Winter Storm Quiana damage to Jersey Woods |
"Boots...again?!!!" |
The storms also brought very high winds. Toward month's end, Quiana hit with 18 hours of sustained winds of 25-35 mph, and gusts of up to 62 mph. I stood on the porch and listened to the awesome sound of the winds in the trees, and heard a tree fall. It was one of many lost in the Jersey Woods this month.
If you're like me, you remember when winter storms were just big weather events that dropped huge amounts of snow and or ice, and maybe caused temperatures to plummet drastically, but which remained nameless. I remember being surprised when I first heard a big winter storm called by name. The Weather Channel (not the National Weather Service, as in the case of hurricanes) began the practice in 2012, about the time it was dawning on meteorologists that something wild was happening weather-wise in every season, and the abnormal was becoming the new normal. Severe weather is a hallmark of climate change, and winter storms have been worsening, both in terms of snow and ice accumulations, wind strength, and amount of people and property affected. The Weather Channel names an impending winter storm, blizzard, or ice storm which the NWS forecasts is likely to impact a population of at least 2 million, or cover an area of at least 400,000 square kilometers. Or both. There's an interesting article posted at Mental Floss about the controversy over TWC's criteria for naming winter storms http://mentalfloss.com/article/74744/why-it-controversial-name-winter-storms
February is the month we observe two Bean Hill signs of spring. The first sign is the return of the Red-winged Blackbird males, the earliest of the migratory birds to appear at our feeders. The second sign is the annual meadow mow-down, which has to be done for the health of the meadow grasses and flowers, and, more importantly, before little critters, like bunnies, start nesting. It should be noted that the first dozen years or so that we lived here, these signs occurred around mid-March. The fact that they now occur in February is another small sign of how the climate on these 5 1/2 acres has changed over two decades.
1 comment:
Anymore, do we dare say normal, or just refer to what happens with our weather as the “new normal?” I had read a prediction that by 2040 Ohio will be more like southern Kentucky with our climate—our new normal, I guess. Glad you are seeing signs of spring!
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