The current drought in the US is quite ordinary, and the US has seen many similar or worse droughts over the last century.
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- “Climate dread is everywhere”
- “The Atmosphere Is ‘Thirstier.’”
- Skynet Becomes Self Aware
- “We Have To Vote For It So That You Can See What’s In It”
- Diversity Is Our Strength
- “even within the lifetime of our children”
- 60 Years Of Progress in London
- The Anti-Greta
- “a persistent concern”
- Deadliest US Tornado Days
- The Other Side Of The Pond
- “HEMI V8 Roars Back”
- Big Pharma Sales Tool
- Your Tax Dollars At Work
- 622 billion tons of new ice
- Fossil Fuels To Turn The UK Tropical
- 100% Tariffs On Chinese EV’s
- Fossil Fuels Cause Fungus
- Prophets Of Doom
- The Green New Deal Lives On
- Mission Accomplished!
- 45 Years Ago Today
- Solution To Denver Homelessness
- Crime In Colorado
- Everything Looks Like A Nail
Recent Comments
- conrad ziefle on “The Atmosphere Is ‘Thirstier.’”
- conrad ziefle on “Climate dread is everywhere”
- Trevor on “The Atmosphere Is ‘Thirstier.’”
- Peter Carroll on “The Atmosphere Is ‘Thirstier.’”
- arn on “Climate dread is everywhere”
- arn on Skynet Becomes Self Aware
- Bob G on Skynet Becomes Self Aware
- arn on Skynet Becomes Self Aware
- arn on “The Atmosphere Is ‘Thirstier.’”
- Bob G on Skynet Becomes Self Aware
Well done, Steve. A picture (or pictures) is worth a thousand words.
looks like “normal” cycles of wet and dry to me….but obviously, i’m a skeptic so I cannot possibly see the bigger picture…/sarc
Those places that are having their January drought this year are normally very dry in winter. One or two good spring rains will take care of that, but the danger is that they might cause droughtflood rather than breaking the drought!