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Post by Deleted on Mar 2, 2018 14:22:35 GMT -5
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Post by Babu on Mar 2, 2018 18:39:45 GMT -5
Woohoo, spring! "Cold-sale" well, at least that's nice.
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Post by P London on Mar 2, 2018 18:59:41 GMT -5
Took a pic of the snow waiting for the bus on Wednesday morning. Brrr. Whoops came out odd.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 3, 2018 3:15:15 GMT -5
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Post by rozenn on Mar 3, 2018 10:18:49 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Mar 3, 2018 14:02:40 GMT -5
Fortunately I have springlike photos to post on this green-starved thread. My decision to post snow pictures here may be controversial, but they were taken in spring, and the beauty of a transitional season is to observe change. This thread should naturally begin with a wintry look, and end looking like summer
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 3, 2018 14:58:58 GMT -5
En subtropisk vår A subtropical spring Eine subtropische frühling Una primavera subtropicale Indice Subtropique 444
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 3, 2018 15:08:36 GMT -5
"Cold-sale" well, at least that's nice. Umeå should have a cold-sale for like five months of the year
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Post by urania93 on Mar 4, 2018 6:16:39 GMT -5
Today there is still some snow on the ground (about 15 cm), but the temperature is decisively warming up. It was the perfect weather for a walk and for taking some pictures Stunning blue sky today How can you call it an Italian village without a fountain? That's the slope where I used to play with a sledge when I was a kid. Back then I would have had a lot of fun in a day like this. Still too early for starting the vegetable garden this year... During the walk I passed next to the local "crazy cat lady" house, lots of cats around there. ^ she didn't seem to like strangers, I didn't manage to get any closer ^ he looks a lot like my oldest cat, maybe they are relatives? It could be possible, my red cat is a foundling after all.
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Post by rozenn on Mar 4, 2018 6:34:43 GMT -5
Nice snowpack! Why are there so many cats in Italian villages (and Countea de Nissa)?! Fortunately I have springlike photos to post on this green-starved thread. My decision to post snow pictures here may be controversial, but they were taken in spring, and the beauty of a transitional season is to observe change. This thread should naturally begin with a wintry look, and end looking like summer I fully support the idea of sticking to the 3-month rule. Will make sure to look back at the OP in late May, thinking "wtf was this less than 3 months ago?!"
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Post by nei on Mar 4, 2018 8:23:46 GMT -5
Nice snowpack! Why are there so many cats in Italian villages (and Countea de Nissa)?! My decision to post snow pictures here may be controversial, but they were taken in spring, and the beauty of a transitional season is to observe change. This thread should naturally begin with a wintry look, and end looking like summer I fully support the idea of sticking to the 3-month rule. Will make sure to look back at the OP in late May, thinking "wtf was this less than 3 months ago?!" I remember dumping so many snow hiking photos in the spring thread one or two years until early April people commented the spring thread looked very un-springlike
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Post by Hiromant on Mar 4, 2018 9:37:04 GMT -5
A beautiful day today, the snow was melting on the roads despite it being -6°C. A few hours later the wind picked up and it felt like winter again though.
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Post by ral31 on Mar 4, 2018 17:12:48 GMT -5
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Post by ral31 on Mar 4, 2018 17:29:28 GMT -5
I saw some sheep! I don't see them too often in my area.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Mar 5, 2018 1:35:45 GMT -5
Two photos of a catastrophic downpour in Denver in May 2015. I lived on a hill so I got to see some pretty good storms which definitely attracted lightning strikes. Watching the lightning continually hit the mountains in the distance as the storms moved was really cool to see as well.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 5, 2018 7:44:45 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Mar 6, 2018 14:19:55 GMT -5
from today. 1C and fog. snow-depth around 30-40cm.
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Post by nei on Mar 7, 2018 11:00:37 GMT -5
Went to Mt. Greylock Saturday, right after a Noreaster Friday. We got all rain, I expected the hills to get more than a foot, but only the high elevations got deep snow; lots of deep snow. Trailhead is right on the edge of Adams, MA. Stopped for food. Greylcok was covered in a cloud, but sunny elsewhere. Morning started cloudy. First weather; you can see it was saturated at the summit. About 35°F at the bottom, 25-27°F at the top with 20 mph ? winds, maybe a little higher on the most open slopes. GFS sounding at the trailhead, looking down the valley towards Adams to the east. eh mountain still covered in cloud. Snow wasn't deep at all; couple inches max and slushy trail followed a stream last glimpse of sunlight snow getting deeper depending on the slope angle (2 inches in some spots deeper in others), big holes from hikers who didn't bother. annoying to slip into. clouded over skiers descending down the slope hint of orange on the one spot with sun final bit of the climb is steep almost to the summit view was disappointing. Seemed like there was 12-15 inches of fresh snow on the summit. no one hiked this on the way down exiting cloud back at the trailhead anyone wanna guess which were phone and which were SLR photos? Babu could probably get it. Most were phone.
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Post by rozenn on Mar 7, 2018 14:06:20 GMT -5
Noice! Quite the difference in atmosphere between the valley and the summit. One can tell winter is easing down there, whereas it's still deep winter at the top. What's with the deep river bed? Looks like something out of a mediterranean area. 11/3°C and showers today, as typical for March as it gets. Convective clouds are making a comeback thanks to the early spring sun. The grass is happy. Nice blue sky
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Post by nei on Mar 7, 2018 17:13:32 GMT -5
Noice! Quite the difference in atmosphere between the valley and the summit. One can tell winter is easing down there, whereas it's still deep winter at the top. What's with the deep river bed? Looks like something out of a mediterranean area. The storm that dumped snow was marginal for snow; it was all snow above 2000 feet but rain mixed in below; that's why there was such a contrast with elevation. Pre-storm, I'd guess the summit had a few inches of old packed snow max. Deep river bed? Steep topography. Why would a mediterranean area have deeper river beds. Added a bit of weather commentary to my post. Btw, found an early April Greylock hike I did post-snow. Was colder, with -12°C temperatures at around 4000 feet ( 875 hPa ) , summit maybe -9°C though maybe a bit less windy than my recent hike. Very different skies, snow looks less deep at the top www.city-data.com/forum/43630655-post668.htmlNice Paris photos, skies look more interesting than your usual winter slate gray, haven't seen a nice convective cloud in a while
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