My new podcast is now online.
You will learn about two major wet periods ahead, Sunday and Tuesday, with the potential for thunderstorms on the latter. Before it is over, much of western Washington could receive 1-2 inches of rain, which is a lot for June.
And in the podcast, I explain the cause of Sunday's wet weather: a potent atmospheric river extending northeastward out of the tropics. Also of interest, we might break some dew point records on Sunday, resulting in a relatively "sticky" experience west of the Cascade crest.
You can listen to my podcast below or use your favorite streaming service.
And more on Tuesday (see below), particularly over Washington State. And if this is right, the rain will be a great help east of the Cascade crest.
Here is my podcast:
I took a look at the drought monitor map for the state and noticed that the band of rainfall stretching across SE Washington overlays fairly nicely with the areas currently identified as driest.
ReplyDeleteHi Cliff, I'm still hoping for some analysis of data due to the 2020 shutdown and CO2. Seems like we should now see a pattern relating to the global energy budget: Emissions vs Atmospheric. Here's the analysis I've run: https://www.desmos.com/calculator/d7z3hkf5lh. -.09 correlation between the yearly moving average of CO2 emissions and Atmospheric CO2. Compiled data: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HepMCqKGy7LEwpEJZRqlMhp3esU6GjE0qHhGfFXHhm0/edit?usp=sharing
ReplyDeleteWow, someone ginned up a table and a scattergram!
DeleteSummer rain in the Columbia basin is useless. It does nothing but moisten the top inch of the dirt for an hour before it evaporates.
ReplyDeleteRight, and of course it has no impact on moisture in the grasslands. LOL
DeleteAlways remember - no matter how much precipitation falls at anytime of the year or how much the snowpack is at any given moment, it's always doom for humanity.
DeleteToo hot? Global warming.
DeleteToo cold? Global warming.
Just right? Global warming.
Too wet? Global warming.
Too dry? Global warming.
Normal year? Global warming.
It's a crisis alright, but not the one they think it is.
Bring on the thunderstorms!
ReplyDeleteShelf Cloud (?) over Port Madison and Bainbridge Is this morning, looking south towards Rainier (not shown)
ReplyDeletehttp://kitsap.whigdev.com/upload/photos/2021/06/ZglQc891C8osuNqIm48A_13_3f12d5eee65c88dbd0fc5eaae0f775d9_image.jpg
It's not even raining in Seattle today!
ReplyDeleteMuggy, but slightly too cool for air conditioning. Definitely dehumidifier weather.
ReplyDeleteHardly dehumidifier weather for an East Coaster. In fact it was just humid enough so I could sail my boat in shorts this weekend without freezing to death, despite the rain, and sleep under only one blanket.
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