Had to run the furnace again last night and this morning.....
Global warming? I Believe, I Believe, I Believe!
Won't be very long before we'll all be shoveling loads of global warming from the walk ways
Had to run the furnace again last night and this morning.....
Global warming? I Believe, I Believe, I Believe!
I remember Hurricane Hazel,in the 50s but I don't remember Toronto Islands and the Beaches constantly flooding annually.
Boiling frog syndrome.
No slur on Le Quebecois.
Seeing is believing in my life time, as its all I got to go on.
Maybe we are all in the same bad dream.
Everyone thinks there era was the golden one, I'm glad I was born when the world wasn't trashed.
It all depends on how much snowfall we have in the central Ontario snow belt and how fast the spring melt down is.I remember Hurricane Hazel,in the 50s but I don't remember Toronto Islands and the Beaches constantly flooding annually.
Boiling frog syndrome.
No slur on Le Quebecois.
Seeing is believing in my life time, as its all I got to go on.
Maybe we are all in the same bad dream.
Everyone thinks there era was the golden one, I'm glad I was born when the world wasn't trashed.
Yes please explain why you are ?
And it still isn’t. If you remember hurricane Hazel , you must rem ember hurricane Freda . Why is the air quality in the lower mainland of B.C. better know than it was back then ? The population has doubled since .Seeing is believing in my life time, as its all I got to go on.
Maybe we are all in the same bad dream.
Everyone thinks there era was the golden one, I'm glad I was born when the world wasn't trashed.
I would be 16 so I dont remember Freda.And it still isn’t. If you remember hurricane Hazel , you must rem ember hurricane Freda . Why is the air quality in the lower mainland of B.C. better know than it was back then ? The population has doubled since .
3 reasons. Electronic Fuel Injection a huge drop of sulphur in the fuel and wood heating ban.Why is the air quality in the lower mainland of B.C. better know than it was back then ? The population has doubled since .
Bullshit. It started cooling in 1500.The Little Ice Age began in Europe with no obvious trigger, but it was certainly reinforced and extended by more violent than usual volcanic activity in the tropics between 1808 and 1835. Mt Tambora in what is now Indonesia put so much ash into the stratosphere to screen sunlight and drop temperatures that 1816 became known as the Year without a Summer.
But there were also four other eruptions. Between 1820 and 1850, Alpine glaciers — now in alarming retreat — actually advanced. African and Indian monsoon systems weakened, and rain that should have fallen on hot soils dropped as more snow over Europe.
“Given the large climatic changes seen in the early 19th century, it is difficult to define a pre-industrial climate, a notion to which all our climate targets refer,” said Professor Brönnimann. “Frequent volcanic eruptions caused an actual gear shift in the global climate system.”
Random Internet Climate Scientist/Geologist/Historian/Political Scientist/Dirt Farmer sez so.Bullshit. It started cooling in 1500.
Blame it on Billy Mitchell.Is the box making labourer from Regina saying it didn't start cooling in 1500?
I would be 16 so I dont remember Freda.
I just remember my motorcycle.
I gave Freda a google.
I just remember walking home from Holy Name School down Carlaw Ave where I lived in Trawna.
The "Royal bumps" when tobogganing on the hill at lower Withrow Park, looked like Niagara Falls, not good!
I would be 8.
I have been in NZ for 33 years and it gas warmed up a degree or so which is XLNT, for some, some others, not so much.
I lived in Rio in 74-75 and the citizens were proud of their pollution as it showed they were " Big league".
Even back then, people would shut their VW bugs off at the lights to save gas.
Its hard to believe that people don't get it.
Bullshit. It started cooling in 1500.
Enjoy the last days of summer, because a wild ride apparently is in store this winter.
The Farmers’ Almanac is predicting that "bitterly cold winter conditions" will be in place from areas east of the Rockies all the way to the Appalachians, with the coldest outbreak of the season arriving during the final week of January and lasting through the beginning of February.
“Our extended forecast is calling for yet another freezing, frigid, and frosty winter for two-thirds of the country,” editor Peter Geiger said in a statement on the company's website.
TROPICAL STORM DORIAN'S PATH: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
The Farmer's Almanac said that this upcoming winter will be "filled with so many ups and downs on the thermometer, it may remind you of a 'Polar Coaster.'"
Included in this year's outlook is the prediction of free-falling, frigid temperatures from the northern Plains into the Great Lakes. The big cities in the Northeast are may also experience colder-than-normal temperatures for much of the upcoming winter.
"Only the western third of the country will see near-normal winter temperatures, which means fewer shivers for them," the publication notes.
Besides the chilly temperatures, the eastern third of the country is expected to see above-normal winter precipitation.
"With colder-than-normal temperatures in the Northeast and above-normal precipitation expected, our outlook forewarns of not only a good amount of snow, but also a wintry mix of rain, sleet — especially along the coast," according to the Farmers Almanac.
The publication claims that 2020 will get off to a busy start in the eastern half of the country as "copious amounts" of snow, rain, sleet and ice may fall in the time frame between Jan. 4 - Jan. 7 and Jan. 12- Jan. 15, along with "strong and gusty winds."
STRONG WINDS IN COLORADO SEND DOZENS OF MATTRESSES FLYING ACROSS FIELD, VIDEO SHOWS
"And for those who live northeast of the Texas Panhandle to the western Great Lakes, watch out for what could prove to be a memorable storm producing hefty snows for the Great Plains during the third week of January," the publication notes.
In other parts of the country, the winter may not be as wild.
The Pacific Northwest and Southwest are expected to be chilly but see near-normal precipitation.
That active winter will, according to the publication, cause a slow start to spring as winter lingers across the Midwest, Great Lakes, Northeast, and New England.
The Farmers’ Almanac says it bases its long-range forecast "on a mathematical and astronomical formula developed in 1818."