Using app.visitiech.ai, you can quickly learn all the details of every extreme weather event in the US, and don’t have to rely on hearsay.
The NOAA database is here. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/pub/data/swdi/stormevents/csvfiles/
Using app.visitiech.ai, you can quickly learn all the details of every extreme weather event in the US, and don’t have to rely on hearsay.
The NOAA database is here. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/pub/data/swdi/stormevents/csvfiles/
There’s nothing like facts to ward off both the climate hoaxers and the conspiracy theory grifters. I’m sure the powers that shouldn’t be exploit the binary reasoning, which is so prevalent in a badly educated society, to discredit climate skeptics by associating them with all manner of lunatic conspiracies.
Well every ‘conspiracy’ of ours since 2000 have been proven true. I love Winning .
Meanwhile, back here in Mayberry (St Cloud Minnesota), we can’t even forecast a 90° temp 2/3 of the way through the month of July. is this July or is it September?
Great video. I’m a subscriber, I think, if my payments are still coming through. I haven’t had time to dig into the AI, but it seems that the website is filling out with more bells and whistles. Anyway, I like this article because I have peripheral knowledge about the Big Thompson, Ruidoso, New Mexico, and Bandelier. When I was 13, we went to Bandelier, because I had read about it in my New Mexico state history book, and I insisted that we go there. We camped on the Frijoles Creek and after hours I slipped off and wandered through the ruins at sunset. After dark, the ranger came around to each camp tent and greeted and spent some time answering questions for those camping there. As you know, those days are no longer. I lived in Denver at the time of the Big Thompson Flood and I remember someone telling me that a major factor was that the storm moved down the water shed dumping water into the peak of the floodwaters, so that something of a tsunami wave of water built up there. The first place I ever skied was Sierra Blanca. It seemed odd seeing the Mescaleros shooting around on skis like they were born on them, but maybe some were. In those days, the skis were wooden and the boots heavy leather contraptions.
I married in September 1976 and our honeymoon was backpacking in Rocky Mountain National Park. We approached to enter the park via Estes Park so we drove down the Big Thompson River valley and saw the unbelievable destruction that had taken place just two months earlier.
The very next summer was the Johnstown Flood of July 20, 1977 which was in my wife’s hometown. We were just starting to look for a house so our experience with these two floods was illustrative for us in making sure to always locate on high ground with full awareness of the water shed around you and what picturesque little streams could potentially become torrents of floodwaters.
Great introduction, Tony.
I was in the High Arctic in 1972 when thunderstorms caused a flood in South Dakota similar to the one in Texas now. The line of storms extended northwest into Canada if I recall correctly. Many were swept away. There is nothing new under the sun.