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kdxken

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Everything posted by kdxken

  1. Yeah nothing out of the ordinary. Lolz...
  2. Yeah him and his pal didn't fare well with this. We tried to tell them.
  3. Exact same thing happened to me back in my coaching days. People can be stupid.
  4. If they're tent caterpillars you'll see webs in the v of trees.
  5. That would be my guess too. You're not going to really notice tent caterpillars.
  6. Not too bad here. 0.15 and doesn't look like a whole lot More with the morning rain.
  7. Locusts might be fun. "Compared to previous infestations in the region, the 1874 plague was significantly more damaging. The invasion coincided with a record drought in the Midwest and Great Plains, which induced the grasshoppers (estimated at 120 billion to 12.5 trillion) to not only thrive but also to swarm when local vegetation was decimated. The arriving locusts would pile up to over a foot high and ate crops, trees, leaves, grass, wool off sheep, harnesses on horses, paint from wagons, and pitchfork handles.
  8. Four in New England last year for June can we double it?
  9. Jackpot has always been Western areas of SNE. Find me one post where Eastern SNE was going to get a lot of rain? 1-3 inches days ago and it still is. .
  10. A story for wiz, was just cutting a tree and this thing was on my neck. Thought it was a bird at first.
  11. "This will be a soaker with the most rain west where there can be 1-3”+. The least across eastern MA where likely 0.50” will do it. I’m watching the trends…the latest HRRR has pushed heavier rain a bit farther east. " Eweather
  12. "Longer read:" Do you have another variety in your toolbox?
  13. "Looking at Tuesday through the end of the week there remains a good deal of uncertainty with the mid-level pattern. Model guidance is not handling the evolution of the departing weekend system. As the cut-off low becomes more of an open trough in eastern Canada, isn`t able to easily move eastward because of the mid-level ridge across the North Atlantic. To the west of southern New England an amplifying mid-level ridge spills northeastward. Does it shift the trough out to sea or does it pinch off the trough into another closed low. If we can shift it out to sea likely a rather nice forecast with dry weather and warming temperatures. The other scenario, it becomes a closed low/cut-off and is stuck east of New England and may result in cooler temperatures and spotty shower activity. As there is a good deal of uncertainty, leaned heavily on the NBM. Which is leaning toward the first outcome, dry conditions and summer warmth. Highs in the upper 70s to low 80s and nighttime lows in the 50s." You've got to ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya, punk?"
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