Weather Alerts
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2023 2:27 pm
... and just in time for a Christmas tree, too!
Torrential downpours and damaging winds left hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses without power in California early on Sunday as the area braced for the next onslaught of severe weather.
More than 560,000 homes were reported to be still without power in California as of 0506 ET (1006 GMT), according to data from PowerOutage.us.
At least six people have died in the severe weather since New Year's weekend, including a toddler killed by a fallen redwood tree crushing a mobile home in northern California.
Forecasters have meanwhile warned yet another "atmospheric river" of dense, moist tropical air will clobber California on Monday with rain and mountain snow.
An NWS weather alert on Saturday warned that the cumulative effect of successive heavy rain storms since late December could bring rivers to record high levels and cause flooding across much of Central California.
My Seattle sister texted me that they were without power for 3 hours today . But, as she added, the Seahawks are in the playoffs!
Yes! Seahawks got the last spot in the playoffs .MN-Skeptic wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 6:34 pm
My Seattle sister texted me that they were without power for 3 hours today . But, as she added, the Seahawks are in the playoffs!
We've had a little more snow than that, but most of the time there's been no snow on the ground. It's not that long ago, this area used to have what was called the January thaw when at the end of the month, we got a warm spell, and all the snow melted and the ice in the rivers broke up, and it flooded here. I'm not sure if I can remember if that has happened more than occasionally (maybe) in the last twenty years.If you’re a snow lover or ski area owner in most of the northeast quadrant of the Lower 48, the situation is bleak.
Below-average snowfall stretches along the entire Interstate 95 corridor from North Carolina to Maine. In Washington, Philadelphia and New York, no measurable snow has fallen.
Interior areas aren’t doing much better. Snowfall in the Allegheny Mountains is running 2 to 3 feet below average. Amounts are also below normal in the Catskills of New York and Green and White mountains of Vermont and New Hampshire.
While snow continues piling up in the West, there are no clear signs the East will see snowier weather in the near future.
Yeah, I think I heard the next round of nastiness is Wednesday afternoon. No power or cable outages, but lucky to live in the part of the valley where most all of it is undergrounds and I rarely loose power. *knocks wood*
My pilot friend warned me a couple of days ago that Wednesday and Thursday were looking to be nasty for windstorms. I lost one tree, but I have a couple of friends who not only lost trees, but one had a tree land on her detached garage, and the other had two trees lose their tops. Both of my friends needed to have cranes come out to remove the trees.
Wichita County and surrounding areas are entering a fire watch because weather conditions are prime for grass fires.
A single spark can start a fire, whether that spark is from a chain dragging under a trailer or the discarded end of a cigarette. Along with dry and windy conditions, the recent drought has caused a lot of dead vegetation, the perfect fuel for wildfires.
“We’ve been under a drought for a while now, the vegetation isn’t doing too good and we’re seeing a lot of dead vegetation,” First Alert Meteorologist Garret James said. “Including grasses, brush, that just would be very easy for a fire to use as fuel to grow and continue to grow until it is a very big fire at that point.”
For Wichita Falls Deputy Fire Chief Donald Hughes, it’s just like any other day. The fire department is always ready to help in the city and surrounding areas.
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) declared a state of emergency, tweeting that tornadoes were confirmed or observed in six counties and possibly near Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, which is the busiest airport in the world.
Ivey (R) declared a state of emergency in six counties. One of those six is Autauga County, where coroner Buster Barber told The Washington Post on Thursday night that emergency workers were still surveying the area but confirmed “we have multiple dead.”
Barber said the storm flipped mobile homes and tore the roof off permanent dwellings. The storm also stymied first responders by collapsing the front end of a fire department, trapping emergency vehicles right when they are needed most.
GOP: "Nothing to see here. Move along."
'Dress like a cabbage': surviving the world's coldest city
Russia's Yakutsk hit by extreme sub-zero temperatures
Sun, January 15, 2023 at 4:09 PM GMT+1
YAKUTSK, Russia (Reuters) - Temperatures have plunged to minus 50 degrees Celsius (-58 Fahrenheit) this week in Yakutsk during an abnormally long cold snap in the Siberian city known as the coldest on earth.
Located 5,000 km (3,100 miles) east of Moscow on the permafrost of the Russian Far East, residents of the mining city often see the thermometer regularly drop well below minus 40.
"You can't fight it. You either adjust and dress accordingly or you suffer," said Anastasia Gruzdeva, outside in two scarves, two pairs of gloves and multiple hats and hoods.
"You don't really feel the cold in the city. Or maybe it's just the brain prepares you for it, and tells you everything is normal," she added in the city shrouded by icy mist.
Another resident, Nurgusun Starostina, who sells frozen fish at a market without the need for a fridge or freezer, said there were no special secrets to deal with the cold.
"Just dress warmly," she said. "In layers, like a cabbage!"
https://www.yahoo.com/news/dress-cabbag ... 49579.html
With the lowest temperature of -67.7°C (-90°F), recorded in 1933, and the average for January being -50°C (-60°F), this village is the coldest permanently inhabited place on this planet.
Yeah. Mrs ado grew up in North Dakota and says her eyelashes would do that in winter. We visited her sister in Bismarck for Christmas years ago. One night it got down to 30 below, so I stepped outside to see what it felt like. PAIN! I stepped back inside very quickly.
I've been to Alaska and northern Norway in the dead of winter. They were freezing, but bearable. Fairbanks was pretty rough in February, though. We went to Fairbanks for an ice carving competition. The port-a-johns were heated!much ado wrote: ↑Sun Jan 15, 2023 5:07 pmYeah. Mrs ado grew up in North Dakota and says her eyelashes would do that in winter. We visited her sister in Bismarck for Christmas years ago. One night it got down to 30 below, so I stepped outside to see what it felt like. PAIN! I stepped back inside very quickly.
Here in the SF Bay Area the coldest so far this winter is 37 F. We get light frost some winters.
Warning of unprecedented heatwaves as El Niño set to return in 2023
Scientists say phenomenon coupled with growing climate crisis likely to push global temperatures ‘off the chart’
Damian Carrington Environment editor
Mon 16 Jan 2023 16.00 GMT
The return of the El Niño climate phenomenon later this year will cause global temperatures to rise “off the chart” and deliver unprecedented heatwaves, scientists have warned.
Early forecasts suggest El Niño will return later in 2023, exacerbating extreme weather around the globe and making it “very likely” the world will exceed 1.5C of warming. The hottest year in recorded history, 2016, was driven by a major El Niño.
It is part of a natural oscillation driven by ocean temperatures and winds in the Pacific, which switches between El Niño, its cooler counterpart La Niña, and neutral conditions. The last three years have seen an unusual run of consecutive La Niña events.
This year is already forecast to be hotter than 2022, which global datasets rank as the fifth or sixth hottest year on record. But El Niño occurs during the northern hemisphere winter and its heating effect takes months to be felt, meaning 2024 is much more likely to set a new global temperature record.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... ate-crisis