Category Archives: Weather/Climate

Our drought and brushfires

Our heatwave is continuing, fueled by our drought, which the meteorologists say is the third worst October to April dry period since 1856—when the reliable record keeping began.

We’re in the 70s at night and 90s during the day, which is very unusual for April. Reason seems to be that the ground is so dry that, instead of absorbing some of the daily UV,  it’s radiating it back into the atmosphere, heating up the air.

Brush fires are becoming common and high winds are making some of them dangerous. A neighborhood in Southwest Austin lost almost a dozen homes to a brush fire the other day. No fires yet where we live, though we do have some brush (in a dry creekbed) a block or so away.

So I have a garden hose connected out front at the rancho where I usually don’t have one. May, on average, is our wettest month. So maybe….

Khamsin

Snoopy says the Rehovot area is enduring its first major Khamsin wind of the year.

It’s sunny and a scorching 97 degrees F there at 1 p.m. and forecast to reach 101. Then (“…as it is mysteriously traditional on Passover”) to fall back into the 70s daily tomorrow with overnight lows in the 50s through Friday.

Texas and Israel, a lot alike

These wildflowers on the Golan Heights this time of year remind me how much alike the Texas hill country and Israel are, because we’re approximately on the same latitude and our climates are similar. Our wildflowers also are coming out all over, and although it’s getting steadily warmer, an occasional cold front  still blows through every now and then.

The Golan’s wind was icy on March 29, when we spent the night up there in a Moshav’s (religious community’s) B&B. The overhead lights in my unit quit late in the evening, but the room heaters kept working. Thankfully.

It was like the Davis Mountains of West Texas, except that the Golan is a three thousand feet higher in elevation than the rest of Israel. The Davis Mountains, which are suffering wild fires this spring due to our severe drought, are between five and six thousand feet above sea level.

Global warming

“Never have so few fooled so many for so long, ever.” — Ninad D. Sheth

Via Soylent Green

All’s well in Israel

I’m still jet-lagged, which means I yawn all day, but am trying to stick to Snoopy’s advice of not taking naps and waiting until 10 p.m. to go to bed.

A world traveler himself, he says the jet lag may linger until I’m ready to go home. I hope not, but if so, I’ll deal with it.

Weather here is mild, chilly nights, warmish days. Forecast is for warming into the 80s by Monday or so.

I managed to get sunburned yesterday at Caesarea, north of Tel Aviv, beside the Mediterranean surf. Interesting Roman, Byzantine, Arab, and Crusader ruins. Lots of Russian, Canadian and Japanese tourists. Snoop says there are fewer non-Jewish American tourists these days because of what Israelis call “the situation,” which speaks for itself. Though most of the country is peaceful and very green this time of year.

So far we have been to Ben-Gurion’s desert home at Kibbutz Sde Boker, in the Negev, where it actually rained while we were there, for a wonder. Rainfall there averages a little better than an inch a year. Lots of vineyards, however. Grapes grow well there.

Then yesterday, after Caesarea, Snoop’s connections (he is a physicist, his wife is a chemist) got us a tour of the Weizmann Institute, which does basic scientific research in a variety of fields. We saw the Weizvac, Israel’s first computer, which ran on vacuum tubes, and its successor, the smaller but more powerful Golem, built two years before the discovery of the transistor, which led to where we are today—posting travelogues on the Web.

Today we’re off to the Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv, to try to get a handle on a possible Portuguese Jewish ancestor of mine, and later, sightseeing in the port city of Jaffa. Tomorrow a longer drive to the Golan Heights, stopping along the way at Tiberias and Safed, near the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), for some old synagogues I want to see.

Once I figure out how to download some photos onto this little Dell netbook of mine (assuming it has enough memory) I’ll try to post a picture.

RVs and cold don’t mix

Now that it’s back down in the teens again tonight at the rancho, I can better identify with these RV problems in North Texas: frozen water tank, dead space heaters, and ice on the windows.

A propane heater and Weller bourbon seems to have helped, though. Here, well, EMS cataloged 233 ice incidents today, mostly traffic accidents but also some falls with broken hips and head injuries. Me? I’m curled up with a good book, Peter Hamilton’s space opera Judas Unchained.

Hot rain

On good old Sol, where else? It’s an impressive video of plasma on the sun.