Category Archives: Weather/Climate

Things We’ll Miss About Israel

As Mrs. Charm, Mr. Boy and I return to Texas today from our 10-day visit to Israel, here are some of the things (a few cribbed from this insider’s list) we’ll miss, in addition to my longtime blog-friend and host Snoopy-the-Goon and his family:

Fresh vegetables for breakfast.

An entire country slowly shutting down and settling into Shabbat around 4 pm, every Friday.

Seeing young children on urban streets after dark, not always accompanied by an adult but unafraid.

The generally friendly people who seldom failed to nod and say “Shalom.”

The supply of beautiful women, with generous decolletage, which never seemed to run out.

Chez Stephanie B&B ski resort (photo above) on the slopes of Mount Hermon where we stayed one night. Wonderfully cool temperatures after much lowland heat and humidity.

The brave young soldiers of the IDF, men and women, black and white, their automatic rifles slung over their shoulders at the mall and on the street. Even hitch-hiking, which they are no longer supposed to do.

Pretty sunsets and puffy clouds which easily rival the Texas ones.

The smell of eucalyptus at Bet She’an in the lower Galilee.

The steep, ancient rock path at Gamla which Mr. Boy’s encouragement (“just a little way more, dad”) finally got me up to the top without a heart attack.

The informal (“individual,” Snoopy says) way most Israelis dress most of the time.

Camel Crossing signs in the mountainous Negev Desert.

The thousands of prayer notes seeking help from God rolled up tightly and stuffed into crevices in the Kotel.

Ice cream on a stick for five shekels (about a dollar).

The funny way some of the lower-domination coins are larger than the higher-denomination ones.

The way drivers sat patiently, without honking, in an almost two-hour traffic jam in Jerusalem caused by forest fires whose smoke blanketed the main highway, but honked repeatedly in the hour-long jam caused by Russian PM Putin’s visit to the city.

Riding the Swiss cable car at Masada.

The hugely-generous buffet supper and breakfast at the Lot Hotel on the Dead Sea, and the colorful flowers in the courtyard at Gil’s Guest Rooms where we actually spent the night—even if the Wi-Fi had a poor signal and kept cutting out.

The round-abouts which make a lot more sense and are easier to use than the four-way stops in the U.S., where no one can remember who is supposed to go first.

Those curious buttons on the tank tops of Israeli toilets: I finally figured out the difference between the two of them shortly before we left.

The juicy cucumbers you can eat like popsicles, without cutting them, one bite at a time.

Diced cucumbers and tomatoes of the ubiquitous Israeli salad.

Red-clay tile roofs on many residences and more all the time.

Roof-top water heaters which make a lot of sense in a country with so much sun. And would in Texas, too.

Sparklers on restaurant birthday cakes.

Home of the Nemos

You know, the clownfish called Nemo. One of their homes would, strangely enough, be the Negev Desert of Southern Israel. Interesting story of aquaculture in the Arava Valley around Eilat. Very industrious people, the Israelis. A great place to visit, despite what the lying liberal news media (War, war, war!) may have you thinking. Check it out.

Why the AGW religion is bull

This graph put together from federal data by Dr. Dewpoint (Joe D’Aleo) at Weather Bell shows the hottest continental U.S. decades (1930s, 1950s, 1910s, and 1980s) came well before sales of the carbon-spewing SUVs that are the radical environmentalists’ favorite culprit for “climate change.”

Course what the pols who babble about Anthropocentric (i.e., human-caused) Global Warming really want is more government control over us and the economy and more tax money to hire more leftist bureaucrats, whom you can bet will be doing something other than altering the climate—if that was even possible.

China’s stance on this nonsense is refreshingly bold: “China will take swift counter-measures that could include impounding European aircraft if the EU punishes Chinese airlines for not complying with its scheme to curb carbon emissions, the China Air Transport Association said on Tuesday.”

Even better is the story behind the North Carolina Legislature’s recent rejection of a state commission’s attempt to impose infrastructure and development restrictions on twenty coastal counties over predicted (without, of course, any evidence) sea-level rises of 39-feet by 2100.

UPDATE:  Bigtime BSer John Kerry rails against AGW critics: “Thomas Paine actually described today’s situation very well,” Kerry said. “As America fought for its independence, he said: ‘It is an affront to treat falsehood with complaisance.’”

I agree. So check out Kerry’s mendacity. While Martha Stewart and others have gone to prison for insider-trading, Kerry does it all the time. Search for his name on the Look Inside feature here to see how he used his insider knowledge to increase his fortune from impending Obamacare legislation.

Sugey Abrego: Rule 5

Noticieros Televisa’s weather presenter Sugey Abrego. Mexican weather forecasting is something else. Might be hard to concentrate on the temps, trends and fronts with her in your face.

Via Planck’s Constant. And Sugey is not alone.

Liquid drought

Our forecast for the week suggests we may beat the anticipated continuation of our drought and get up to four inches of rain by Friday. Got about an inch at the Rancho on Saturday night and more is expected tonight and tomorrow. Moist ground would also lower our daytime temperatures this summer.

Via WeatherBELL

UPDATE:  We got another inch of rain Monday night, with more forecast tonight (Tuesday). As of Thurday night (May 10), with a thunderstorm in progress, we are at more than three inches total. Some places in the Hill Country west of the rancho have logged six inches or more since Saturday night.

By Saturday, May 12, we had finally logged a bit more than four inches, making for a pleasant 80ish afternoon, with similar temps forecast all next week.

Those pathetic climate models

Real scientists (as opposed to those corrupted by the federal dole) know the climate is far too complicated for any computer model yet devised to measure what’s happening today, let alone a hundred years in the future.

Like they say, GIGO:  garbage in, garbage out. So this is not a surprise:

“49 former NASA scientists and astronauts sent a letter to NASA Administrator Charles Bolden last week admonishing the agency for [its] role in advocating a high degree of certainty that man-made CO2 is a major cause of climate change while neglecting empirical evidence that calls the theory into question.”

Read. It. All.

Beautiful Texas

A photographic (and musical) tribute to West Texas—from the Rio Grande to the Palo Duro. By the official Texas state photographer Wyman Meinzer. Take a look.

Via old friend (even if he is a Democrat) Tucker Smallwood.