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Atmosphere Comparison

Posted: May 15 2009 8:25 pm
by Jim
The endless chatter of weather.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 02 2011 7:23 pm
by Jim
Been real dry, too. Dry up here at altitude, and in Tucson, on the down low. Currently we have identical -4 dewpoints.
http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/images/twc/misc ... AprMay.png

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:26 pm
by hippiepunkpirate
Being that today is pleasantly NOT windy, and I finally got on an anti-biotic regimen which is rapidly annihilating my lingering my sinus infection, I may have to get out onto the Fat Man today after work.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:31 pm
by Jim
Your sinuses are bad, too, what are you on? Not that placebo amoxicillen, I hope?

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:33 pm
by hippiepunkpirate
Jim_H wrote:Your sinuses are bad, too, what are you on? Not that placebo amoxicillen, I hope?
No, I can't remember the actual name of the drug, but the prescription is always written up as "z-pak"

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:35 pm
by Jim
azithromycin, probably.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:37 pm
by hippiepunkpirate
Jim_H wrote:azithromycin, probably.
Yeah, that sounds right

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:44 pm
by Jim
No wind, so the state is burning 200 acres out by Woody Mt, but no Federal Burns today. No wind! What a spring treat!

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:46 pm
by hippiepunkpirate
Jim_H wrote:but no Federal Burns today
Slackers! (myself included)

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 03 2011 1:48 pm
by Jim
Government waste run amok. Privatize it all, and turn it over to Donald Trump to run into the ground like every other business he destroys.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 04 2011 4:55 pm
by Jim
Awesome weather in Flag today, 73 degrees with 16% humidity in my apartment. Thats 2 degrees warmer with twice the humidity of the airport.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 9:09 am
by Jim
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/images/abq/cli/ ... 110411.gif
http://www.srh.weather.gov/images/abq/c ... 100411.gif

Both of the above links, which open in a new window unless told to open in a new tab, are from the ABQ NWS office and show just how dry it has been in NM this year. If they expanded to AZ, parts of CO and TX, it would be quite bad in other areas, too. There are wet years and there are dry years, but this seems to be pretty exceptional for the southern part of the state, and the SE part of AZ. I tried to find a link to a local Flagstaff Daily Sun article about a prediction that the recent decade's dry springs, later monsoons, and then more intense monsoon, how they are supposed to be linked to a climate pattern shift. Like how I didn't say global warming or climate change? Just about everywhere in the west this year is normal or above normal and in some places, well above normal for winter precipitation. Just not AZ, NM, or TX. It was an La Nina.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 9:18 am
by joebartels
The two links are identical. Looks like a terrain map, the precipitation enjoys high country.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 9:28 am
by Jim
Thanks, I fixed that. Yup, the water likes to fall where it is high. The San Juans in CO were lower than normal, but recently they have picked up more water again. I thought I might go up there this June to do a traverse between two high peaks. I saw a trip report for one and there is a ton of snow. June is too early.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 10:21 am
by hippiepunkpirate
joe bartels wrote:Looks like a terrain map, the precipitation enjoys high country.
Jim_H wrote:Yup, the water likes to fall where it is high.
Orographic uplift. Anyone care to discuss wet and dry adiabatic rates?

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 10:33 am
by Jim
I find it interesting that similarly prominent ranges don't have the same precipitation patterns. Sometimes due to rain shadows and sometimes due to the size of the area over a certain elevation. Sort of the way the Pusch ridge is relatively dry when a similarly elevated Granite mountain is wetter.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 11:57 am
by hippiepunkpirate
@Jim_H
You mentioned rain shadow without the determining factor for a rain shadow: wind direction. What is the predominant wind direction for the Tucson area?

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 12:03 pm
by azbackpackr
WNW, as I recall.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 4:15 pm
by hippiepunkpirate
azbackpackr wrote:WNW, as I recall.
Assuming that would be "from" the WNW, I wouldn't expect Pusch Ridge to receive a great deal of rainshadow, but perhaps the Tortolita Range is a moisture thief.

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 10 2011 4:23 pm
by chumley
Nice to see a dusting of snow at the Nordic Center earlier today. Yay May 10th! :y:

Re: Warm spring a-rising, pre-monsoon chat.

Posted: May 12 2011 4:10 pm
by Jim
Woke up to a nice fresh layer of snow above 11,000' on the Peaks, today. Mostly gone now, but it makes them look a lot nicer.