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Everything posted by tamarack
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Reported 0.21" to cocorahs and maybe another 0.05" after that 7 AM obs. Oct. 1-14 had been quite dry (0.04") but tonight should correct that. Glad I raked leaves yesterday when they were dry and light. Yesterday's low of 57° was 22° AN and this morning's low was about the same. Peak of summer - late July - has average minima of 55°. PWM reported 1.13" from 2-8 AM, and had a TS. -
Did the same for the Farmington co-op's 129 years. There are 27 years with August as the warmest month, including 2021. The 26 winters following averaged 89.47" compared to the over average of 89.71" - not much to see there. Number of times: 40s 1 (2015-16) 50s 2 60s 5 70s 2 80s 4 90s 4 100s 1 110s 2 120s 4 130s 0 140s 1 (2000-01) August 2021 was warmest by 4.2°, easily the largest span of the 27 warm Augusts, so winter 21-22 may be charting new ground. Only 3 previous Augusts were warmest by more than 2°. Year, difference and following winter: 1969/3.1°/90.4"; 2001/3.3°/80.7"; 2009/2.5°/62.4". One average one BN, one ratter, average 77.8". SSS but not looking great. Even worse using my location, as August was warmest in 2001, 02, 03, 09 and 2015. Those years averaged 65.2" compared to my overall 89.0" and included 2 BN (barely better than the -20% ratter line), 2 ratters, and 15-16 with 48.2" which doesn't even rise to ratter status.
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I read this several times and wondered where in Harrington there was 9 miles of road that fit the above description. Only spot that far from Rt 1 appears to be Ripley Neck (looks like a wonderful spot) and it looks paved well into the neck itself. Having driven other Downeast roads, mainly East Machias to Cutler plus many trips on the Blackwoods Road (Rt 182), I'm familiar with sudden curves, short steep hills and such, but most are plowed by the towns. (My impressions are not the norm, however, after decades with travel on iced woods roads, sharing them with hundred-ton log trucks.) . Lack of water would seem the biggest issue unless there's a well that could operate with generator juice.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
06-07 had record warmth Nov-Dec (obliterated 9 years later) and the 1st two weeks of Jan. Had 11' snow thru 1/13 and 84" afterward. 05-06 had some early snow, including a birch bender at elevation in late October and the T'Day modest snowstorm than included EF-0 and EF-1 spinners at midcoast Maine. Our biggest event that season came in early December and snofall was about average thru Jan, though with terrible retention - 1/06 is my mildest January. Then 7.8" Feb 1 on - avg for that period is 44". -
Only the book - had no idea that it was built from his earlier short story. And thanks for the correct spelling of his name.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
The same friend who alerted me to birch boletes proposed this test for mushroom consumption: "Take a bite then wait 20 minutes. If you don't feel dizzy/nauseated you're good to go." Since some of the most toxic 'shrooms don't present symptoms for several hours, and have no antidote, one should ponder one's actions. -
Many thanks. I'll look for those books. Though Karres is also my favorite of my limited Schmidt works, the other titles I mentioned have about the most fascinating and logically developed exobiology I've read in sci-fi.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Ever look for birch boletes? Form is like the farmed variety but with a reddish cap, found near birches and aspen, delicious. Have rarely seen them at my current location but picked a fair amount when we lived up north. The friend who introduced me to the species noted that boletus edulis, found in spruce stands, is the best. I've never seen one. Near 60 this morning, avg minimum for 10/15 is 35. Dews finally reached here after the finest mid-October wx in memory. Temps 11-14: 67/45 73/43 73/45 72/45 -
October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Got me! The horizontal lower branches faked me out. -
October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Odd. Pin oaks usually have the best red of any of the oak group native to or planted in Maine. -
Kind of OT: I had no idea there were sequels to Witches of Karres (which I've read and re-read) and would be interested in authors/titles. James Schmidt apparently didn't write much - in all my sci-fi, much of which hasn't traveled with our moves, I've seen only 4 of his works. The other 3 include one novel, Demon Breed (set on a water world) and two short stories (Balanced Ecology, Grandpa), and all 3 include plausible and interlocking ecosystems.
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Given my lesser November snow, 2.1" is significant. Out of 128 Novembers at the co-op, there's both Nov. temps and Nov. snow in 124, and the AN/BN split is right down the middle. (It's a bit surprising that they're equal, given the sample size.) So if AN Novembers run 4.7" and the total average is 6.8", the BN Novembers must average 8.9", nearly twice the ANs.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Another fine day, though with more clouds than the previous 2. Not much wind but near constant leaf drop - probably 70% gone and counting. Color was a bit late but defoliation is about on schedule. -
Good points all (including those which I deleted) but I think the windfarm disappeared because Gene's pic was taken at lower elevation. Though it's hazy, the mountain behind the windfarm shows up in both pics but less of it in the bottom one.
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Went back to the data and saw that AN Novembers averaged 4.7" snowfall while all Novembers ran 6.8". That adjustment raises AN-Novie winters from 93% of average to 95%. Those AN November years had October snow averaging 0.8", compared to all-October's 0.7", which would put Dec-May snowfall at 77.9" for AN-November years and 82.2" for all years.
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Back to the numbers I go (tomorrow). November snow at Farmington is 5-6% of the total, so the self-fulfilling potential might be less, but I'll check.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Farther north, Farmington's earliest sub-80 record is on 10/15 and for sub-75 it's the 31st. -
October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
Low of 37 last Wednesday and my cukes were fried. Had 34 on 9/29 and nothing was harmed. Clear and cold both mornings. Wx can be weird. And I record length of growing seasons as the days between last 32/lower and first 32/lower - mister obvious. The plants may reacted differently - thermometer 31 with a breeze may not do harm because the garden is 33-34, and instrument 33-35 in still/clear may be 30 at cuke level. -
At the Farmington co-op, 62 AN Octobers have been followed by an average of 101% normal snowfall. For the 62 AN Novembers, it's 93%. Given the sample size, I'd guess the November discrepancy is likely significant.
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Guess you hit Mt. Vernon at the right time. About 50% leaf drop here. Maples 50% ash 95%, basswood 40%, oak/beech/popple 10%. First 3 on the list are 90% of the hardwood component in the hood.
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- leaf peapers
- crisp autumn nights
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November cold is strongly predictive of good snowfall here - AN Novies like last year's are followed by BN/ratters more often than not. October temps are just the opposite though the correlation is much weaker.
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Retention on the Downeast coast is generally terrible (2014-15 excepted - Machias reached 74" that Feb.) so you can probably drive in and out with a 4WD SUV. And pine wood is soft, easily cut with a chainsaw. I don't think the board has ever had posts from Washington County. Cool Spruce () was closest at Ellsworth.
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Or Siri Island, an Iranian oil-terminal spot. I've seen it with 98/90, winds 25, condition "sand". Just lovely - blowing sand sticking to one's sweat.
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October Discussion: Bring the Frost-Hold the Snow
tamarack replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in New England
It's past my previous delay of 1st frost - Oct. 6, 2011 - and I'm guessing at a week from today as a possible date, and could be later. Farmington co-op's latest for 1st frost was Oct. 17, 1990 and that year's Sept. had 3 mornings at 33. For certain my spot would've frosted on those days. Last month's low here was 34 and the co-op 35. Good chance this will be the co-op's latest 1st frost since they began records in 1893. -
OT, but any way to seal off all but a ground-floor section that you would be using? Save on heating and perhaps be less depressing than having all that open space around. (I suspect you've already considered that strategy.)
