Category Archives: Weather

Space Aliens May Have Caused The Cold Snap

That makes about as much sense as the garbage purveyed by the usual news media suspects (NPR, cBS, etc.) that this latest example of extreme weather may be caused by global warming.

University of Washington meteorologist Cliff Mass succinctly puts their reporting where it belongs: among the fairy stories we heard as children. He does have a bit more concern about AGW than the other meteorologists I respect, but he shows that extreme weather is not, in fact, a trend:

“The media needs to stop pushing this unsupported argument.”

Happily, things already are warming up at the rancho, with highs in the 70s expected by the weekend. How sweet it will be. Of course we are pretty far south.

UPDATE:  Joe Bastardi at Weather Bell adds this funny: “The cause for the cold this winter so far was outlined long ago. Yet many media outlets are seriously taking the idea that AGW is causing this as something to consider. Its as if every single event that has happened before [’77 & ’85], doesnt count. How the heck did it get so cold before?”

MORE:  Wormtongue’s “science” adviser pushes the bogus extreme weather meme. But of course. Gotta grow those taxes.

Bubbles in the deep freeze

Syrup-soap bubbles blown at 16 degrees F (-9 C) freeze, then melt. Pretty cool photos of the process here. One way to have fun with the deep-freeze. No, not at the rancho. It’s only 25 F here this morning—cold enough for us, though.

Rule 5: Beach bunny

Simon Bolz, www.simonbolz.com

Another bid for warm in cold, cold temps. We can dream, right? Click to biggerize for more, uh, detail.

Hard freeze impending

“Stay safe in the central [U.S.]- the next few day[s] will be brutal.”

That’s Joe D’Aleo at Weatherbell, adding to the warnings of regional meteorologists forecasting fourteen hours of below freezing temps for us, starting sometime later this evening. Which we call a hard freeze because we don’t get many of them this far south.

Tonight’s low is forecast to be 23 degrees and Monday night’s just 19 degrees. Hopefully, the air will warm up in between those lows.

Goodbye to the elephant ears in the rancho’s front beds. But they’ll bounce back from the roots in the spring I expect. And as long as the power stays on, we’ll be fine. We could rely on the gas log in the fireplace, if necessary, but we’d rather not.

Sick of the damned cold

It feels like it’s been a month since the temperature rose above 45 degrees, though it hasn’t been quite a week yet. But I’m thoroughly sick of it. Sick of living in Little WisconTex, with the temp falling into the 20s every night.

Thanks to help from my IT guru, aka The Fat Guy, at least the Scribbler finally has a home that’s not vulnerable to Yahoo!: what you see here is it, the good Lord willin’ and the creeks don’t rise—if they did they’d just freeze over anyhow.

We’ve transferred all the posts, comments, and media back to infinity and beyond (actually 2006) from Ye Olde Scribbler, so, as Darkwater wanted, the Rule 5 catalogue (among others) should be intact.

As for Ye Olde, she hasn’t been scuttled over the Mariana Trench yet, but that’s coming. So if you’re feeling sentimental, go say goodbye. And if you could bring us some proper, early December, 70-degree weather, I’d be forever grateful.

Winters are turning colder

We’ve had four severe winters in the past decade in North America and this one is shaping up as a repeat performance. Not that you’d know that from paying attention to the Non-Fox news media or reading the dictator’s club’s annual crock on global warming.

But the good Joe D’Aleo at Weather Bell Analytics has a interesting take on those winters that began in 2002/03: “Most of the media seem to be obsessed with extremes of heat, completely ignoring cold weather extremes, despite these apparently being on the rise and despite the IPCC’s science failing to offer an explanation for them. In fact, the IPCC extreme weather events table projects ‘fewer cold days and frost in future’.”

I remember 2002/03 because we lived in a drafty old shiplap house on a ridgeline in Travis Heights where the windows rattled when the wind blew. And it blew hard that winter. This year, our tenth in the stone-and-siding rancho in a small valley in Northwest Hills, is starting out to be just as frigid and windy. Unusually cold for this time of year, but it was last year and the year before also.

Purely anecdotally, our Central Tejas winters do seem to be getting colder. Used to be November and December were mild with only the occasional cold front passage of a few days. January was our only killer cold month and February was the warmup. I’m getting nostalgic just writing that.

Let’s all hope the future is nothing like Larry Niven’s Fallen Angels. We don’t need a glacier whose leading edge is 400-feet high and moving, well, glacially, through what was once called Missouri.

Gusty wind could promote ice

Weather Bell Analytic meteorologist Joe Bastardi says our wind of 16 gusting to 22 mph could make us more prone to an ice storm. If it continues as the temp drops to 24 tonight.

“Deep in the Heart of Texas, the hideous specter of the ice storm is rearing its ugly head. Since the wind is blowing while precip is falling, the heating of the air that occurs through the freezing process of water is negated by evaporation due to wind…The heart of Texas will be cold and unforgiving in this pattern the next 3-5 days.”

Hasn’t happened yet. But if it does, we may be off the air, since ice buildup tends to bring down power lines, or over-weight and bring down adjacent trees which fall on the lines.