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Posts posted by madwx
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Wisconsin up to about 30 deaths per 100,000 from Covid. Still only about 40% of South Carolina's death rate of 74 per 100,000. Still a long ways from having as bad of an outbreak.
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27 minutes ago, A-L-E-K said:
OT but fire in RMNP is wild, jumping the continental divide over 13k+ peaks, going big
Huge fire event may happen in California early next week. welcome to the new normal
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1 minute ago, Hoosier said:
Multiple brief exposures to an infected person can be a problem
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6943e1.htm#contribAff
I think people forget how nature works sometimes. You could get Covid from someone being by them for 1 minute. The odds are much lower than 15 minutes but its still there. Just like there's no magic barrier at 6 feet. Sure it goes down further away from that but its not like there's a magical barrier where someone 7 feet away can't give you covid.
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people like to apply reasoning for disease spread to fit their personal beliefs. in reality humans are imperfect and this disease can spread easily so there are many, many variables for disease spread and not just one specific government decision.
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I would also like to point out that before this Wisconsin was 43rd in deaths per capita out of all states so it had been doing well keeping cases and deaths low. Out of all states for an outbreak to currently occur in, it makes sense that it's happening in Wisconsin.
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48 deaths in Wisconsin today. The record case numbers of the past few weeks are now coming to roost
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Snow Squall Warning along I80 in the Des Moines area
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8 hours ago, Hoosier said:
Barring eradication of covid-19, hopefully the IFR gets to flu levels or like some of the more benign coronaviruses over time.
I've wondered what the IFR was of the other types of coronaviruses when they first showed up.
There are ideas that the Russian Flu in the late 1800s was actually the introduction of one of the common coronaviruses we have today. There were a lot more neurological symptoms with it than normally occur with the flu
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4 minutes ago, Hoosier said:
That estimated IFR is actually higher than I thought.
Guessing it’s more around 0.5-0.7% when it’s all said and done. Started around the high end at the beginning and will get to the lower end as we get better treatments. Some states like Utah and Alaska have a CFR in that range right now
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Just now, Hoosier said:
Difference between now and the summer is that it was basically 4 or 5 states really driving the big increase. Now it's more states.
North Dakota only has 13 ICU beds available. The city of Bismarck only has 1 left. I'm guessing the closest city with ICU beds is hours away
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you know it's the cold season when forecast discussions talk about early evening lows with temps rising throughout the night.
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I think the biggest lesson is that you can't completely eradicate the disease in western societies, so the big goals are the slow the spread by encouraging mask wearing, not allowing mass gatherings and letting people who can work from home work from home and other common sense measures to keep hospital numbers down
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the ride never ends
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looking like a good chance for some flurries if not outright snow N of a line from The Quad Cities to Chicago to Detroit over the next 4 or 5 days
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looks like troughing last over the east for at least a week or two. The GEFS and CFS have a relatively weak vortex through the period which goes hand and hand with the blocking pattern.
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This is fun, lets do it for MSN
Record High
10 Easiest to Break
- 51 on February 13
- 50 on December 26
- 50 on December 27
- 64 on November 12
- 47 on February 1
- 47 on January 30
- 47 on January 19
- 48 on January 14
- 50 on February 9
- 50 on February 7
10 Hardest to break
- 62 on December 28
- 76 on November 7
- 68 on February 22
- 62 on December 20
- 58 on January 6
- 60 on December 24
- 57 on January 3
- 63 on February 12
- 63 on February 15
- 77 on November 1
Record Lows
10 Easiest to Break
- -10 December 12
- -13 February 14
- -14 February 15
- -16 January 1
- -19 January 27
- -9 February 26
- -19 February 6
- -16 December 30
- -16 December 31
- -11 December 6
10 Hardest to Break
- -37 January 30
- -20 February 28
- -14 November 28
- -28 December 24
- -26 December 27
- -22 December 9
- -11 November 29
- 0 November 5
- 1 November 7
- -7 November 21
- **Bonus** -29 March 1 (which is an amazing 15 degrees colder than any other record low in the month of March. Must have been some radiational cooling)
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18 minutes ago, Hoosier said:
Louisiana is trying to do its best Florida 2004 impersonation.
Looks like a chance for more development in the Western Caribbean after 10/15, but climo says that should stay east of Louisiana
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1 hour ago, Chicago Storm said:
Euro and CFS are not only an overall torch for the rest of Oct, but also for Nov as well.
Biggest torch month on Euro is actually Jan.
9 minutes ago, Hoosier said:The Euro winter prog was not the greatest look.
If that's the case I'll have started the most popular thread in forum history. My only hope is for more moisture, in whatever form. I can handle warm if there are storms to track
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4 minutes ago, Danny8 said:
very neat. microclimates always interest me. Reminds me of driving around my town at night when I was younger and the car thermometer would bounce around by 5+ degrees
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With all the COVID talk and the fact that we're weeks into Fall already we need a fresh start on this board.
This upcoming week is going to be lovely but the lack of rain/severe this fall has been disappointing. Hoping with can get some dynamic fall systems toward the end of the month that can bring some rain/wind/severe and backside snow.
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down to 31 here this morning. First frost and freeze of the season
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5 minutes ago, Hoosier said:
Would not at all be surprised if things have to be tightened up again eventually. I think we can avoid the amount of lockdowns that we had in the winter/spring. As evidenced by what happened in the United States and some other countries over the summer, the seasonality component is not as pronounced as the flu, but it still appears to be a factor. With more cases comes a higher likelihood of somebody walking into a restaurant or bar or some other place where masking is difficult, thus causing more spread.
lockdowns aren't really practical at this point in terms of limiting spread. Really two things can help things from getting out of hand, rapid testing like the kind that was approved by the WHO today and no large indoor events.
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7 minutes ago, nwohweather said:
It's time to shut this down folks
shut down the bad math and lack of fact checking that pervades our media. I agree
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Fall/Winter 2020/21 Banter Thread
in Lakes/Ohio Valley
Posted
The lack of sea ice on the Siberian side of the arctic is really causing some interesting patterns.