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Cyburbian
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Invest in a thundershirt. You'll thank me later. And your pup will thank youOur doggo has ensured no one gets a good night sleep during the multiple thunderstorms the past couple nights.
Invest in a thundershirt. You'll thank me later. And your pup will thank youOur doggo has ensured no one gets a good night sleep during the multiple thunderstorms the past couple nights.
We had a round of storms move through quickly late yesterday afternoon that knocked out power to 600k households in the state and then we had another round that came through from round 2:00 a.m. until maybe 6:00ish this morning and we're now at about 700k without power.
Looking at the outage map in Metro Detroit, it looks like our neighborhood is one of the few without losses but everything to the east and south of us looks affected. I didn't notice much in the way of trees down on my run this morning but I could hear the hum of the generators and there was a lot of flooding out there.
I predict this will be the hottest September on record for Ohio. Not sure about Michigan, because of the UP, but it wouldn't surprise me if it's in the Top 5.It's still summer and will be for a while longer. The warm weather will likely continue into early part of September, but sometime around mid September we'll feel a disturbance in the Force and note that a seasonal change is beginning. Maybe it'll be a cool morning or an outlier maple tree with a few leaves starting to yellow, but you'll someone silently register the change is definitely coming.
I predict this will be the hottest September on record for Ohio. Not sure about Michigan, because of the UP, but it wouldn't surprise me if it's in the Top 5.
It started raining pretty hard around 5:45 yesterday evening and hasn't stopped yet. We're forecast to get up to about 7" today.
Yeah, I got hit with....ice crystals? this morning walking across the street.It was snowing at lunch (but not sticking) - first flakes of the season.
Great night to leave the bedroom window cracked.
It was one of the hottest summers on record in much of the eastern U.S. and Midwest and one of the wettest. Hard to believe that it was one of the wettest for California as well, though it all seemed to come at once.
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Well, this isn't broken down by county but it does give a more regional breakdown of the drought in Texas and other states.I wonder what those maps/numbers would look like broken down by county... Places like California and Texas are so large that it's entirely possible that extreme weather in certain parts of the states really drives the statewide averages.
The afternoon high temperatures for the next few days in the ATL will be in the high 60s/low 70s.We've gotten small amounts of snow daily since the day after Thanksgiving. Enough to keep the ground barely white and then mostly melt by the evening. We got a couple inches of snow last night that actually left some icy roads this morning. Not enough snow to actually do any winter sports, but quite picturesque all the same.
With winds to match...Wow, it was 52 out at lunchtime.
Why would you post a screenshot from our local station?