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#31
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Is it just me, or does it seem like weather forecasting has gone off the deep end? I think, probably, that the weather and news people really don't have any other choice but to over-hype. If they down played the forecast, and it ended up being worse, they'd be burned at the stake. --- Jay -- __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino ! ! ! http://www.oceancityairport.com http://www.oc-adolfos.com |
#32
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![]() "Dave Stadt" wrote in message . .. "Icebound" wrote in message ... "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:CgZCd.620242$wV.514014@attbi_s54... Is it just me, or does it seem like weather forecasting has gone off the deep end? Once again, we've been deluged with "Winter Storm Warnings" Well, this particular storm may have affected Iowa a little less than they expected, but it is not *ALL* hype. ....snip... This is a *significant*, though certainly not an exceptional, storm, and some concern was warranted. Still is, for the people to the northeast of it ... LIKE US!!... It's winter in the Midwest. Snow and ice are the norm and sometimes it's rain, that's why it is called winter. Several inches or even a foot of snow hardly qualifies as a "storm." Maybe not..., but it depends on your perspective... Give it any name you want, but nine inches at O'hare does appear to quality as "significant". Even if you can call it the "norm", it still qualifies as worthy of warning of widespread disruption: http://cbsnewyork.com/topstories/top...006103936.html |
#33
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![]() "Blueskies" wrote in message om... "Dave Stadt" wrote in message om... snip I wonder how our ancestors survived all these deadly weather attacks without the benefit of modern media warnings. They didn't! Sure they did.... When it was winter, they *dressed* for winter... all of the time.... and not in fancy topcoats, low shoes and thin gloves, with no hat. They travelled by a means and at a speed that were suitable to the conditions. And they knew enough that there was nothing so urgent that it could not wait for a day or two and be done later... so they stayed put until the weather improved. |
#34
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I agree although we got 11" of snow from the storm. Still I think the most
fun was that the Chicago news crews went out on the expressways to show that they were all moving normally and ended up causing a huge gapers block that doubled travel time. The news people are now covering a story about how news crews affect traffic, Geesh! In the Chicago area we get an average of almost a foot of snow in January. Well we hit our average in a 24 hour period, worth mentioning but hardly a major news event, after all it snows every January in Chicago since the Silurian epoch! But we have 24 hour news and weather so they have to talk about something, lord knows they could not actually cover something in depth so just make hype out 1 or 2 things. Scott -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Scott F. Migaldi, K9PO MI-150972 PP-ASEL-IA Are you a PADI Instructor or DM? Then join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/join ----------------------------------- Catch the wave! www.hamwave.com "I can accept that Bush won the election. What I have a hard time swallowing is that I live in a country where more than half the population is willfully ignorant, politically obstinate, religiously prejudiced, and embarrassingly gullible." ------------------------------------- "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:CgZCd.620242$wV.514014@attbi_s54... Is it just me, or does it seem like weather forecasting has gone off the deep end? Once again, we've been deluged with "Winter Storm Warnings" in the Midwest that have turned out to produce a few inches of snow. As one station (primarily the Weather Channel) starts to hype the coming "huge storm" all the local stations feel compelled to jump on the bandwagon. They, in turn, start running live segments of "Doppler Radar" and serious talking heads showing all of us that it is -- *gasp!* -- actually SNOWING outside! Imagine! In Iowa! In January! Then, the inevitable school closings follow, as the head of the school board is showed wringing his hands on live TV, pining for the "safety of the kids." This is followed by dire warnings not to travel unless "absolutely necessary"... Meanwhile, the storm peters out after a few inches of snow, the kids play outside all day, the malls are packed, and the adults laugh it off as just another screwed up weather forecast. Sorry, but this situation seems to have NOTHING to do with meteorology. I took weather classes in college, and have been a keen observer of it all my life. I was able to take one look at the radar and satellite pictures, and knew immediately that they were blowing sunshine up our butts yet again. I think it's all about ratings, and the public is being misled on a grand scale, at an annual cost of hundreds of millions of dollars in lost productivity. Worst of all, NO ONE is taking their warnings seriously anymore (except the schools, who love the paid time off), so when we really DO get hit with a blizzard, no one will be prepared. When I was a kid in Wisconsin, if they had closed school every time we got 3 inches of snow, we'd have had the whole winter off! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#35
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![]() "Matt Barrow" wrote in message ... "Blueskies" wrote in message om... "Dave Stadt" wrote in message om... snip I wonder how our ancestors survived all these deadly weather attacks without the benefit of modern media warnings. They didn't! So how did YOU get here? I'm here...Where? ;-) |
#36
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![]() "Nathan Gilliatt" wrote in message ... In article , "Blueskies" wrote: We did the So. California to visit grandma and grampa for Christmas last week and were greeted with the severe winter storm warnings. It must have rained a whole 3-5 inches the entire time we were there. [...] There were wrecks all over the place, pretty amazing The thing about Southern California is that a foot of rain is all they get in a year. The roads have a buildup of oil and muck that doesn't wash off with the first drops, so the roads are slippery until it rains enough to wash them off. The really scary part is the runoff into the channelized rivers, which are dry until they flood. Then they run fast and furious, and you can't just climb out the side if you fall in. Lots of drama for the fast-water rescue teams. I thought I saw much higher rainfall totals for SoCal last week, too. But I did get a chuckle when our local (NC) news picked up the story of snow in SoCal, near LA--without mentioning what, exactly, I-5 does north of the LA area... http://www.thealpacastore.com/grapevinecam/page2.html The funny thing is they already had the rain earlier to wash the roads off. The flood control is much better now than it was back in hte early 70's - there was very little 'flooding' under the overpasses. I know what you mean about the Grapevine - sort of a sleeping giant. I remember trying to get an old '59 microbus up that grade, down to second gear with big rigs passing us... |
#37
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![]() "Colin W Kingsbury" wrote in message nk.net... "Casey Wilson" N2310D @ gmail.com wrote in message news:_b_Cd.12923$1U6.6740@trnddc09... Two years ago, about four inches fell, and stuck, just before sunrise. Would you believe about one out of six or seven cars rattled down the street with chains! Some of those didn't think about what that extra eight inches or so of chain was going to do to the fenders, if they didn't tie it down. Chains!? Where do they get them? I grew up in upstate NY, on a steep dirt road that often iced over, and I don't think we even owned a set of chains, let alone put them on cars. -cwk. We never use them here (Kalamazoo, MI) either, but the California CHP will not let you through some of the mountain passes in 'severe weather' without them on... |
#38
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![]() "Blueskies" wrote in message . com... We never use them here (Kalamazoo, MI) either, but the California CHP will not let you through some of the mountain passes in 'severe weather' without them on... My stunt when the snow is light and dry is to put the chains on at the required point, drive until I'm out of sight and have safe room, then take the things off. Sometimes, infrequently, they are helpful. |
#39
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![]() "SFM" wrote in message ... Are you a PADI Instructor or DM? Then join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/join ----------------------------------- Catch the wave! www.hamwave.com "I can accept that Bush won the election. What I have a hard time swallowing is that I live in a country where more than half the population is willfully ignorant, politically obstinate, religiously prejudiced, and embarrassingly gullible." I love how Democrats love democracy...but only when they win. |
#40
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Is it just me, or does it seem like weather forecasting has gone off the deep end? Yes. For this reason I now use only the web for meaningful forecast information. For excellent analysis of the synoptic situation and an unhyped forecast, check out http://iwin.nws.noaa.gov/iwin/textversion/states.html Click on the state, then "forecast discussion", then scroll down to the area of interest (there are separate forecasts for each "zone" within a state). This comes from NOAA meteorologists whose forecast drives what the TV weather-person is going to say anyway. www.wunderground.com Type in the 3-character airport identifier or city,state and get the current forecast. No fuss, no hype. Also has local and regional radar that can be put into motion. With all this, I don't even bother with the TV forecast any more. Forecasts from the numerical models is available at http://weather.unisys.com The "eta" and "avn" models are the primary resources for 2-3 day forecasts, and "mrf" model for longer forecasts (up to 9 days). The output from these models forms the basis of much of the discussion in the "iwin" site mentioned above. Jim Rosinski |
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