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North Balti Zen

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Everything posted by North Balti Zen

  1. YTD now: 3.0 BWI (2.3 on 3/14) 3.4 DCA (1.7 on 3/14) 7.3 Dulles (5.6 on 3/14) That 3.0 for the season is 5th worst all-time for BWI on the seasonal snowfall list. The 3.4 seasonal total for DCA moves them off the top 5 worst ever list. The 7.3 for Dulles also moves them from what had been in running for their worst seasonal total ever to off the top 5 worst list. Late season "save", I guess, although doesn't feel like it to me.
  2. Closing in... YTD remains - 0.7" BWI (would tie for worst) 1.4" DCA (top 3 worst) 1.6" Dulles (would be new worst)
  3. YTD as of 2/9/17: Tie for top 1 worst, top 3 worst and top 1 worst snowfall seasons at the respective airports still on the table as an option.
  4. I had this in the banter thread, but am pulling it out and dropping it here for quick reference, and, because, well, it may be relevant sadly in other years too. At any rate, if people could help double-check, I think we are at year to date: 0.7" BWI 1.4" DCA 1.0" Dulles Seriously, if someone can fact check the current numbers that would be great. Here's the relevant futility lists for each airport for reference: http://www.weather.gov/lwx/winter_storm-pr#SeasonalSnowfall Hoping we get snow that takes the airports off of these lists, but, if not, they are the markers.
  5. Sure is - as befitting a snow town... Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  6. Looking at those months - have to assume those were all pumped up with tropical systems or remnants maybe.
  7. Feb. 8 - 11, 2015. The models didn't really lock into the cold air being in place enough for the 3 feet we ended up getting area-wide until about Friday. Those Saturday runs were nuts, never been around a happier board.
  8. psstt...read three posts above yours...in a post responding to you.
  9. Word, by my calculations, by 2017 we will be as hot as the surface of the sun around here.
  10. The 1st person reports that CNN is taking right now from NY and DC are high comedy. Apparently people felt "shaking".
  11. No such luck. Was working in the Towson office today (next to courthouse). 7 floors up, rather than 20. And, um, 7 was plenty high up. Talking to clients, dawning realization that it was an earthquake, mostly when the large table began to move. None of my co-workers at my usual office are answering the phone, so I am guessing they are outside at the moment. Will be curious myself how that felt.
  12. Good **** that was surprising. Working in the Towson office today, which was 7 stories up, rather than 20 stories up as usual. And, well, kinda unsettling, to say the least.
  13. They have pared the missing list down to a more reasonable 232. That said, that still seems high for this late as they cross off the inevitable names that were elsewhere when it hit. The article: http://www.msnbc.msn...191/ns/weather/ Pic to lead it is of a truck with a family that has painted the name of a missing 12-year-old on it. So I am guessing that there are still an additional number unaccounted for who are truly missing as a result of the storm. A similar cnn article: http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/05/26/missouri.tornado/index.html?hpt=C1
  14. Re: big box stores, there were seven bodies found under a cement slab at the Home Depot that was hit. Read that in one of the stories, I think on msnbc, in the same story that noted they managed to find one person alive in that store's rubble.
  15. yeah. Just amazing. And a nice reminder for non-mets and non-weather geeks that a storm with a funnel cloud properly warned has to be taken seriously. Not sure from some of the discussion in this thread what more people want. This was a warned storm, and while there wasn't time to add "large and dangerous tornado on ground" to the warning, there was still a warning that a cell capable of producing a tornado was on the way. That's enough, if people were near a TV or radio to hear that bit of information, to seek some sort of shelter. If folks wait to hear "tornado emergency" before acting, that is too late (and always has been) in my opinion. I grew up in Ohio in the 70s not far from Xenia, and was always pretty clear that if a storm was bearing down on your area that was funnel cloud warned, you took shelter, whether a tornado was reported on ground or not.
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