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Post by kronan on Aug 23, 2020 10:04:18 GMT -5
Continuing with another climate box from 1942. This place is an island 50 km E of a certain Nyköping... The east coast had even more extreme temperature deviations than the west coast that year. Here are the temperature deviations from the 1961-1990 normal for the first five months of the year Jan: -7.5C Feb: -9.9C Mar: -8.4C Apr: -1.7C May: -1.7C
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Post by aabc123 on Aug 24, 2020 12:59:58 GMT -5
Warmest minimum temperatures in Võru
Jan: 6.0c
Feb: 4.9c
Mar: 9.9c
Apr: 15.6c
May: 19.7c
Jun: 22.5c
Jul: 24.5c
Aug: 22.6c
Sep: 18.2c
Oct: 13.9c
Nov: 10.3c
Dec: 8.6c
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Post by irlinit on Aug 24, 2020 15:48:56 GMT -5
Serious bullshit weather now. High teens forecast later this week with fucking stratocrapulus, extremely high wind and lots of rain, this is about as bad as it can get at this time of year.
What a fucking load of bollocks, fuck the Atlantic, fuck Greenland, fuck the jet stream and fuck terrible oceanic weather 😡😡😡
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Post by kronan on Aug 25, 2020 9:42:10 GMT -5
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Post by nei on Aug 25, 2020 12:10:36 GMT -5
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Post by nei on Aug 25, 2020 13:54:38 GMT -5
gross NY is getting western smoke; the smoke is probably at the current frontal boundary
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Post by knot on Aug 25, 2020 16:36:33 GMT -5
What a steaming pile of horse shit. Since 1916, wildfires have dramatically decreased in the US. It makes sense—because, you know, it's now a wetter climate with less extreme temperatures. Or would you seriously have me believe that wetter = more fires? LMAO!
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Post by Candleur on Aug 25, 2020 16:43:43 GMT -5
gross NY is getting western smoke; the smoke is probably at the current frontal boundary Crystal clear air here. Take that suckers.
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Post by Ariete on Aug 25, 2020 16:49:12 GMT -5
Since 1916, wildfires have dramatically decreased in the US. It makes sense—because, you know, it's now a wetter climate with less extreme temperatures. Or would you seriously have me believe that wetter = more fires? LMAO.
Yeah, and? Even if wildfires today are a lesser health hazard than 100 years ago, they are still a health hazard. No?
Even if wildfires have dramatically decreased in the US, wildfires should by default affect more people than 100 years ago, as the population of the US has increased dramatically.
Or am I wrong?
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Post by knot on Aug 25, 2020 16:52:48 GMT -5
Yeah, and? Even if wildfires today are a lesser health hazard than 100 years ago, they are still a health hazard. No?
Even if wildfires have dramatically decreased in the US, wildfires should by default affect more people than 100 years ago, as the population of the US has increased dramatically.
Or am I wrong?
The article made the bold claim that fires are increasing in the US, which is blatantly false. It mentioned nothing about population.
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Post by Steelernation on Aug 25, 2020 17:33:23 GMT -5
I have read about wet winters causing more/stronger fires in places like California. The wet winter leads to more plant growth which means there’s more to burn. Edit: Just saw nei’s article. We’ve been under a pretty continuous air quality alert for weeks now. The smoke doesn’t bother me at all, at least that I’m conscious of, but it’s bad for old people or asthmatics. It will be nice to get clearer air for better views rather than endless haze but not a big deal imo.
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Post by Ariete on Aug 25, 2020 17:42:22 GMT -5
The article made the bold claim that fires are increasing in the US, which is blatantly false. It mentioned nothing about population.
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Post by Babu on Aug 26, 2020 1:18:05 GMT -5
The all time record in Sweden is 23.7 or 23.8'C at Kullen (old station on the west coast or off the west coast) and/or Östergarnsholm off of Gotland.
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Post by knot on Aug 26, 2020 16:15:41 GMT -5
Saw a tik tok of a girl moving around her throat like it was made of rubber and all loose, asking doctors whether it was normal or not, and my reaction was "heyyy that's the thing I can do!". The few people in chat who actually were doctors all said Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, so I started reading about it. Turns out I'm pretty sure I have hEDS, the hypermobile type. Almost all of my medical history can be connected to Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, with various joint and cardiovascular problem, like osteoarthritis in my hip, subluxation of my jaw (and collarbone too I think), nostril collapse, and heart murmur, arythmia and tachycardia, and a veinous aneurysm. Osgood-Schlatter as well as foot lumps when I was young are also very common. It would also explain why I keep getting lower back pain and possibly even disk hernias from very low deadlift weights. I also realized today I probably something called Chiara 1 Malformation which is common among people with EDS, which would explain why I've sometimes had extreme sudden headaches when straining my body intensely. And it could also be the reason I green out really easily when working out, feeling dizzy, nauseaus, and puking. Oh, and I'm hypermobile and my skin is looser / more elastic than normal of course. I think you've got the wrong thread, champ. This is the Weather Chat Thread…
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Post by jgtheone on Aug 26, 2020 21:45:06 GMT -5
Saw a tik tok of a girl moving around her throat like it was made of rubber and all loose, asking doctors whether it was normal or not, and my reaction was "heyyy that's the thing I can do!". The few people in chat who actually were doctors all said Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, so I started reading about it. Turns out I'm pretty sure I have hEDS, the hypermobile type. Almost all of my medical history can be connected to Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, with various joint and cardiovascular problem, like osteoarthritis in my hip, subluxation of my jaw (and collarbone too I think), nostril collapse, and heart murmur, arythmia and tachycardia, and a veinous aneurysm. Osgood-Schlatter as well as foot lumps when I was young are also very common. It would also explain why I keep getting lower back pain and possibly even disk hernias from very low deadlift weights. I also realized today I probably something called Chiara 1 Malformation which is common among people with EDS, which would explain why I've sometimes had extreme sudden headaches when straining my body intensely. And it could also be the reason I green out really easily when working out, feeling dizzy, nauseaus, and puking. Oh, and I'm hypermobile and my skin is looser / more elastic than normal of course. I think you've got the wrong thread, champ. This is the Weather Chat Thread… I moved it lol thanks for letting me know guys
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Post by Babu on Aug 26, 2020 23:15:20 GMT -5
Saw a tik tok of a girl moving around her throat like it was made of rubber and all loose, asking doctors whether it was normal or not, and my reaction was "heyyy that's the thing I can do!". The few people in chat who actually were doctors all said Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, so I started reading about it. Turns out I'm pretty sure I have hEDS, the hypermobile type. Almost all of my medical history can be connected to Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, with various joint and cardiovascular problem, like osteoarthritis in my hip, subluxation of my jaw (and collarbone too I think), nostril collapse, and heart murmur, arythmia and tachycardia, and a veinous aneurysm. Osgood-Schlatter as well as foot lumps when I was young are also very common. It would also explain why I keep getting lower back pain and possibly even disk hernias from very low deadlift weights. I also realized today I probably something called Chiara 1 Malformation which is common among people with EDS, which would explain why I've sometimes had extreme sudden headaches when straining my body intensely. And it could also be the reason I green out really easily when working out, feeling dizzy, nauseaus, and puking. Oh, and I'm hypermobile and my skin is looser / more elastic than normal of course. I think you've got the wrong thread, champ. This is the Weather Chat Thread… Haha damn, sorry. Was meant to be the unhappy thread. Though the general chat works well tbh
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Post by Crunch41 on Sept 2, 2020 7:39:37 GMT -5
Yahya Sinwar I mentioned a foot of rain in the shoutbox yesterday but didn't show the post. August 2018 and early September were extremely wet. Normal is 4" a month My post: cdweather.boards.net/post/68292/threadAnother NWS post: www.weather.gov/mkx/August2018SevereandFloodEstimated rainfall 14-day (Aug 22- Sep 5). Not including the storm above, part of the state is in the 15-20" range in two weeks. Estimated rainfall 30-day (Aug 6- Sep 5). Over 20" in spots. Low areas were flooding badly.
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Post by Ariete on Sept 10, 2020 10:35:27 GMT -5
Referring to the Climate Maps thread, the growing season (mean temp permanently above 5.0C) at Turku Artukainen since 2003
Start:
2003: 1 May
2004: 14 April 2005: 25 April 2006: 24 April 2007: 13 April 2008: 15 April 2009: 23 April 2010: 25 April 2011: 16 April 2012: 22 April 2013: 29 April 2014: 13 April 2015: 19 April 2016: 16 April 2017: 5 May
2018: 13 April 2019: 16 April 2020: 18 April
Average: 20 April
End:
2003: 14 October 2004: 27 October 2005: 22 October 2006: 28 October 2007: 11 October
2008: 31 October
2009: 10 October
2010: 22 October 2011: 8 November
2012: 25 October 2013: 19 October 2014: 21 October 2015: 28 October
2016: 29 October 2017: 20 October 2018: 28 October
2019: 26 October
Average: 23 October
With the end dates I were a bit more strict, a single day with a mean below freezing ends the growing season, even if mean temps recover to way above 5C after that. They don't necessary follow FMI definitions.
Length:
2003: 168 days 2004: 197 days 2005: 181 days
2006: 188 days
2007: 182 days
2008: 200 days 2009: 171 days 2010: 181 days 2011: 207 days 2012: 187 days 2013: 168 days 2014: 192 days 2015: 193 days 2016: 197 days 2017: 169 days 2018: 199 days 2019: 192 days
Average: 186 days
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Post by Benfxmth on Sept 10, 2020 10:56:55 GMT -5
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Post by Crunch41 on Sept 10, 2020 22:19:19 GMT -5
I feel dumber for reading that article.
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