.04 here and nothing in sight for a while. Did the tug test on several dormant areas of grass today and it’s finally giving in. Suppose I’ll punt until fall.
I’m crushed as well that Josh isn’t chasing this. I get it,this core won’t be easy to nail but his documentation of this event stood the chance to be an all timer. Not to mention the scientific data he gets.
If you’re bored with baking and sweating from places you didn’t know you could sweat, head to the tropical thread. Not sure when we’ll see another June major like this. Beryl is going to be a case study for a long long time.
Yep. And if it can fight off shear in the western Caribbean, look out. I get a bad feeling it’ll find a weakness in the ridge to the north but one thing at a time for now I suppose.
A lot of discussion on X about this being anomalous from a time standpoint but hell- when was the last time the southern Antilles were impacted by a major? I truly can’t remember. This will have a painful impact on areas that have been fortunate to dodge an active Atlantic cycle to this point.
Today/tomorrow or bust! I’m worried we’re in big trouble locally. I’m starting to see sandbars in spots on lake hickory that I’ve never witnessed having depth issues before.
I’ve only got .84 on the month and none in at least 10 days. A far cry from the foot last month. Our climate has become such a pattern of haves and have nots. It’s either flooding or a drought and no in between.
3.24 this week, 7.62 on the month! The lake is full of floating logs, ponds are brown and the worms are even trying to escape the saturated ground. Quite the flip from my almost rainless April.
My location has an absolutely uncanny ability to miss storms. I’ve really never seen anything quite like it. When everyone was getting drenched over the past few weeks, we were missing almost all of the activity.