Category Archives: Weather/Climate

Be Green like Gore

Thanks to Iowahawk:

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Complete with Flickr stickers. Via Instapundit.

Dust storms

It’s just windy in Central Texas today, with what trees were still clinging to brown leaves losing them over the Rancho. But there are wildfire warnings out because the humidity’s low and the vegetation is dry, and a fire seems to have hit Fort Hood. But it’s worse elsewhere in the state.

"The winds kicked up the dust across North Texas, turning skies brown and cutting visibility to less than a mile in some places. The dust storm extended from Lubbock to North Texas."

Mr. B.’s grandmother called to wish him Happy Birthday, and then told of the dust storm in Fort Worth, so it’s at least that far south of Lubbock. Then a friend told us of some brush fires along Interstate 35 near Buda, south of Austin.

UPDATE  Cool North Texas dust storm slideshow, via LCRA’s Bob Rose. 

Looking for a flood

Area meteorologists aren’t enthusiastic about the prospects of a rainy spring, as El Nino bows out and La Nina walks downstage. Bob Rose certainly sees no more than light showers late tomorrow:

"While this is typically a fairly dry time of the year, the overall pattern seems to have shifted back toward dry after a period of rain in January.  With most storm systems being too weak or tracking too far to the north, I’m not confident we’ll see a wet period return anytime soon."

So, even though the marina wants a new annual contract, the boat remains practically inaccessible on vanishing Lake Travis. That’s Texas, long periods of drought broken by intense flooding. I’m ready.

Bypassing spring…

…and going straight to summer. It’s forecast to hit 82 degrees today, according to the National Weather Service, for what surely has to be the first time in three or four months. I’ll have to check this out. But that sounds right.

UPDATE  It’s 80 degrees in the city at 2:30 p.m. KVUE’s Mark Murray says Saturday is the last average freeze day for the area, but some cold Canadian air could arrive late next week to change that. Rather have rain, but none to speak of forecast yet. 

Christmas in February…

…in the sense that greeting card makers say Valentine’s Day encourages enough card-sending to rival Christmas, and florists and candymakers also prosper. It’s also a holiday of Christian origin, which may explain some official Muslim hostility to it, being the execution date of Saint Valentine, an early Christian martyr. And there’s some pagan influence, as the day falls on the old Roman Empire’s date of the annual love lotteries of the fertility festival:

"On the eve of the festival of Lupercalia the names of Roman girls were written on slips of paper and placed into jars. Each young man would draw a girl’s name from the jar and would then be partners for the duration of the festival with the girl whom he chose. Sometimes the pairing of the children lasted an entire year, and often, they would fall in love and would later marry."

Fortunately, there’s still time to buy a card, candy or flowers if you’ve forgotten. Which is not likely if you’ve been married more than a year, or have young children. Mr. Boy, for instance, was so enthusiastic about it this year that he chipped in $2 of his own funds to get Mom a stuffed bear as well as a card and flowers. Though Mom is of Welsh descent, fortunately that was a long time ago, so we’re not required to carve any wooden love spoons for her.

UPDATE  For you lucky folks in the Northeast, Alan at Fresh Bilge is posting (and periodically refreshing) satellite radar images of the (possibly historic) Valentine’s Day Blizzard. Brrr. 

Winter still, and dry

Another very cold morning at the Rancho. Winter should be almost over for us by now, but we aquired some more arctic air overnight which looks to be hanging around right on through the weekend, according to the Lower Colorado River Authority’s chief meteorologist Bob Rose. And, thanks to  the subtropical jet being away without leave, it’s dry, dry, dry.

"This feature (the jet), which helped pull rain and storms from the eastern Pacific to Texas in January, has diminished over the past couple of weeks.  It may be associated with the rapid weakening of El Nino…or it could just be a part of the transition from winter into spring. In any event, weather conditions have turned dry across Central Texas and it looks like it will be at least another week before a chance for rain returns to the forecast."

Rest at Bob’s new blog here

More drought ahead

That’s the apparent forecast, according to KVUE chief meteorologist Mark Murray, and the latest data on the El Nino Southern Oscillation, which is oscillating in an unfortunate (for us) direction:

"These trends in surface and subsurface ocean temperatures indicate that the warm episode (El Niño) is weakening. It is still possible for some areas to experience El Niño-related effects during the next month, primarily in the region of the central tropical Pacific."

One supposes that the normal (i.e. non-El Nino) Central Texas spring could still bring us abundant rainfall by the end of May-June, but Mark didn’t seem too optimistic about it when we spoke last night. Lake Travis remains really low, and its manager, the Lower Colorado River Authority, recently took the unprecedented step of denying what remains of its water to Texas rice farmers down on the coast.