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Everything posted by LibertyBell
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complain when it's 95, 70-80 degrees is not hot.
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Both days will be fine, it's Monday that it will rain.
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Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
So glad I don't live in that part of the country-- for multiple reasons lol. -
Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
No one has been able to answer this for me.... why did they create an entirely new scale? Why not just plug in the EF values into the old F scale, I actually like that scale much better. -
Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
wow thanks Don, these are absolutely stunning! I wonder what the Cheshire Cat looks like :-) -
Probably not lol. It might be more like a 2005 type summer.
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ah so it could be both high min and lots of 90 degree days (30 or more), Don?
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It's so late in the season, I doubt we can get "more organized areas of low pressure"-- scattered showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon is all we should expect.
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there's no such thing as a washout this late in the season, all we can get are scattered afternoon thunderstorms-- normal summer stuff.
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and our beaches are opening tomorrow for swimming! I wonder what the SST is near the Rockaways?
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Occasional Thoughts on Climate Change
LibertyBell replied to donsutherland1's topic in Climate Change
How could it be smart when he knows there is no available data from that period? But comparing it to DC from a more recent period is smart, because a mountainous location should never be warmer than DC and the fact that it is, indicates a global, not local, effect. -
Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
Thanks so much Don, if you have more pictures of that magical place, please feel free to share! It doesn't even feel like being in the city or even in New York, to be there! -
but the question is will it be a really hot summer-- or a fake warmer summer with only high mins? Hot summer to me is 30 or more 90 degree days.
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This is exactly why we need to warm up our oceans, this damn thing seems to happen every year now.
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wow a big change from April 2002! But we went on to have a nice hot and dry summer.... Was the lowest it got at either JFK or NYC 42 that month?
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Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
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looks like the big memorial day weekend rainstorm is now gone?
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Get used to it and put on some suntan lotion dude
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This is very rare! all record highs and record lows from the same year on the same date! 2002 was such a warm winter and hot spring and hot summer, how did it get so cold so late? Was this the peak of the cold in May that year? Records:Highs:EWR: 99 (1996)NYC: 96 (1996)LGA: 97 (1996)JFK: 95 (1996)Lows:EWR: 41 (2002)NYC: 43 (2002)LGA: 44 (2002)JFK: 42 (2002)
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why cant we dump liquid helium into the oceans?
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Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
wow thanks Don, these are absolutely amazing! -
Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
FYI Since we are talking about plants and flowers, I just got this ultraviolet pass filter to see hidden markings on flowers. More details can be found on this page: http://www.virtualherbarium.org/GardenViews/BeesEyeView.html Bees Eye View Scott Zona, Ph.D., Former Palm Biologist http://www.virtualherbarium.org/images/BeesEyeView5.jpg For some time, biologists have known that bees perceive light differently than humans do. What we see as visible light is a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum and consists of a mixture of different colored light. Color is determined by the light's wavelength, which ranges from violet (400 nm wavelength) to red (700 nm). We are unable to see other portions of the spectrum, such as ultraviolet or infrared. Bees, on the other hand, see a portion of the spectrum shifted toward shorter wavelengths. Their eyes perceive yellows, greens, blues and purples as we do, but they also perceive ultraviolet (UV) light (180-400 nm). Bees do not perceive the red portion of the visible spectrum. http://www.virtualherbarium.org/images/BeesEyeView1.jpg What we see What the bee sees Because their eyes are so different from ours, we can only approximate how bees see flowers. By using photographic equipment, we can visualize some components of bee vision that are normally invisible to us, namely the reflection or absorption of UV radiation. Plants contain chemicals that either reflect or absorb electromagnetic radiation, including UV, visible, and infrared (which we cannot see but we can feel as heat). Sunlight's UV radiation is absorbed, partially absorbed, or reflected by flowers and can be captured on black and white photographic film or with a digital camera, using special filters. In the resulting photograph, reflected UV appears white, and absorbed UV appears dark. Partially absorbed UV appears gray. The two photos shown here are of a locally common weed, Achmella pilosa, in the sunflower family (Asteraceae). The photo on the left was taken in sunlight without any special filter, using a Minolta DiMAGE 7Hi digital camera. The right-hand photo was subsequently taken with a Wratten 18AUV filter attached to the camera. Typical of the sunflower family, Achmella has the common daisy-type “flower” (inflorescence) that is actually a group of two different kinds of flowers. The outer “petals” are individual flowers, called ray flowers. The central eye is a cluster of small flowers called disk flowers. Together, these two kinds of flowers make up the inflorescence we commonly call daisies or sunflowers. Achmella pilosa exhibits a common phenomenon seen in many Asteraceae: the bull's eye pattern formed by UV-reflecting ray flowers and UV-absorbing disk flowers. The pattern helps bees locate and land on the flowers. Plants need bees to carry pollen from one flower to another, and UV patterns expedite the process. -
Extended summer stormlover74 future snow hole banter thread 23
LibertyBell replied to BxEngine's topic in New York City Metro
I didn't know it covered 250 acres and they have an Alice in Wonderland themed giant topiary going on there? I am partial to the giant March Hare topiary! Question-- why is it called New York Botanical Garden when it's in The Bronx? Why not call it The Bronx Botanical Garden? We have one in Brooklyn and it's called The Brooklyn Botanical Garden. -
last year on this very date it was 42 degrees lol
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wow it was 42 degrees here last year on this date? now thats cold!
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