Post by DaleP on Mar 15, 2009 8:56:31 GMT -8
The weather is starting to beat down attitudes amongst the strongest of us. For those at all interested in what the rest of the year looks like, I present the following from a fellow who has been spot on for 2008 and so far in 2009. Looks like I'll be wearing out my AmFibs this spring.
**THEO'S SEASONAL OUTLOOK FOR WINTER, SPRING & SUMMER AND FALL 2009**
Expect A Colder Winter, A Very Wet, Sluggish Spring, and Stormy Summer & Fall Seasons Ahead
THEO'S ASTOMETEOROLOGICAL
SEASONAL OUTLOOK FOR WINTER, SPRING, SUMMER & FALL 2009
According to my astrometeorological calculations on climate conditions, this winter season will last from mid-November 2008 into May 2008 due to the cooler and wetter Spring of 2009, which will make this coming winter season seem longer than normal.
In my estimation, Winter 2009 will begin on Saturday, November 13, 2008 and will extend to April 25, 2009. The trend of the winter will be Air temperatures, making this one of the coldest winters for some time in North America. By the weekend of November 15, 16, 17, gusting winds, heavy rains, and thunderstorms strike the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. This will be followed by a strong northwestern cold front driving temperatures down for daytime highs in the 30s and lows in the 20s in the cities, with outlying regions seeing low daylight temperatures in the 20s, and teens at night.
The week of November 19-27 will see a slight warming trend and rise in temperatures in the South, Southeast, and Mid-Atlantic into the November 27 Thanksgiving Day holiday, and weekend. However, skies cloud again with colder temperatures arriving by November 30, and into the month of December, which will feature increased heavier precipitation, snows, and gusting winds for the central Midwest,Eastern states, Southeast, and Great Lakes.
This winter season will be a "classic" and historically cold winter with strong low pressure systems bringing increased snow accumulations along with blizzard conditions because of gusting winds. This begins in the month of November and continues through most of the month of December for about two-thirds of the country.
Spring 2009 will "appear" to be early in the month of February, with some regions in the east and southeast, late, making the months of March, April and May 2009, wet and cooler than is normal for spring. From what I can determine from my calculations, Spring 2009 is muddled, cold, cloudy, with the climate still in the throes of winter, which does not want to seem to end until late April 2009. Warmer weather and clearer spring-like skies will not become more frequent for two-thirds of the country until early June 2009.
I am forecasting a long winter for this reason, as I see spring 2009 arriving latter than usual, with a delay in climate and spring weather until early June for many regions of North America.
Winter's arrival by November 13th, is about 18 days ahead of meteorological winter (Dec. 1) and a full five (5) weeks ahead of the Winter Solstice (Dec. 22) in the Northern Hemisphere. This winter will be colder-than-normal due to the lack of sunspot activity affecting the Earth's equator. Colder than normal winter temperatures (arctic air) are on tap this winter ahead with increased precipitation of freezing rains, snows and gusty winds mixing with very cold air.
My outlook for the nation for the Continental Divide towards the entire two-thirds of the country is to prepare for a chilly early autumn and very cold winter season. Think and act about 4-5 weeks ahead of what one would normally do to prepare for fall and especially winter this year.
At times this winter, the Pacific Northwest, Plains states, Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, New England, the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states will be much colder than normal this winter, with above average snowfall, along with ice events that will make roads very dangerous.
Due to heavier than normal snowfalls in the Pacific Northwest this winter, some northwestern regions will experience common flooding in the months of March and April. The slightly drier conditions will end in the northwest with the heavier than normal snowfalls during snowmelt season in spring 2009.
My long-range weather forecast will include I disagreeessment of winter's early arrival by mid-November, with some snows in October & November along the northern regions of North America.
WINTER ARRIVES IN MID-NOVEMBER 2008
Winter 2008-09, according to I disagreeessment will be colder and wetter than normal with increased snow and ice events for the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. Winter is earlier than usual, with much colder temperatures than is normal for November and December. I've been forecasting an earlier than normal winter for this year in my comments since last year.
Colder than normal temperatures for two-thirds of the country (excepting parts of the far west and Northwest) will occur between November 26 through to January 4, 2009. Arctic temperatures do slip into the northern regions of the United States, in December, and continue off and on in January, but begins to gradually ease by late January until the effects of the Pacific jet warms things up in the month of February for regions of the country including the Mid-Atlantic, Northeast, parts of southern New England, and the Ohio Valley. Arctic air will slip into the Pacific Northwest briefly during January, and will recede again that month, and drift back towards the northern Plains states through the northern, central and southern Rockies as far as the panhandle of northern Texas and Oklahoma.
I do not expect a strong Pacific jet until after January 25, 2009. This means the month of February 2009 will see temperatures rise after the pullback to the north of arctic air. However, February 6-9 brings another eastern snowstorm to the Mid-Atlantic states, then afterwards, a continuing warming up of the atmosphere the rest of February, but with still more threats of ice events because of the increase moisture in the atmosphere threatens the Plains states, and parts of the southeastern U.S. in February.
Expect a stronger-than-normal northern jet stream this winter bringing about northwestern winds and Alberta clipper systems into the Great Lakes, upstate New York and New England with these clipper storms riding this wave also into the states of Ohio and Pennsylvania and into the Mid-Atlantic region.
December 5-12, 2008 shows snow and ice events for parts of southeastern & central U.S., with colder than normal temperatures, heavy rains from the Gulf of Mexico combined with cold arctic air from Canada combining to produce snow and ice. Strong winds will make the storms damaging. The Central & Southern Rockies, and southern Plains into northern Texas will be affected, as well as states as Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Maryland, Virginia.
That early December 2008 winter event, for example, continues into the Mid-Atlantic region the week of Dec. 12-19, and will arrive by Friday, December 12, making for a messy weekend on the east coast and northeastern metropolitan areas with heavy blowing snows in Philadelphia, New York, Washington D.C., and parts of the Southeast. Blizzard warnings due to the high winds will increase snow accumulations in the cities and suburbs. Roads will be treacherous the second and third weeks of December.
The month of December 2008 is very active before the astronomic start of winter on December 21, 2008. Expect increased winter precipitation, with blowing snows, and blizzard-like storms during the month of December. Colder than normal polar air will sweep into the country affecting states from the Upper Midwest to the Eastern states during mid-December.
ASTROMET OUTLOOK
I expect about 2-1/2 snow storms a month from early December 2008 through to early March 2009 for the Rocky Mountains, the Southern Rockies, Central & Plains states, as well as the Southeastern, Central and Northeastern United States. This will make Winter 2009 memorable after several years of a relatively warm winters; especially in the Midwestern , Southern and Eastern U.S.
GENERAL CLIMATE CONDITIONS FOR WINTER 2008/2009
- Early onset of winter by Mid-November 2008
- Colder-than-normal temperatures for much of the country
- Heavier than normal snowfalls - Pacific Northwest, Rockies, Central Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, Central Plains, Northeast
- Gusty Winds, blowing snow, blizzard conditions - Plains states, Rocky Mountains, into Nebraska & Central Midwest
- Strong Northwestern Winds (affecting Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Northeastern states)
- Arctic Air (late Dec. '08/Jan. '09) Pacific Northwest, Intermountain West, Rockies, Great Lakes, Central Midwest & Northeast)
- Alberta Clippers from the Northwest sweeping further south than usual
- Increased southern precipitation Mixing with Arctic Air
- Freezing Rains & Ice storms - Pacific Northwest, Central Midwest, Mid-Atlantic
SPRING 2009 OUTLOOK
Next Spring is "muddled." That's the word I use because from all my calculations, spring is very slow to get up and fully bloom. When it does, it is sluggish at best and takes it's time to get started.
February 2009's Pacific jet will warm the atmosphere over much the U.S., and during the latter half of the month of February, it will "appear" as if spring is one its way. However, it is not. Spring-like weather will be seen in the Southern U.S. in early February. Do not be surprised to witness thunderstorms and lightning in mid-to-late February in the southern regions of the country. There are strong potentials for tornados in February and the first 15 days of March 2009 throughout the southeastern U.S. The months of April, May and June are very active for severe thunderstorm and tornado activity in the Lower Midwest and Southeastern U.S.
By March 6, 2009, a six-week Venus retrograde (Mar. 6 to April 17) signals the onset of spring climate conditions relative to Earth's position to the Sun-Venus configuration. Prior Venus retrogrades before spring equinoxes in analog data have shown very wet late winter conditions persisting over the course of about six-weeks ~ the exact length of most Venus retrogrades.
The climate by the next spring equinox (March 20, 2009) will see increased precipitation from the South to Central Midwestern states, to the Northeastern regions, including New England, with heavier-than-normal rains, particularly in April 2009, with the threat of a major Nor'easter along the Eastern U.S. from April 17-25. New England is particularly wet, and several states should guard against flooding in March and April.
The months of March and April 2009 show colder-than-normal weather conditions. A damp, unsettled, and stormy climate exists throughout both months. April 2009 is very windy, wet and cold, with winter-like days and colder-than-normal temperatures showing that spring will be delayed yet another month. Warmer temperatures from the continued Pacific jet will increase, as the northern jet falls further south, bringing with it gusting winds, and heavy rains in early to mid-April.
According to my calculations, the spring season does not fully bloom until the end of the first week of June 2009.
SPRING 2009 CLIMATE CONDITIONS
- Winter-like storms in March & April
- Colder than normal
- Wetter than normal w/ heavy precipitation & freezing rains (March, early April)
- Gusting, Damaging Winds, Heavy Rains (early-to-mid April 2009)
- Dense Fogs (March/April/early May)
SUMMER AND FALL 2009 OUTLOOK
My Summer 2009 outlook calls for a warmer than normal summer, with above-average temperatures and high humidity which will persist into the autumn months, leading into an Indian Summer for the South, Southeast, Upper and Central Midwest, Upper Great Lakes, New England, Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic states. The summer is very stormy, with numerous thunderstorms, gusting winds, and electrical storms lasting into late fall in several regions of the country. The air is quite charged in summer and fall 2009
After a sluggish start to spring, the Summer 2009 season features some "spring-like" storms in the months of July and August in the Southeastern U.S. featuring powerful thunderstorms, lightning strikes, gusting winds, and tornados. For the Gulf, and Southern states, I expect one tropical storm in the month of July, a second tropical storm and major hurricane in mid-August followed by another a hurricane in the second week of September.
My long-range outlook for September 2009 shows pleasant summer weather for many of the northern states, including New England, the Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic after the active stormy months of July and August.
Summer & Autumn 2009 is very warm and humid for two-thirds of the nation, excepting the Pacific Northwest, which will see moderately cooler summer temperatures in 2009. The atmosphere is electrically “charged” during summer, with powerful thunderstorm activity lasting the entire summer season, and into the fall months throughout much of the country; especially the Central & Southern Rockies, the Central Midwest, the Southeast, and the Mid-Atlantic.
There are unusual late season electrical storms with thunderstorm activity in the month of November. This extends into the month of December for the South, Southeast, states bordering the Mason-Dixon Line, and into the state of Maryland, and Washington D.C.
The Southwest, Southern Plains, Central to Southern Rockies, Southern Midwest, and Southern states should guard against strong summer and fall storms bringing gusting winds, heavy precipitation, hail, and lightning strikes.
After a wet late winter, and spring, the far western states of California and Nevada will see a reduced threat of wildfires during the spring season. However, drier climate conditions resurface during the summer months of mid-July, August, and September 2009. The months of August and September 2009 are particularly drier and windier than normal in western states. Communities and firefighters are urged to use extra caution during the summer months in helping to prevent the spread of wildfires during the late summer and fall months.
I am forecasting another El Nino in the Pacific to start in 2009. This build-up of Pacific Ocean waters will lead to a very wet late 2009 and 2010 for the Pacific coastlines stretching from British Columbia to the north and extend as far south as central South America. This means that the western states of Washington, Oregon and California can expect heavier than average precipitation under the coming El Nino I’ve forecasted to begin in mid-to-late 2009, and increase in strength into all of 2010.
SUMMER/FALL 2009 CLIMATE CONDITIONS
- Warmer Than Normal Temperatures
- High Humidity
- Numerous & Powerful Thunderstorms (lasting deep into the fall season.)
- Flash Flooding From Heavy Downpours
- Hail & Strong Electrical storms - (July, August & again November, December)
- Tornados & Gusting Winds – South, Southeast, Central Midwest, Ohio Valley)
- Tropical Storms & Hurricanes – South, Southeast (July, August, September)
This post has been edited by AstroMet: Dec 7 2008, 07:01 PM
--------------------
Theodore White; Professional Forecaster
AstroMeteorologist.S
Classical Scientific Astrologer
"As Above, So Below" ~ Hermes T
"Some are Weather-Wise, Some Other-Wise." ~ Benjamin Franklin
Theo's Weather And Global Transits Blog
www.SPACEWEATHER.COM
The Old Farmer's Almanac
**THEO'S SEASONAL OUTLOOK FOR WINTER, SPRING & SUMMER AND FALL 2009**
Expect A Colder Winter, A Very Wet, Sluggish Spring, and Stormy Summer & Fall Seasons Ahead
THEO'S ASTOMETEOROLOGICAL
SEASONAL OUTLOOK FOR WINTER, SPRING, SUMMER & FALL 2009
According to my astrometeorological calculations on climate conditions, this winter season will last from mid-November 2008 into May 2008 due to the cooler and wetter Spring of 2009, which will make this coming winter season seem longer than normal.
In my estimation, Winter 2009 will begin on Saturday, November 13, 2008 and will extend to April 25, 2009. The trend of the winter will be Air temperatures, making this one of the coldest winters for some time in North America. By the weekend of November 15, 16, 17, gusting winds, heavy rains, and thunderstorms strike the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. This will be followed by a strong northwestern cold front driving temperatures down for daytime highs in the 30s and lows in the 20s in the cities, with outlying regions seeing low daylight temperatures in the 20s, and teens at night.
The week of November 19-27 will see a slight warming trend and rise in temperatures in the South, Southeast, and Mid-Atlantic into the November 27 Thanksgiving Day holiday, and weekend. However, skies cloud again with colder temperatures arriving by November 30, and into the month of December, which will feature increased heavier precipitation, snows, and gusting winds for the central Midwest,Eastern states, Southeast, and Great Lakes.
This winter season will be a "classic" and historically cold winter with strong low pressure systems bringing increased snow accumulations along with blizzard conditions because of gusting winds. This begins in the month of November and continues through most of the month of December for about two-thirds of the country.
Spring 2009 will "appear" to be early in the month of February, with some regions in the east and southeast, late, making the months of March, April and May 2009, wet and cooler than is normal for spring. From what I can determine from my calculations, Spring 2009 is muddled, cold, cloudy, with the climate still in the throes of winter, which does not want to seem to end until late April 2009. Warmer weather and clearer spring-like skies will not become more frequent for two-thirds of the country until early June 2009.
I am forecasting a long winter for this reason, as I see spring 2009 arriving latter than usual, with a delay in climate and spring weather until early June for many regions of North America.
Winter's arrival by November 13th, is about 18 days ahead of meteorological winter (Dec. 1) and a full five (5) weeks ahead of the Winter Solstice (Dec. 22) in the Northern Hemisphere. This winter will be colder-than-normal due to the lack of sunspot activity affecting the Earth's equator. Colder than normal winter temperatures (arctic air) are on tap this winter ahead with increased precipitation of freezing rains, snows and gusty winds mixing with very cold air.
My outlook for the nation for the Continental Divide towards the entire two-thirds of the country is to prepare for a chilly early autumn and very cold winter season. Think and act about 4-5 weeks ahead of what one would normally do to prepare for fall and especially winter this year.
At times this winter, the Pacific Northwest, Plains states, Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, New England, the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states will be much colder than normal this winter, with above average snowfall, along with ice events that will make roads very dangerous.
Due to heavier than normal snowfalls in the Pacific Northwest this winter, some northwestern regions will experience common flooding in the months of March and April. The slightly drier conditions will end in the northwest with the heavier than normal snowfalls during snowmelt season in spring 2009.
My long-range weather forecast will include I disagreeessment of winter's early arrival by mid-November, with some snows in October & November along the northern regions of North America.
WINTER ARRIVES IN MID-NOVEMBER 2008
Winter 2008-09, according to I disagreeessment will be colder and wetter than normal with increased snow and ice events for the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. Winter is earlier than usual, with much colder temperatures than is normal for November and December. I've been forecasting an earlier than normal winter for this year in my comments since last year.
Colder than normal temperatures for two-thirds of the country (excepting parts of the far west and Northwest) will occur between November 26 through to January 4, 2009. Arctic temperatures do slip into the northern regions of the United States, in December, and continue off and on in January, but begins to gradually ease by late January until the effects of the Pacific jet warms things up in the month of February for regions of the country including the Mid-Atlantic, Northeast, parts of southern New England, and the Ohio Valley. Arctic air will slip into the Pacific Northwest briefly during January, and will recede again that month, and drift back towards the northern Plains states through the northern, central and southern Rockies as far as the panhandle of northern Texas and Oklahoma.
I do not expect a strong Pacific jet until after January 25, 2009. This means the month of February 2009 will see temperatures rise after the pullback to the north of arctic air. However, February 6-9 brings another eastern snowstorm to the Mid-Atlantic states, then afterwards, a continuing warming up of the atmosphere the rest of February, but with still more threats of ice events because of the increase moisture in the atmosphere threatens the Plains states, and parts of the southeastern U.S. in February.
Expect a stronger-than-normal northern jet stream this winter bringing about northwestern winds and Alberta clipper systems into the Great Lakes, upstate New York and New England with these clipper storms riding this wave also into the states of Ohio and Pennsylvania and into the Mid-Atlantic region.
December 5-12, 2008 shows snow and ice events for parts of southeastern & central U.S., with colder than normal temperatures, heavy rains from the Gulf of Mexico combined with cold arctic air from Canada combining to produce snow and ice. Strong winds will make the storms damaging. The Central & Southern Rockies, and southern Plains into northern Texas will be affected, as well as states as Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Maryland, Virginia.
That early December 2008 winter event, for example, continues into the Mid-Atlantic region the week of Dec. 12-19, and will arrive by Friday, December 12, making for a messy weekend on the east coast and northeastern metropolitan areas with heavy blowing snows in Philadelphia, New York, Washington D.C., and parts of the Southeast. Blizzard warnings due to the high winds will increase snow accumulations in the cities and suburbs. Roads will be treacherous the second and third weeks of December.
The month of December 2008 is very active before the astronomic start of winter on December 21, 2008. Expect increased winter precipitation, with blowing snows, and blizzard-like storms during the month of December. Colder than normal polar air will sweep into the country affecting states from the Upper Midwest to the Eastern states during mid-December.
ASTROMET OUTLOOK
I expect about 2-1/2 snow storms a month from early December 2008 through to early March 2009 for the Rocky Mountains, the Southern Rockies, Central & Plains states, as well as the Southeastern, Central and Northeastern United States. This will make Winter 2009 memorable after several years of a relatively warm winters; especially in the Midwestern , Southern and Eastern U.S.
GENERAL CLIMATE CONDITIONS FOR WINTER 2008/2009
- Early onset of winter by Mid-November 2008
- Colder-than-normal temperatures for much of the country
- Heavier than normal snowfalls - Pacific Northwest, Rockies, Central Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, Central Plains, Northeast
- Gusty Winds, blowing snow, blizzard conditions - Plains states, Rocky Mountains, into Nebraska & Central Midwest
- Strong Northwestern Winds (affecting Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Northeastern states)
- Arctic Air (late Dec. '08/Jan. '09) Pacific Northwest, Intermountain West, Rockies, Great Lakes, Central Midwest & Northeast)
- Alberta Clippers from the Northwest sweeping further south than usual
- Increased southern precipitation Mixing with Arctic Air
- Freezing Rains & Ice storms - Pacific Northwest, Central Midwest, Mid-Atlantic
SPRING 2009 OUTLOOK
Next Spring is "muddled." That's the word I use because from all my calculations, spring is very slow to get up and fully bloom. When it does, it is sluggish at best and takes it's time to get started.
February 2009's Pacific jet will warm the atmosphere over much the U.S., and during the latter half of the month of February, it will "appear" as if spring is one its way. However, it is not. Spring-like weather will be seen in the Southern U.S. in early February. Do not be surprised to witness thunderstorms and lightning in mid-to-late February in the southern regions of the country. There are strong potentials for tornados in February and the first 15 days of March 2009 throughout the southeastern U.S. The months of April, May and June are very active for severe thunderstorm and tornado activity in the Lower Midwest and Southeastern U.S.
By March 6, 2009, a six-week Venus retrograde (Mar. 6 to April 17) signals the onset of spring climate conditions relative to Earth's position to the Sun-Venus configuration. Prior Venus retrogrades before spring equinoxes in analog data have shown very wet late winter conditions persisting over the course of about six-weeks ~ the exact length of most Venus retrogrades.
The climate by the next spring equinox (March 20, 2009) will see increased precipitation from the South to Central Midwestern states, to the Northeastern regions, including New England, with heavier-than-normal rains, particularly in April 2009, with the threat of a major Nor'easter along the Eastern U.S. from April 17-25. New England is particularly wet, and several states should guard against flooding in March and April.
The months of March and April 2009 show colder-than-normal weather conditions. A damp, unsettled, and stormy climate exists throughout both months. April 2009 is very windy, wet and cold, with winter-like days and colder-than-normal temperatures showing that spring will be delayed yet another month. Warmer temperatures from the continued Pacific jet will increase, as the northern jet falls further south, bringing with it gusting winds, and heavy rains in early to mid-April.
According to my calculations, the spring season does not fully bloom until the end of the first week of June 2009.
SPRING 2009 CLIMATE CONDITIONS
- Winter-like storms in March & April
- Colder than normal
- Wetter than normal w/ heavy precipitation & freezing rains (March, early April)
- Gusting, Damaging Winds, Heavy Rains (early-to-mid April 2009)
- Dense Fogs (March/April/early May)
SUMMER AND FALL 2009 OUTLOOK
My Summer 2009 outlook calls for a warmer than normal summer, with above-average temperatures and high humidity which will persist into the autumn months, leading into an Indian Summer for the South, Southeast, Upper and Central Midwest, Upper Great Lakes, New England, Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic states. The summer is very stormy, with numerous thunderstorms, gusting winds, and electrical storms lasting into late fall in several regions of the country. The air is quite charged in summer and fall 2009
After a sluggish start to spring, the Summer 2009 season features some "spring-like" storms in the months of July and August in the Southeastern U.S. featuring powerful thunderstorms, lightning strikes, gusting winds, and tornados. For the Gulf, and Southern states, I expect one tropical storm in the month of July, a second tropical storm and major hurricane in mid-August followed by another a hurricane in the second week of September.
My long-range outlook for September 2009 shows pleasant summer weather for many of the northern states, including New England, the Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic after the active stormy months of July and August.
Summer & Autumn 2009 is very warm and humid for two-thirds of the nation, excepting the Pacific Northwest, which will see moderately cooler summer temperatures in 2009. The atmosphere is electrically “charged” during summer, with powerful thunderstorm activity lasting the entire summer season, and into the fall months throughout much of the country; especially the Central & Southern Rockies, the Central Midwest, the Southeast, and the Mid-Atlantic.
There are unusual late season electrical storms with thunderstorm activity in the month of November. This extends into the month of December for the South, Southeast, states bordering the Mason-Dixon Line, and into the state of Maryland, and Washington D.C.
The Southwest, Southern Plains, Central to Southern Rockies, Southern Midwest, and Southern states should guard against strong summer and fall storms bringing gusting winds, heavy precipitation, hail, and lightning strikes.
After a wet late winter, and spring, the far western states of California and Nevada will see a reduced threat of wildfires during the spring season. However, drier climate conditions resurface during the summer months of mid-July, August, and September 2009. The months of August and September 2009 are particularly drier and windier than normal in western states. Communities and firefighters are urged to use extra caution during the summer months in helping to prevent the spread of wildfires during the late summer and fall months.
I am forecasting another El Nino in the Pacific to start in 2009. This build-up of Pacific Ocean waters will lead to a very wet late 2009 and 2010 for the Pacific coastlines stretching from British Columbia to the north and extend as far south as central South America. This means that the western states of Washington, Oregon and California can expect heavier than average precipitation under the coming El Nino I’ve forecasted to begin in mid-to-late 2009, and increase in strength into all of 2010.
SUMMER/FALL 2009 CLIMATE CONDITIONS
- Warmer Than Normal Temperatures
- High Humidity
- Numerous & Powerful Thunderstorms (lasting deep into the fall season.)
- Flash Flooding From Heavy Downpours
- Hail & Strong Electrical storms - (July, August & again November, December)
- Tornados & Gusting Winds – South, Southeast, Central Midwest, Ohio Valley)
- Tropical Storms & Hurricanes – South, Southeast (July, August, September)
This post has been edited by AstroMet: Dec 7 2008, 07:01 PM
--------------------
Theodore White; Professional Forecaster
AstroMeteorologist.S
Classical Scientific Astrologer
"As Above, So Below" ~ Hermes T
"Some are Weather-Wise, Some Other-Wise." ~ Benjamin Franklin
Theo's Weather And Global Transits Blog
www.SPACEWEATHER.COM
The Old Farmer's Almanac