Somewhere, behind space and time, Is wetter water, slimier slime
Somewhere, behind space and time, Is wetter water, slimier slime
It's coming in wetter and windier than expected over Northern California.
I have no insight on it. I don't know what to say. What's been unusual for this season is the number of consecutive days of rainfall. That hasn't happened before. We've had wetter Marches, but we haven't had a string of day after day of rainfall like this.
Not much was going wrong. It's usually colder and wetter, and the longest of the courses. But with the weather, this is the shortest it has played.
But somewhere, beyond Space and Time, Is wetter water, slimier slime; And there (they trust) there swimmeth One; Who swam ere rivers were begun, Immense, of fishy form and mind, Squamous, omnipotent, and kind.
June was much cooler and wetter than normal. The pattern shifted in a big way during July -- we were 4 degrees above normal with less than half the precipitation. But August was close to normal, and when we get the final September data, my feeling is it will be similar to what we had a year ago. So again, that could mean a wetter year with more runoff. But again, that's only if you're looking at trends.
The collective impact of power plants is their contribution to greenhouse gases which would cause warmer and wetter or warmer and dryer conditions. It is likely that the warmer weather would increase the loss of moisture to the atmosphere more than the slightly increased precipitation will add to the overall water balance creating a net moisture deficit.
The link is very important and it is also important to link it back to the Black Death in the 1300s because there were the kind of weather conditions then -- warmer and wetter -- that we predict for the future,
It's a cold, dry miserable place today. But we have got these tantalizing clues that, in the past, it used to be warmer and wetter,
This winter will be warmer and drier than usual in the southern half of the U.S., wetter and stormier in the Pacific Northwest and the Great Lakes down into the Ohio River Valley,
It's too early to tell. The bigger factor now is the weather. The longer, wetter rainy season makes deciphering what's happening difficult.
All the indicators are neutral right now, so our ability to forecast long-range is weak. But there are ways to look at it. If we look at this from a cyclical standpoint, we may be in a wetter pattern.
It's going to turn the land into a marsh for the people who live on the end of the street touching the river. We already get wetter than what other parts of the county are used to, but once you start building and moving all that dirt around I can only assume its going to impact those houses.
© 2020 Inspirational Stories
© 2020 Inspirational Stories