Originally Posted by displacedinMN:
With the amount of water heading south, and this potentially adding to it--the army corpse is going to be busy.
Shit, after 4 decades of hunting ducks on the Missouri River, I can guarantee you they just pull levers as they see fit. More than a couple of dozen times we've had to chase down decoys, move our duck blinds due to raising our the lowering of water.
They have apparently modified their "master manual" after the 2011 flood, so that much I will give them. [Reply]
Originally Posted by displacedinMN:
No kidding. After 4 years of drought, we want the rain to stop. A lot of mess out there. And it looks like we are stuck in that pattern.
It will be interesting to see where Beryl ends up. Does it cross Mex or when does it decide to curl North. So many possibilities.
With the amount of water heading south, and this potentially adding to it--the army corpse is going to be busy.
Warning: the entire west coast is extremely hot this week. After they get done dick slobbering hurricane Beryl as being the earliest hurricane 4 and 5 on record, they'll turn to that. [Reply]
Originally Posted by ptlyon:
Warning: the entire west coast is extremely hot this week. After they get done dick slobbering hurricane Beryl as being the earliest hurricane 4 and 5 on record, they'll turn to that.
LATEST July 5, 4:09 p.m. Palm Springs’ record high temperature of 123 degrees was broken Friday, the National Weather Service confirmed over the phone to SFGATE. Though the organization won’t officially record it as a record-breaking temperature until 5 p.m. Friday, the temperature reading taken at 3:53 p.m., which represents the hourly high, showed a temperature of 124 degrees, the organization said. [Reply]
LATEST July 5, 4:09 p.m. Palm Springs’ record high temperature of 123 degrees was broken Friday, the National Weather Service confirmed over the phone to SFGATE. Though the organization won’t officially record it as a record-breaking temperature until 5 p.m. Friday, the temperature reading taken at 3:53 p.m., which represents the hourly high, showed a temperature of 124 degrees, the organization said.
Sacramento's previous high for today was 105.
It's currently 106 and the forecast was expected to be ~111, so a considerable jump in the record. Although I'm not sure if it is going to get that hot or not. [Reply]