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Weather rules our lives, and at times, ends our lives. Perhaps this is less true for computer conferencers, unless they are caught clutching the keyboard during a lightening strike. The Nature of this item is: What is the weather like right now, where you are? How has weather influenced you? How has weather dramatically or subtly affected you in a specific instance?
14 responses total.
It's too dang hot. I really detest summer. Still it seems petty to complain about this when Alberto has flooded out a good portion of the state of Georgia, and the dry summer has ignited the forests in the Colorado Rockies.
Agreed. I work in Detroit. This week has been alternating high heat/humidity and rain/lightening blasts. In the city it is hard to see where the weather is coming from if you are buried indoors or amongst buildings, but my exposure to it is not buffered much, as my building leaks and, eventually, floods. Upstairs is an old many-windowed warehouse that stores heat as well as anything else; imagine walking inside a hot air balloon. I wasn't thinking about Georgia and Colorado directly when I started this item, and so that remark I made about "weather" taking lives was more immediately appropriate than I realized. About a week ago I was in Worth County, South Georgia. While traveling to Sylvester, Ga. for a two day stay, we crossed the Flint River a short time before arriving. Of course, being from Michigan, we duly noted the coincidence of a local name. I owe a letter to someone there, and since learning that 14,000 people have been evacuated from the region of the Flint River in Georgia, and since I have learned that the Flint River is 30 feet above flood stage, I know this region is feeling the effect of the "weather" acutely. My letter will certainly offer sympathy and an inquiry of well being...in addition to my routine purpose. Incidentally, I don't always feel sympathy for people choosing to live in a flood plain, or thinking that channeling a river is the surest way to "control" it. I recently read in "Game Wars" by Marc Reisner that Louisiana is losing thousands of acres of wetlands annually because channeled and dammed Mississippi water is a) dumping its silt load at the mouth of the river instead of overflowing to spread silt and create, or sustain land, and b) dams upstream act to a certain extent as silt traps by creating giant settling ponds. In any event, the Flint River in Georgia is said to be in full flood, with its waters pouring out among the forested lands. The trees and surrounding landscape actually serve to slow and disperse the flood waters, rather than pass the flood tide on downstream as with a channelized river. The fires in Colorado brought to my mind the book "Young Men In Fire" by Norman Maclean who wrote "A River Runs Through It". The book is about the Mann's Gulch Fire in the 1930's that killed a number of young firefighters in Montana. This very personal book offers an interesting look at the little or mis-understood connection between weather, topography and fire.
This is from Merit's current "Weather Underground". Maybe we could get a regular feed, and read the weather reports here? (I've edited this to save space.) THIS AFTERNOON...PARTLY SUNNY. A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS... MAINLY LATE. HIGH IN THE MID TO UPPER 80S. SOUTH WIND 10 TO 20 MPH. TONIGHT...THUNDERSTORMS LIKELY. SOME STORMS MAY CONTAIN HEAVY RAIN... HAIL... AND GUSTY WINDS. LOW 65 TO 70. SOUTH WIND 10 TO 15 MPH... BECOMING SOUTHWEST. CHANCE OF RAIN 60 PERCENT. SATURDAY...PARTLY SUNNY. A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. HIGH IN THE LOWER TO MID 80S. EXTENDED FORECAST... SUNDAY...SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE MID 50S TO LOWER 60S NORTH... AND THE 60S TO AROUND 70 SOUTH. HIGHS IN THE 70S NORTH... AND THE LOWER TO MID 80S SOUTH. MONDAY...SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHEAST. DRY NORTH AND WEST. LOWS IN THE 50S TO AROUND 60. HIGHS IN THE MID 70S TO AROUND 80. TUESDAY...DRY. LOWS IN THE MID 50S TO AROUND 60. HIGHS IN THE MID 70S TO AROUND 80.
The Mann Gulch fire was in 1949. NPR had an item about "Young Men In Fire" on the news this afternoon. I didn't know you could feed something like the weather forecast into a conference..this sounds like a job for an expert! Remember that I am looking for personal experiences and impressions as well, although the weather service data would make a great baseline, at least for the AA area. Anything else would be overload in our poor little conference perhaps. For other areas, I would like impressions from various Grex members from around the world. Last night I saw members from Germany and Italy and who-knows-where else logged on. It would be interesting to read from them a short item of weather description. Sort of reinforces the idea that we can have discourse day and night, winter and summer, (any south of the equator members?) etc. etc. all at once in cyberspace. I may write a J Nature and describe the weather response in "other conferences" item over in Agora.
"Everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it." - Charles Dudley Warner Relative, mwarner?
Is this better? Downloaded from Compuserve - but as a PICT. Had to copy into text (is there a utility to convert a PICT of text to text?) Melborne, AUS Currently it is mostly cloudy with a temperature of 5C/41F. The wind chill is 3C/38F. The relative humidity is 92%. Winds are from the northeast at 9 kph/6mph. Sunday's forecast: Some sunshine. High 13C/56F. Low 9C/48F.
Very refreshing indeed: As in, should this be linked to the Saturday Walk Item? Does Barry's Bagel's have a Melborne outlet?
That should be Melbourne. Further to the Compuserve source - the weather and forecast were stated to the *copyrighted*. In addition, Compuserve disabled all Menus, so I could not Save Selection. Instead, I captured it with Flash It, in Marquee mode, as a PICT file. I presume that a PICT can be copyrighted, but certainly not the information.
Weather here today in my part of NC: Partly sunny, partly stormy with thunder and rain coming and going. Temps in the 80s with, of course, humidity. Rather mild for this time of year. And green, too.
We've been watering the lawn furiously for the last month and hoping that eventually it may rain here in AA.
We have been letting the lawn become dormant. It's pretty brown but doesn't need mowing. It's absolutly amazing how quickly it turns green when it gets some water!
I don't water my lawn either. The grass just hunkers down and turns a nice shade of brown - a pleasant contrast with all the other green. I was observing the grass-watering practices in Colorado, last week. Most people don't bother. It is surprising to see selective watering of patches of grass along major streets. You wouldn't know then that water is a scarce commodity (of course, the Front Range communities are stealing a lot of water across the Continental Divide, parching the Southwest more than it would be).
It's Indian Summer right now, but we're not enjoying it. Paul and Mom playing GO.
Maybe they should GO outside and enjoy the weather.
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