I don't want to hear about anything except rainbows and sunshine from your little corner of the southeast.IlliniDave wrote:After a pair of mild summers it's pretty miserable in my little corner of the southeast so far in 2016, and very dry.

I don't want to hear about anything except rainbows and sunshine from your little corner of the southeast.IlliniDave wrote:After a pair of mild summers it's pretty miserable in my little corner of the southeast so far in 2016, and very dry.
Wilco! Remeber too, everything I say most be put through an iDave-to-Normal/Normal-to-iDave translator. What I find miserable is often what the majority of people find adorable when it comes to weather.jennypenny wrote:I don't want to hear about anything except rainbows and sunshine from your little corner of the southeast.IlliniDave wrote:After a pair of mild summers it's pretty miserable in my little corner of the southeast so far in 2016, and very dry.
There is more and more vegetation in this area (Arctic AK) every year. There are some fairly interesting comparative studies comparing vegetative cover today to what it was in the 1960s.Dragline wrote:For those of you living in the arctic:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/ene ... &tid=ss_tw
I think the study itself is behind a paywall.
There is such a yield gap between developing and developped countries due to lack of good practice and technologies (sometimes up to 10x, see Mueller 2012) that the future doesn't look so bad for food production as long as good practices and technologies spread... And as explained earlier, yields are increasing.jacob wrote: So yes ... there are potentially huge changes under way and lots of things will get broken, e.g. coastal cities, our ability to keep growing food to sustain 7 billion people .
Well, for now people in the Gulf seem to manage the heat by building ski resorts in their malls and living in buildings with AC.jacob wrote:http://qz.com/674284/incredible-heat-co ... w-decades/
http://link.springer.com/article/10.100 ... 016-1665-6
http://eltahir.mit.edu/wp-content/uploa ... /Paper.pdf
If five million Syrian refugees are hard to absorb, consider the issue of dealing upwards of five hundred million refugees ... They can't all go to Europe?
I think some places got over 30 inches of rain over a couple days. I was remarking to a friend a couple weeks ago that this has not been the hottest summer of the 18 I've spent in Alabama, but it's been the most consistently humid (which is saying something). A lot of days it feels similar to the way it does this far from the ocean after a large hurricane makes landfall and disperses. It's hard to describe, but it's a different kind of humid. Apparently I wasn't imagining that as what I'd heard was a large volume of tropical moisture collected in an low pressure hole and set the event up. Here at the far end of the state from the gulf, except for one 2-week stretch, it's been pretty dry since Memorial Day.cmonkey wrote:I noticed the rainfall totals down in LA when I was looking at rainfall totals for our area last Friday. The color shades were the same as our area, indicating they got 10-12+ inches at a time. It was much more widespread, however.