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9 votes
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Thousands of egg-shaped balls of ice have covered a beach in Finland – the result of a rare weather phenomenon
6 votes -
Worst weather experience?
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the...
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the incidents you've had personally, and whatever you've learned about preparation, resilience, and recovery.
I'm no longer a Florida resident, but my contacts are blowing up with concern over Hurricane Dorian.
I've been watching the storm on this nifty site, which has great tools and visualisations to satisfy the most avid weather geeks.
Dorian is likely to be another devastating, small-region, high-intensity buzzsaw, like last year's Hurricane Michael, which practically erased towns in the Florida panhandle, or the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. [I'm not really a good person - I'm having more than a little schadenfreude that Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort is near the center of the storm's predicted path. But I'm not the only person who thought of that.]
According to the Insurance Information Institute, Florida has nearly $600 billion dollars of single family housing at risk from a Category 5 hurricane, leaving aside loss of life and injury.
My stories, compressed for those who've read this before
Some of my friends and colleagues have families still recovering from the impacts of 2017's Hurricanes Irma, Harvey, and Maria.
While I had to deal with these storms' impacts to infrastructure professionally, the hurricanes didn't have enormous personal impact. I was mainly supporting friends or covering for colleagues struggling to help family in Texas, Puerto Rico, and the Caribbean Islands. Our house was eight miles from the coast, so we only dealt with a downed tree and other cleanup, a few hours without power, and some blocked roads.
Because I have dumb hobbies, the most extreme weather dangers I ever encountered were while kayaking and canoeing. Five years ago, I was on a guided ocean kayaking trip that ran into an unpredicted storm squall. Perfect blue skies and calm one minute; near darkness, huge waves, practically solid rain, and 40-knot winds the next. The party got scattered all over half a dozen of the 10,000 Islands. I struggled to get off the windward side of a long isle, so the wind banged my kayak into mangroves for an hour, then I was paddling furiously to avoid being swept into the Gulf of Mexico. But we all survived without major harm, the guide managed to reconnect us without calling for rescue, and we arrived at our destination with good stories. I can only imagine what it's like to be exposed to worse conditions in a hurricane.
Up to that time, the most dangerous weather I'd run into was snow and ice storms. When I was a kid, the Blizzard of 1978 left my family stranded, without phones, power or heat, for five days. We had a fireplace, plenty of hardwood, and an ample store of dried and canned provisions, so it felt more like a rustic adventure than the dire situation it could have been. My brother and I thought 10-foot snowdrifts were the greatest fun ever - we spent more time outside than in, "helping" to dig out by making snow forts and tunnels with the neighbors' kids. Of course, it was followed with a spring of chores like putting up half a kilometer of snow fences, learning to drive a 40-hp farm tractor, and setting up a ham radio antenna and generator, as my city-raised parents had come to grasp what rural life really entailed.
14 votes -
The size and shape of raindrops
3 votes -
Plastic particles falling out of sky with snow in Arctic
7 votes -
US hurricane forecasts may be running headlong into the butterfly effect
8 votes -
It’s not in your head: Urban flooding is getting much more common
14 votes -
Tropical Storm Barry expected to landfall as hurricane; Mississippi River rising faster than expected
7 votes -
On 'hottest day in history of France,' world told 'do not look away' as police tear-gas climate campaigners in Paris
33 votes -
Europe has had five 500-year summers in fifteen years
18 votes -
Severe weather pits meteorologists against some viewers
5 votes -
The long-awaited upgrade to the US weather forecast model is here
7 votes -
How do meteorologists work out the weather forecast? And how far into the future can they go?
7 votes -
5G networks could throw weather forecasting into chaos
19 votes -
Hurricane Center reclassifies Michael to category 5, the first such storm to make landfall since 1992
7 votes -
As more rain falls, Greenland is melting faster
7 votes -
Mars Weather - Latest Weather at Elysium Planitia
8 votes -
New Zealand heatwave - the science behind why it's so hot
4 votes -
How Western Australia's Pilbara region can generate a heatwave that can stretch to Melbourne
3 votes -
Hurricane Florence isn't alone: Four powerful storms seen from space in one day
9 votes -
Scientists slowly cast light on celestial mystery known as Steve
7 votes -
Droughts, heatwaves and floods: How to tell when climate change is to blame
9 votes -
Global warming is increasing the chances of heatwaves, scientists say
6 votes -
Methane is giving noctilucent clouds a boost
3 votes -
Taiwan shuts down for Typhoon Maria
4 votes -
Can someone please explain what causes this kind of wind on a sunny day?
4 votes -
Australian tornadoes flying under the radar but more common than you think, BOM warns
3 votes -
Recently published study in Nature shows that tropical storms have slowed by 10% over seventy years
4 votes -
Rare Gulf of Aden tropical cyclone to bring flood risk to Yemen, Somalia
3 votes