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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 26, 2021 13:54:37 GMT -5
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Post by nei on Feb 26, 2021 22:41:13 GMT -5
lol I'm near the weird micro zone of no snow
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Post by jgtheone on Feb 26, 2021 22:52:38 GMT -5
19/20C right now and cloudy. Tired of this shit. La Nina will be going away in the coming months, and I hope it goes away for a long, long time.
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Post by Doña Jimena on Feb 27, 2021 2:37:18 GMT -5
The wind is blowing from the North. Clear, currently 2C, high should be only 4C or 5C in Riga.
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Post by Beercules on Feb 27, 2021 2:54:44 GMT -5
Another record breaking day in Europe, this time Poland has its highest ever February temperature Poland in winter is warmer than Melbourne in summer. #crummer2021 #fuckoffyoorup #frogs #gaypari
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Post by Beercules on Feb 27, 2021 2:58:11 GMT -5
19/20C right now and cloudy. Tired of this shit. La Nina will be going away in the coming months, and I hope it goes away for a long, long time. Hopefully it'll fuck off until 2080 or some shit when I am long dead. Why can't we get a goddamn El Nino in summer in our New Age Climate, I mean, are we condemned to never see heat and storms again or what
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Post by Babu on Feb 27, 2021 3:40:11 GMT -5
lol I'm near the weird micro zone of no snow To me it doesn't look like an area of no snow. Just looks like an area of conifer forests where most other forests are deciduous.
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 27, 2021 14:39:30 GMT -5
-----
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Post by ral31 on Feb 27, 2021 14:54:54 GMT -5
This week ended up warmer than expected. Quite a turnaround from the previous week. Hit 80F for the first time of the year yesterday. Dewpoint in the 60's. Felt pretty spring-like. Convective looking clouds to the north.
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Post by ral31 on Feb 27, 2021 14:58:05 GMT -5
80's were widespread across the Deep South yesterday. Much of Louisiana was warm except for Shreveport which had a max of 60F.
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Post by Doña Jimena on Feb 28, 2021 10:00:45 GMT -5
7C and sunny this Sunday afternoon in Riga. Goodbye winter!
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Post by aabc123 on Feb 28, 2021 12:01:45 GMT -5
This afternoon, in Tartu by the river, 7c.
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 28, 2021 15:24:36 GMT -5
Several stations in NC have seen their first 80°F highs of the season today and yesterday. ----- Yesterday's highs/lows nationwide
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Post by ral31 on Feb 28, 2021 16:24:31 GMT -5
Tornado watch in Arkansas & west Tennessee for areas that were covered with snow not long ago. Severe storms supposed to stay to my north.
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 28, 2021 17:47:48 GMT -5
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 28, 2021 19:35:54 GMT -5
Over 4" of rain has fallen since midnight in Bowling Green
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Post by nei on Feb 28, 2021 22:26:59 GMT -5
arctic blast coming Tuesday. 850 mb could reach -32°C too short lived for really cold temperatures, not enough time for the cold upper air to filter down. Still 6°F as a morning low with wind has to be from a cold airmass aloft. my forecast rain precedes the cold front, could get a few flurries after the cold moves in while at 2000 feet in the Whites, high temperature barely above 10°F
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Post by nei on Feb 28, 2021 22:29:46 GMT -5
calm day on Mount Washington but the wind picked up late in the afternoon as a rain system moves in
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Post by greysrigging on Mar 1, 2021 3:09:44 GMT -5
The La Nina Effect: Australia's Coolest Summer In Nine Years La Niña just delivered Australia its wettest summer in four years and the first cooler-than-average summer in nine years based on daytime temperatures. While some pockets of Australia were abnormally warm and dry in summer (looking at you Queensland), much of the country had a relatively wet and mild season. Australia's national mean temperature during summer (December to February) was 0.06ºC above the 1961-1990 average. This was the country's coolest summer since 2012. When looking at daytime warmth, Australia as a whole actually had a cooler-than-usual summer. The average national maximum temperature for the season was 0.28ºC below the 1961-1990 average. This was the country's first cooler-than-average summer (based on maximums) in nine years. Image: Australia's summer maximum temperature anomalies since 1910. Red bars are summers that were warmer than the 1961-1990 average and blue bars were cooler-than-average summers. Source: Bureau of Meteorology Rainfall was plentiful over much of Australia between December and February, with the country having its wettest summer in four years. For the Murray Darling Basin it was the wettest summer in a decade. The healthy rain and mild temperatures of the past few months can both be credited to La Nina, which peaked in and persisted through the 2020/21 summer. La Nina is an abnormal pattern of wind and sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Paficic Ocean that causes more moisture-laden air to flow towards Australia. La Niña typically enhances cloud cover and rainfall over large areas of Australia in summer, which promotes cooler days and warmer nights. The cooling effect of La Niña, both in Australia and globally, can mask the background warming signal that's occurring as a result of contemporary climate change. The footprint of La Niña can be seen clearly in the summertime temperatures of the last two decades. Only four out of the last 19 summers have featured below-average maximum temperatures in Australia. Unsurprisingly, these relative cool summers all occurred during La Niña events. ( Source: Weatherzone )
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Post by Beercules on Mar 1, 2021 3:26:09 GMT -5
You know it's been a shithouse crummer when even the media, BUM and Weatherzone not only don't put out their usual "hottest summer on record" spiel at the end of the season, but actually go the other way! Edit - oh wait never mind, they still managed to shoehorn some global warming malarky in there. They are smart, '61-'90 "averages" means every year can be above avg
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