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priceless!
Published on Dec 31, 2014 “… South Coast Winery Resort & Spa: Snow Levels fell below 2000 ft on December 31st, 2014 in Temecula, CA. This video was taken around 6:40 AM. Wine Country was full of snow. The foothills and mountains fully covered in snow….”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1x0eKfHxv0
Temecula, CA. lat. 33.5° N Elevation, 1,017 ft
Los Angeles, California, Lat. 34.05° N Elevation 233′ (71 m)
Temecula, CA. is inland from San Clemente
About the elevation of Lakeside. I wonder if they got some?
This can’t be good for the grape vines there. Temecula is normally semi-arid, which makes it a great place for wineries.
Yes, yet rainfall in SC is still well be low normal, and in the winter cold T is fine for the vines.
Snow in San Diego
http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/Fallbrook-Temecula-Murrietta-See-Rare-Dusting-of-Snow-287212191.html
One of these days your sense of humor is going to get you in trouble . . .
O/T Massive 50-car pileup in New Hampshire
These would be the people returning home from a skiing trip to the mountains over the holidays. A trip I made on weekends quite often and my in-laws make now. 93 is a four lane and normally very well kept. (Also bumper to bumper on weekends and that was 20 years ago.)
http://www.aol.com/article/2015/01/02/snow-leads-to-50-car-chain-reaction-pileup-on-new-hampshire-highway/21123651/?icid=maing-grid7%7Chp-desktop%7Cdl1%7Csec1_lnk2%26pLid%3D592295
http://www.necn.com/news/new-england/50-Car-Pileup-Reported-on-I-93-in-New-Hampshire-287337161.html
Cold wave and frost in Algeria: remote villages, there are dead and wounded.
Snow algeriaL’ondata frost and heavy snowfall that hit these days the Kabylie of Algeria claimed the lives of six people and injuring another 20. According to the press of Algiers are 17 isolated villages with many roads cut off. 15 are instead the homes collapsed due to the snow and the army ‘already’ intervened in the area to help the local population where there are power outages.
A village in eastern Algeria and ‘isolated for five days due to heavy snowfall affecting the area. According to reports from the Algerian newspaper “El Khabar”, the villagers of Amara, in the province of Oran, have requested the intervention of the army after the road that connects the capital with the eastern Algerian Tlemecen and ‘still closed. The fear and ‘today may burst accidents after the local population threatened revolt. In recent days there are already ‘held sit-in spontaneous, blockades and protests over the collapse of a building that caused the evacuation of six families.
http://www.meteoweb.eu/2015/01/freddo-gelo-in-algeria/372641/
I need a little off-topic help if anyone would be so kind today. I have lost my figures on this issue and google is not helping today.
I would like to compare the maximum temperature of the moon’s surface with that of the earth’s surface. I can find a figure of 123C for the moon (253F) but can’t seem to find anything on how hot the earth can get. I assume the maximum temperature of the surface would be at the equator on a sandy beach but don’t know if that is right. Anyone have reliable figures on this?
http://www.extremescience.com/hottest.htm
The above link claims that the surface temperature of earth sometimes gets up to 66C (150F). Can that be right?
Some data here from NASA which might be of interest
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/
Thanks for that link.
It did get up to 57 C (134 F) at Furnace Creek in Death Valley over 100 years ago. Think that is right up there at the top for the earth too?
If I remember correctly Algeria beat that record but it was later declared ‘unofficial’ WUWT covered the issue.
I knew there was something tickling my mind that prevented me from stating absolutely it was the world record though I knew it was for a long time. Perhaps that’s why I’m still not sure if that temp remains tops. I’d guess that it has been hotter somewhere on earths surface since thermometers have been around but we just haven’t had the instruments at the right place at the right time. And personally I have no interest in getting them to the likely places that could get hotter than Death Valley.
I am sure that a google search will give you better details, but the world record which has stood for decades was voided by the official organization. Looking at the logs for the recorded temperature at that spot in the Sahara Desert, it became quite apparent that the recorder had transpose a couple of digits which gave that record. Eventually, when comparing temperatures before and after, and when comparing temperatures nearby, the recorded temperature was not credible.
By the way, that Sahara Desert record stood for 90 years. It was in Libya, not Algeria. The world record has returned to Death Valley: 134 degrees on July 10, 1913, over a hundred years ago
Sorry, I have been reading too many stories about the snow in Algeria.
Too much Happy in the New year. 😉
Wasn’t that Libya?
According to this Article it looks like the Met office might not of gotten Obama’s message that 2014 WOULD BE the hottest year Evah!
Forget global warming – it’s Cycle 25 we need to worry about (and if NASA scientists are right the Thames will be freezing over again)
Met Office releases new figures which show no warming in 15 years
WHAT!?! Did I read that correctly the temperatures have FALLEN 1/2 degree?
Sounds like a few scientists are tippy toeing away from CAGW.
……
Interesting that the 100 car pile-up in New Hampshire made the UK news as well as snowmobilers digging out a moose that got caught in an avalanche in Alaska, but nothing on the snow all around the Mediterranean.
The only headline is this: More than 1,000 migrants saved trying to cross the Mediterranean in the last 24 hours before Christmas… and five found dead: Still more desperate refugees attempt the deadly crossing to Europe from Africa
The timing is righ according to the sunspot recordst:
http://iceagenow.info/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Sunspot-Curves-Wolf-Numbers.jpg
Being an American history buff I can’t but put a little historical spin on the Dalton Minimum.
The American revolution occurred during the Dalton minimum Most people have learned how rough the winter was for Washington’s troops at Valley Forge. But most probably don’t remember the winter miracle of Frank Knox hauling the 600 tons of cannons the 300 miles from Ft. Ticonderoga to Boston on sledges over mountains, lakes, and across rivers to get them to Boston for the siege. Wouldn’t have been possible if many of the unbridged or inadequately bridged bodies of water hadn’t been frozen solid. And bodies of water that were not normally frozen solid were during the colder winters of the Dalton Minimum. Nor do they probably know that actually that when Washington wintered his Army in Morristown, NJ it was considerably colder than it was at Valley Forge. Nor have they considered that had not Washington attacked Trenton when he did the Delaware would have frozen solid enough within a few weeks for the British to have marched right across and destroyed his rag tag remnants of an Army.
I was just think of this type of evidence. Some guy by the name of Greg House over at Jo Nova’s is saying
“…, I have not seen a single scientific evidence of climate change yet….”
Guess the guy has never heard of newspapers, diaries, journals and all the other first had eye witness accounts not to mention sea cores and pollen counts…
Having lived in the New York finger lakes area and then next to a glacial terminal moraine (watch out for the copperheads) I have seen the evidence, especially the deep gouges in solid bedrock.
Heck the very existence of Long Island is evidence! There are gouges in exposed bed rock in Central Park!
I thought central park was on Manhattan?
Science begins with observation. Maybe he should look outside once in a while.
The southernmost extent of the Wisconsin Ice Age is marked by a terminal moraine along the middle of Long Island. The northern most part of Long Island is a recessional moraine.
New York state has glacial features all over the place if you bother to look. So rah and I mentioned three different features all located in or near NYC. The finger lakes are perhaps the most dramatic glacial features. Recent study of them have made some surprising findings.
http://fingerlakesmuseum.org/did-you-know-there-are-eskers-buried-beneath-the-finger-lakes/
“philjourdan says:
January 3, 2015 at 9:42 pm
I thought central park was on Manhattan?”
It is and the glacier who’s terminal moraine formed Long Island that also made the gouges in the exposed bedrock at Central Park in Manhattan. We’re talking something like 3 mi between the two.
Thanks. I have demonstrated my ignorance of the NYC area. Not that I will be using the information any time soon in any event as I prefer to stay out of the area. 😉
There was snow in Needles, CA, with 33 degrees around midday. They are often the nation’s hot spot during the summer.
Not looking at the records, but I do remember Needles (my mother said it was not bigger than a pin – bad pun) having snow before – once when we passed through in the 60s.
Passed through Needles a bunch of times Summer and Winter taking I-40 to I-15 where I would go by the great bird cooking operation and doing the reverse coming back. Generally I-40 is the best interstate to use transiting the US W or E during the winter to and from LA area unless your start or destination is far south so you can use I-10. Used to make it a habit of stopping at on the exit for the Meteor Crater off I-40 and into the dead end on the north side of the Interstate to take a wiz on dark clear starry nights. I envy the clear dark skies the folks have out there.
Snow in Phoenix, Arizona. The world’s least sustainable city:
http://phoenix.suntimes.com/phx-news/7/83/90599/phoenix-snow-photos/
http://tinyurl.com/l8wuqwh
Four Peaks and the Superstitions taken from San Tan Valley (Ironwood and Ocotillo).
Nice!
Just got back from taking my grandsons to Mt. Laguna, east of San Diego. The area is up around 7,000 feet and the place looked like a winter wonderland. Snow was still 8 to 12 inches deep. The high temp was 38 degrees. About half of San Diego was trying to crowd into the place as we were leaving to return to Yuma. The boys had never played in snow before. I bought them a snow mat and they figured out how to ride it downhill pretty fast.
AH! I remember it well. Having relocated from the east coast, I thought snow was a thing of the past. But my mother took us up there back in 68. And I was in hog heaven! The beach an hour (with traffic) west, and snow an hour east!
You can lead a child to snow – and they will know what to do with it!
Well, Media Matters is a Leninist propaganda ministry with ties to the Communist Party USA, the American Nazi Party and the Rotarians.
Soros supposedly put in a pretty good chunk of cash for the seed money to get it started and continues to help keep it afloat today.
Yes, SO does the Tides foundation a money laundering operation for the rich who do not want their names tied to radical organizations.
https://www.activistfacts.com/organizations/media-matters-for-america/
Unfortunately Activist Cash is now off line. They had a lot more info than the present Activist Facts. For example they had a long list of groups Tides funded and now they have only three.
From my old notes Tides Foundation & Tides Center: Donations FROM Rockefeller’s $9,467,955.00 (1991 – 2005)
…. And then came an Arctic winter in Europe, in 1939/1940, mostly caused by war – http://www.2030climate.com/a2005/02_11-Dateien/02_11.html. …..
So how did war cause it?
Naval warfare during the two World Wars determined two major climate changes: a sustained warming which started at the end of World War I and lasted 20 years, and the next climatic shift which started during the winter 1939/40 and caused a four-decades global cooling. The extensive fighting at sea was a real threat for the normal course of the climate. I have read dr. Bernaert’s thessis on “Naval War changes Climate”, in which the ocean’s main role in the climate change is explained. You can see it on the website http://www.1ocean-1climate.com. I would be really interested in your opinion.
The energies expended in war are minute compared with those involved in weather.
I have to agree with Beale. However that being said, until we know more, we cannot rule it out. But color me skeptical.
Record North Atlantic sea ice in summer 1917! At http://www.arctic-heats-up.com/_ADD/add50.html , a high time in naval warfare during the Great World War when 5-10 ships were sunk every day!