14 GMT -5
Crater lake had feet of snow when I was there in July. Iβll dig up the snow free season length by year when I get a chance. Obviously, it has to melt by the end of the summer or itβd be glaciated The link I posted earlier had average snow depth by day. It appeared to melt in early July and come back mid-October, but that's not for sure. The surrounding area could easily have a few extra weeks of snow cover.
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Post by nei on Oct 9, 2018 17:15:19 GMT -5
Crater Lake summer solstice 2011 my bicycle: me:
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Post by Hiromant on Oct 11, 2018 3:18:03 GMT -5
D. Not a great winter. Too monotonous, snowy and long with above freezing highs to make it all slushy and wet. Summers are passable.
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Post by nei on Oct 11, 2018 11:02:46 GMT -5
Crater Lake had a high of 77Β°F/25Β°C on September 28th; despite the snow, it can get warm there. July 2017 averaged 72/43. What day were your photos from AJ1013 ? Records show the snow melted by July 4 that year; but the station elevation is a bit lower than most of the lakeshore at 6480 feet; much of the lakeshore is at 7200-7600 feet, with that peak in our photos at 8900 feet.
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Post by AJ1013 on Oct 11, 2018 11:06:45 GMT -5
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