PLACE YOUR BETS!!!!
Dogs, no problem. Cats, ehhhhhh. Just as long as it doesn't pour rattlesnakes
Sorry for the doom and gloom report - but hey, for now, let's just see if we can see more snow this year, foot by foot...
http://sanmarino.patch.com/groups/edito ... s_d7b6b4fb
Snowfall in the San Gabriel Mountains could drop 30 to 40 percent by mid-century, according to a new UCLA study
The more detailed report...
http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/uc ... 46820.aspx
- cougarmagic
- Posts: 1409
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2008 5:21 pm
I say, ENSO neutral this winter. A whole lotta La Nada.
500mb chart........wtz dat? Dallas cant even hit a 7 day forecast anymore.
More humid, more thunderbumpers, not when or where needed, tho
More lightning sparked fires..thats not been seen in these parts by me in long time.
yea,lets pave another mega mall parking lot...........
Mother Nature is slowly getting even............
IMHO....of course
More humid, more thunderbumpers, not when or where needed, tho
More lightning sparked fires..thats not been seen in these parts by me in long time.
yea,lets pave another mega mall parking lot...........
Mother Nature is slowly getting even............
IMHO....of course
- moppychris
- Posts: 87
- Joined: Mon Sep 07, 2009 12:56 pm
My theory..
We've had a lot of summer blooms and fruit on plants that seldom produce any fruit or blooms. I am talking about the joshua tree yucca, gooseberry, wax currants, elderberries and thimbleberries. Spring 2013, Joshua trees had an extreme bloom, the biggest in 30 something years, according to what I heard from a ranger and articles. Summer 2013, I have seen more thimbleberries and elderberries in the Gabes, Berns and Sierra than I have ever seen before. These plants must be producing mass amounts of seeds and fruit because they know a big rain is coming.
Or.. I could be thinking too much. It could just be Obama's fault.
We've had a lot of summer blooms and fruit on plants that seldom produce any fruit or blooms. I am talking about the joshua tree yucca, gooseberry, wax currants, elderberries and thimbleberries. Spring 2013, Joshua trees had an extreme bloom, the biggest in 30 something years, according to what I heard from a ranger and articles. Summer 2013, I have seen more thimbleberries and elderberries in the Gabes, Berns and Sierra than I have ever seen before. These plants must be producing mass amounts of seeds and fruit because they know a big rain is coming.
Or.. I could be thinking too much. It could just be Obama's fault.
I can't subscribe to any theory that ascribes clairvoyance to a plant. This article posits a more realistic theory: that the unusual blooms are a stress response to less rain than normal.moppychris wrote: ↑My theory ... These plants must be producing mass amounts of seeds and fruit because they know a big rain is coming.