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Everything posted by tamarack
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The 2023 Lawn, Garden, Landscape Party Discussion
tamarack replied to Damage In Tolland's topic in New England
Hit or miss here - some pines loaded, some with just a few. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
0.01" here, 3.20" for the month, as echoes died on the doorstep. Temp was 4° BN yesterday, only the 2nd BN day of the month. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Been there, done that. My dad passed on Pearl Harbor Day in 1993 and I inherited his 1992 Ranger with 6k miles. (Neither of my brothers needed it so it became part of my 1/3.) I burnt out a clutch, thanks in part to the tranny getting stuck in 4th as I was climbing a hill - trying to slip-clutch on a steep upgrade, not recommended. Followed by a nice after-dark 3 mile walk to where my wife picked me up. I drove that for 13 Maine winters and by then it was in tough shape, sold it for $200 and the check bounced, but maybe I got exactly what the rig had been worth. Edit: Unsurprisingly, the siggy RA stayed north - just a few sprinkles here. Now the best action is to the south and also looks to miss. In May, every event overperformed, in June the forecasts were usually spot on (same pattern all month) but if the recent outcomes here continue, I might have to (gasp!) water. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Watching the color drain out of the echoes as they approach (and slide to the NW of here). Everything is still moist, but the trend may be moving to dry here, based on the most recent precip chances. The warned severe storm on 7/7 slides south, we get a rumble and 0.11", VT floods and 3/4" here, last weekend's 'widespread 2-3" with some 5-7"' brings 1.1" and Tuesday's flash flood and severe TS warning produces 2 distant rumbles and 20 drops. When forecasts consistently over- or underperform, it's usually the start of a trend. If/when my 2011 Ranger dies (and if I can afford it) I'd like to move to the hybrid Maverick. However, I'm not interested in all-electric unless: --Rates back down instead of leaping by 50%. --Service interruptions are greatly reduced. Not sure how well recharge would work on genny power. --Grandkids live <200 miles away instead of >500. --I never again need to drive when it's minus 20. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
As noted elsewhere, it's the noise. I think leaf blowers are the loudest one-person tools out there, probably 15 decibels above my snowblower and louder than a modern chainsaw. Of course, I won't even use the roaring air hand driers in public bathrooms - not only are they about 90 decibels (a guess) but they're in an echo chamber. (Disclosure: Our nearest neighbor is 500 feet away and no one else is within 1/4 mile, so no exposure to the blowers at home.) Also, in terms of GHG the (non-electric or hybrid) cars and trucks are worse, but for hydrocarbons and NOX those small motors are far more polluting. Raking is overrated… Leaf cleanup is in fact overrated. I don't rake leaves from the lawn, but the side yard gets a 6" layer of (mostly) maple leaves, so I free up the hostas and lily-of-the-valley, and gain nutrients and organic material for the garden, also mulch for when I overwinter carrots. Everything in its proper place. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Saw the Milky Way last evening, 1st time since mid-June. Since June 1 we're running -2 maxima, +4 minima, so +1 overall. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
My sister-in-law was staying with us (my father-in-law had passed a week earlier) and she's a big NWL fan and got all teenybopper with Kris, had to get pics. Then insisted that I get pictured with him - at least that one showed the deer. That was my 3rd deer collision. 1st was in Bedford, NH as I was hauling my daughter and 3 friends back to Dublin on a Sunday evening in mid Nov. It had stormed that morning (blew down 2,000 cords on state land near Jackman) and the critters were on the move. I'd taken my foot off the gas upon seeing the light ahead go yellow and it was deer-bang-gone before I could even hit the brake, launched the little lamb of the year into the woods at a 45° angle, $2,900 to the Subaru. We were going south at 45 and the deer about 35 westbound. 2nd was the Sunday morning a week prior to deer season, a nice 6-8 point buck that was running northeast as we drove northwest. Hit the driver side front door and fender, whipped around to mess up the rear door and left the side mirror hanging by one wire. We continued to church after dealing with the LEO; a guy with a scanner asked to retrieve the deer and found it dead in a swamp maybe 1/4 mile from impact. $1,900 for that one. It was decent to finally eat what I'd hit on #3. 54° this morning, lowest of the month. In 25 years only July 2000 failed to get below 50 - hit 51 - and 4 Julys had sub-40 readings. I'll be surprised if July 2023 gets below 50, though HIE hit 49 this morning. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
I hit a deer in 2014 while driving home from the Sundy evening service, the day after the regular firearms season ended (of course ) with no deer meat. I had slowed to maybe 15-20 at impact and the critter was able to get up and run into the woods, after destroying the Ranger's plastic grill and also bending the bumper. Next morning, Kris McCabe of North Woods Law fame came and tagged it (a hairy-horned doe, 2nd one I've "taken". 1st was shot on T18R12 in 1979) and I took it to the meat cutter in Oakland after following the tracks in the snow left from the pre-T.Day 13" dump. It had gone only 500' before dying from massive internal bleeding and was still slightly warm inside. Based on what I took home, deboned except for one roast and nothing bloodshot, the butcher had to discard less than 10%. About $1500 of repairs, but it only cost me the $100 for Comprehensive - actually less as the mechanic bill came in at less than the adjuster's price. Edit, for some wx: Saw the Milky Way last night, first time in nearly a month after loads of clouds and haze, and dews were probably mid 50s this morning. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Deer meat is wonderful - tasty and very low cholesterol. However, in the Northeast, buck fawns have only buttons by deer season and most states have a 3"+ antler standard to be a legal antlered buck. (Some states are more rigorous. PA requires that at least one antler has 3+ points.) -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Looked again and found a few blues, almost all on the Northlands. Also found the fastest growing jewelweed I've ever encountered. Two weeks ago, they were a foot tall or less, but some were near 6 ft and many in the 4-5' class, and many many hundreds. Still some in the patch but the ones I pulled (no weed pulls easier, fortunately) pretty much filled the 6' by 6' cedar log compost area. Those plants must be 95%+ water, and surely love this warm season's tropical rainforest wx. They will quickly break down and make room for other compost. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
We started with 3 Patriots and 2 Northlands, added 2 more Northlands and 3 Bluecrops a few years later. These more recent additions are lagging badly in both growth and production. Looks like a moderate crop on the big 5 but none have begun to color - above norm temps but the lack of sun being the bigger factor. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Roy Clark's "Yesterday when I was young" might've broken the mold for thoughtful country, though another (name unremembered) sang the most concise description of alcoholism I recall: "One drink is one too many, and a thousand not enough!" Just once . Just one time is all we all ask for . 80-110 mph gusts for a few hours. "A few hours" would probably mean a solid Cat 4 at landfall, Nassau and Suffolk Counties on separate islands? -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Flash flood warning stops about one mile to my west (literally), severe storm areacloser to 5 miles away. Precip seems to be dying as it passes beyond Farmington, though there's still some bright echoes upstream. Not a 7-10; if we miss the good stuff it will be like the ball going between the 4 and 6 pins while touching neither. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
In my 50 years living in Maine, I swam in 70+ water only once. It was in shallow (3-5 ft) water in a small bay just south of Otter Cliffs on Acadia's Loop Road - mid-afternoon on August 2, 1975, when BHB hit triple digits for the only time on record. -
Some flooded roads in Fort Fairfield and Easton, Maine. (central Aroostook) Just PC/hazy sun with 70+ dews here.
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July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
I noted how the break in the pretty colors was right over my head - this year TS have tended to die between Farmington and here. Wonder if the haze will short-circuit any convection. we lived in standish that year and I recall having contractors need most of the summer to do some carpentry work on the exterior. The town was replacing the Muddy Brook bridge that summer, and as the steep banks made a temp bridge costly, they chose to gravel the long-unmaintained road beyond our place so the dozen or so families east of the brook had access. At least twice, juicy August TS blew out the gravel; we had dump trucks going past the house all that month. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Took until August here. July's rain came in smaller buckets than June's but with equal frequency. June 2009: Dry for 1-8, then 21 of 22 with some RA, 18 measurable, total 9.76" July 2009: Dry for 5 days and measurable for 24, total 7.29" (That 25 total/24 measurable was tied last month, in one less day.) August 2009: 17 dry days plus 2 with T, total 6.77". That met summer total of 23.82" is 4.71" higher than the next highest here. -
Looks like the power company decided to run poles up a brook.
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When will (did) you install/ turn on the AC this year?
tamarack replied to Cold Miser's topic in New England
I'm an "Other" as the heat pump installed in November 2020 has been used only for AC since then. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Last month some folks mentioned 2009, the year my garden rotted, and I thought, "no way." The resemblance is certainly there; biggest difference is that the dews are considerably higher this year. Not my cup of (sweat) tea. -
1.00" on the piton. First time since putting out the Stratus in 2009 that the inner cylinder was full and the outer still dry on the inside. Yesterday's 71/68 was the first July day here with that small a diurnal range, and the 71 came at my 9 PM obs time the night before. During daylight the temp wiggled between 68 and 69. Highest I saw in Maine was Bethel at 2.77". Two towns to my west in Temple there was 2.05" but in between at Farmington it was closer to 1.2". Glad to see the sun today, a rare treat during the past 6-7 weeks. Would really like some real (smoke-free) Canadian cool air; it's been 3+ weeks with constant dewiness. Month to date is running +4, with highs at +1 and lows at +7.
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July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Except every now and then they pop up with a TD of 32. Never 31 or 34. Then they'll go back to be 2-3° dewier than anyone else. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
Maybe. This is Ekster's short term discussion from GYX. SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... Flash flooding continues to be the main concern for tomorrow as near record high PWAT values highlight a very moist air mass coinciding with increased dynamics arriving with the low pressure center. High res guidance continues to showcase the training lines of torrential thunderstorms that put down 5-8" of rain in spots, but continue to waiver all over New England as to where the heaviest bands will set up. We know there will be some notably higher totals in some places more than others, but we continue to advise people to plan for 2-3 inches, and understand that some areas will likely see more than double that. Oy! -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
We crept down to 56 this past Wednesday, but afternoon dews have been 65-70+ every day since June 24. July 2020 had the highest average minimum so far here with 58.7°. This month is running 60.6° with the warmer half yet to come. 2020 was also the only July that failed to drop below 50, though they reached 51. The only such run to compare with this year was late June thru about July 20 in 2013, but this streak is easily dewier. -
July has arrived ... the Meteorologically defined mid summer month
tamarack replied to Typhoon Tip's topic in New England
That model looks just like the last event - 5"+ in VT and maybe 3/4" here. We're in the 0.6-0.7" color.