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It's raining hard here now. One massive cloud just suddenly came down from Nebraska.

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patrice Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-18-11 11:44 PM
Original message
It's raining hard here now. One massive cloud just suddenly came down from Nebraska.
I hope it keeps on moving down to Oklahoma where they REALLY need it.

It's been cooler the last few days. Did the dishes a little bit ago and the ants that kept coming in to the kitchen to hide from the heat seem to have finally given up.
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Javaman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-19-11 08:29 AM
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1. Send it toTexas. nt
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kentauros Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-19-11 09:18 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Really!
Texas towns teeter on drying up

By Paul J. Weber

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: 9:37 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011
Post a Comment E-mail Print Share Larger Type

ROBERT LEE — Ranchers in pickups stop to ladle up puddles of street water after underground pipes crack, and wilting trees are quenched with dirty bathwater hauled from tubs to front yards.

An April storm teased Robert Lee, but instead of rain, a lightning strike started a wildfire that chewed up 169,000 drought-starved acres.

"We can't catch a break," said Eddie Ray Roberts, the city's water superintendent.

The worst Texas drought since the 1950s has this ranching town of nearly 1,110 residents and a handful of other cities facing a prospect they've never encountered before: running out of water. Outside Dallas, the town of Kemp experienced a dress rehearsal this month when every faucet was shut off for two days to fix pipes bursting in the shifting and hardening soil.

~~~more at link~~~



Why It's So Hot, When It Might End and Why We Should Count Our Blessings

By Jeff Balke Thu., Aug. 18 2011 at 3:01 PM

Polite elevator conversation usually includes something like, "How about that weather, huh?" Lately, that conversation might be more along the lines of, "Holy shit, I went outside and thought I was going to die!" Normally, summers in Houston turn the average resident into either a hermit, scurrying from one air conditioning source to another as quickly as possible, or a grumpy bastard who does nothing but complain about the heat to anyone who will listen, as if no one else has been outside since April, or some combination of the two. Unfortunately, this year, those responses are not just normal, they are justified.

Houston is currently suffering through what will turn out to be the hottest summer on record. We already broke July records and the average August temperature is three degrees higher than the hottest month in Houston history. It was 103 degrees on Wednesday -- part of a 17-days-and-counting streak of over 100-degree days breaking the previous record of 14 -- and there is even a chance we could see temperatures near 105 next week (the record highest temperature ever recorded in Houston, if you're curious, is 109). Normally, our hottest week of the summer is the last week in July with average temperatures in the upper 90s, so, yeah, this heat is sucking our will to live, but why has this year been so bad and when will it end?

Our unreasonably warm temperatures are the result of a dome of high pressure sitting over Texas that is so persistent, it has been given the nickname "bulldog" by some members of the meteorological community. This large mass of high pressure is also responsible for our record-setting drought. It generally prevents storm clouds from forming within the area and holds in heat like a pressure cooker, making us the chili (no beans, thank you very much).

~~~more at link~~~


I know many DUers don't care, but it's really gotten bad here. We watch as the north and north-east flood, everything east of the Mississippi gets normal to above-average rain, and we get nothing. We watch the satellite images and all the clouds rotate around the state, never venturing inside the borders. The HP story describes it so well in so few words: we're inside of a pressure-cooker, and we're the chili.
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