What's the weather where you are?

PHOTOS: DC residents flock to Capitol Hill for first legal sledding in decades
http://www.accuweather.com/en/features/trend/photos_sledding_on_capitol_hill_blizzard_2016_washington_dc_ban_lifted/54986768

Just in time for the blizzard that dumped more than 2 feet of snow across the mid-Atlantic, kids and adults took their sleds to Capitol Hill, legally, for the first time in more than 140 years.

In a provision from December's spending bill, Capitol Police will halt their enforcement of the sledding ban as long as conditions are safe.


Hundreds of people took advantage of the newly changed policy during the record-breaking blizzard on Saturday. The Hill was quickly populated with sleds, inflatable mattresses, inner tubes and other creative forms of transport.

"It took an act of Congress, but children are finally welcome to sled down on #CapitolHill," Speaker of the House Paul Ryan tweeted on Saturday.

Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) released a press release on Thursday citing her work to include the provision for non-enforcement of the 19th century law in the fiscal year 2016 omnibus bill.
 
In keeping with the cold weather and storms around the globe, Hong Kong just had its coldest day since 1957, where temperature dropped to 3 degrees C in the city areas, and sub zero in the hills:

Hong Kong shivers through its coldest day since 1957: kindergartens, primary schools closed today

http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/health-environment/article/1904775/hong-kong-shivers-through-its-coldest-day-1957

The thing is, this is city without any central heating, hence all public buildings and offices, and most of the houses are very frigid right now. In these temperatures without heating, you only feel warm under a hot shower...
 
Richard S said:
Nienna said:
seek10 said:
Here in central New Jersey near my apartment, it may be 2ft+ snow. Power is there in the apartment, so not too much to complain for weekend snow. It will be some time before it will be cleaned up though.

Glad to see that you are okay, seek10. :)

I'm glad you weathered the storm OK too! In my area we got about 30 inches on the ground. Lots of people out with shovels and snowblowers today. It really is a mess and it is going to take some time to get back to 'normal'.

I'm at the Northern part of NJ. Seems we really weren't prepared for this storm; most of the streets remain uncleaned (not plowed) all Sunday. Luckily it wasn't really cold out and a lot of it has cleared up/melted from the streets. It must have been a good 25" of snow.

Trying to get around in un-shoveled areas meant getting submerged knee deep in snow. The worst has been shoveling though, with so much snow, and no where to put it! My back is sore from digging out the cars and the walk way, but laying in cold snow helped!! :P

I really enjoy snow days, it's the one time you really get to see your neighbors and kids playing!

I hope everyone's okay and doing well.
 
Just a quick update on the weather from the NW coast of UK - the snow we had a week or so ago, it stuck for two days and it was so fresh and kinda frosty that it felt like Caesarmas again ;)

Then it melted and we've had this odd rise in temps again basically wavering between 13C and 8C later in the days. When the snow fell it was hovering around 3C. I'd say it's unseasonably warm again. But it looks like we're set for another swing to lower temps later this week.

The mornings have been bright which is a nice change but then by 11am the clouds are already rolling in and today in particular is looking grey and like we won't see the Sun again till tomorrow. And it rains every other day, nothing too heavy though, at the moment.

Glad to hear everyone who was hit by the US blizzard is doing ok! That kind of snow is unheard of in England...
 
During the last week or two, Northern Central Spain has registered at some point or another minus 8 degrees and plus 19 degrees Celsius. Crazy weather!
 
i had heard we were due a drop in temp but for the record, and let's see how accurate he is; Piers Corbyn, Jeremy Corbyn's brother (leader of the British political party Labour) has said the following:
“It will get much, much colder,”

Corbyn asserts (he has lately suggested that in the longer term we are on the verge of a great cooling cycle, which will vindicate him once and for all).

“Next month we have a displaced polar vortex situation. Plenty of snow coming.

www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/jan/24/piers-corbyn-other-rebel-in-the-family-jeremy-corbyn-climate-change#_=_


I haven't had chance to read the whole article but if any one is near to accurate it seems it's Piers
The miners were planning a strike and “they wanted to know whether it was going to be cold enough for the strike to be effective, to bring Britain to its knees,” Corbyn recalls.

He said no, but under pressure from his comrades he went back to the data, “looked at a lot of new relationships and correlations” and came to the conclusion that, yes, it was going to be a very cold winter. He presented his evidence to the Miners’ Educational Support Committee (“I think it was called that. We had a lot of committees…”) And it was passed on up to the NUM. As the strike unfolded Corbyn’s prediction proved correct, the winter of 1984-85 was unusually cold.

Was the NUM grateful?

“Very,” he says. He had phone calls from head office, “not [Arthur] Scargill personally but one of his senior assistants”, asking how long the cold weather would last. He told him he thought it could possibly last long enough to bring down the Thatcher government, but by March the strike had collapsed and he never got the chance to be proved right.

5616.jpg

I like the guy, but let's see :)


Added: if you're not familiar, the guy apparently is qualified in meteorology and astrophysics and, i think, uses solar cycles and EU type of theory for his calculations.
 
Never let a perfectly good disaster go to waste ......

DC Issues $1 Million Worth of Parking Tickets After Blizzard
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/DC-Issues-1-Million-Worth-of-Parking-Tickets-After-Blizzard-366711341.html

D.C.'s snow emergency will remain in effect through Wednesday at 6:30 p.m., and the city wants drivers to know it's serious about enforcing the parking bans.

Since the blizzard began last Friday, the District has issued $1,078,000 worth of parking tickets and $65,600 in fines so far. It has towed 656 cars.

And until the snow emergency expires, the District will continue to ticket and tow vehicles parked or abandoned on any snow emergency route (PDF), or considered to be road hazards. Crews are trying to plow streets from curb to curb, officials said, and vehicles parked in the way of plows will have to be removed.

Cars parked in a traffic lane on any road that are deemed a hazard or a barrier to snow removal may also be towed.

Vehicles are being towed at the owners' expense. Violators face $250 tickets, $100 tow charges and a $25-per-day fee until they pick up their vehicles.

"Don't park your car illegally, and that includes parking it kind of in the middle of the street next to the snow bank," D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said Tuesday. Cars should be parked no more than 12 inches from a curb, not a snow bank, or drivers risk a ticket, she said.

But many drivers said they simply couldn't move their cars from emergency routes after the blizzard dropped two feet of snow on the District.

"They gave me a $250 ticket just for being snowed in. I couldn't get no help," driver Danielle Smith said.

This storm will easily rank among the region's five worst, Storm Team4 said, and the cleanup is taking days. Temperatures across the area are expected to drop again overnight, creating icy conditions on many of the region's roads Thursday.

Giant Snowblowers Clear Roads in DC, Maryland (3 min. Video)
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Giant-Snowblowers-Clear-Roads-in-DC_-Maryland_Washington-DC-366793781.html?_osource=taboola-recirc

Oversized snowblowers that plow snow and grind ice have been loaned to D.C. and Maryland by the state of Connecticut. News4's Shomari Stone caught the machines at work in Montgomery County.

(Note - "the District has issued $1,078,000 worth of parking tickets and $65,600 in fines" probably - to cover the cost of the loaned snowblowers and over-time for emergency workers?)
 
Australia: Geelong hit by freak storm, ‘millions and millions’ of dollars of damage (Photo - Video)
http://www.euronews.com/2016/01/28/australia-geelong-hit-by-freak-storm-millions-and-millions-of-dollars-of-damage/

Wed. 1/27/2016 - The storm-hit Australian port city of Geelong, in the south-eastern state of Victoria, is beginning to recover from its worst flooding in decades.

Two weeks of rain fell in just 20 minutes on Wednesday afternoon to Geelong, which is located around 75 kilometres southwest of the state capital, Melbourne.


The Australian Bureau of Meteorology described the flash flooding as a “one-in-50-year event.”

More than 150 houses were flooded and dozens of cars were submerged, although floodwaters receded quickly.

Geelong’s mayor Darryn Lyons told local media he expects the repair bill to reach “millions and millions of dollars.”
 
When joining the local "Polar Bear Club' in Winter - to experience the cool waters of a lake side beach - isn't enough adventure .... try surfing in Siberia.

Surfing in Siberia: braving the icy waves in Russia's wilderness (Photo - Video)
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/28/surfing-in-siberia-icy-waves-russia-kamchatka

A small band of enthusiasts has helped the remote region of Kamchatka become a year-round mecca for surfers.

The hill overlooking Khalaktyrsky beach in Siberia’s Kamchatka region offers a stunning view in winter, stretching out over snowy volcanoes and crystal-clear ocean waves crashing onto black volcanic sand.

But look closer at the icy waves and you might see an unlikely wetsuit-clad silhouette since the beach has become home to a group of intrepid local surfers who ride the waves not only in the warm summer months, but in the long and freezing winters too.

“Years ago people here didn’t care about the ocean. The beach was completely empty,” says Anton Morozov, a surfer and owner of local snowboarding and surfing school, Snowave. “You could meet young guys who had lived their whole lives in Petropavlovsk, but had never even seen the ocean.”

Now, despite its remote location and lack of facilities, Kamchatka has begun to draw a steady stream of tourists to its stunning scenery – and its surf.

15 minutes of fame

Kamchatka first grabbed Russia’s attention two years ago when Surf in Siberia – a collection of film-making surf enthusiasts – devoted a video to the region’s winter waves.

“Kamchatka is an incredible place,” says Konstantin Kokorev, the organisation’s founder.

“I’ve been here before several times – saw the ocean, the gulf, ships sailing – but I had no idea you could surf here. People who live here have no clue they have world-class surfing opportunities.”

The film was soon picked up by local and national media and in the two years since local surfers say the number of tourists to Kamchatka has significantly increased.

Learning to surf

Morozov started surfing more than 10 years ago. “I’d always wanted to try, but back then there was nothing that would help me … All we could do was watch movies and documentaries and try to figure out how,” he says.

When he tried for the first time – in the summer – he used a borrowed wetsuit and an old surfboard a friend had left him. “The suit was no good for surfing,” Morozov says. “And we had no idea how to do it, when to get nice waves, how far to swim. It took me months to learn all these things.”

Morozov and other enthusiasts gradually gathered enough information and experience to enjoy their new hobby. Soon they wanted to try surfing in winter.

“I saw a video with a guy surfing in the winter in Canada, and the beauty of him riding the waves against the snowy background just stunned me,” Morozov said.

Morozov and other enthusiasts gradually gathered enough information and experience to enjoy their new hobby. Soon they wanted to try surfing in winter.

“I saw a video with a guy surfing in the winter in Canada, and the beauty of him riding the waves against the snowy background just stunned me,” Morozov said.

His first winter experience, without winter wetsuit, boots or gloves, was excruciating. “My hands quickly went numb in the water. I ran out of the ocean screaming in pain and was afraid I wouldn’t be able to ever warm them again.”


Despite the bone-chilling cold, he fell in love with it. “We went to the ocean in the morning, right before the sunrise. It was unbelievable – because of the low temperature the air was crystal clear, the sun was rising from the water, our black diving suits contrasting with the white snow,” he said.

This is his fifth surfing winter. Morozov and his fellow enthusiasts now have the necessary gear and surf three to four times a week.

“That feeling, when you struggle with yourself in cold water and at some point the struggle ceases and leaves pure joy in its place is special for me.”

‘Pure torture’

Lyudmila Tanachyova loves to surf and though she finds the cold a challenge she’s found herself braving the icy waters out of necessity.

“Here in Kamchatka we have only three months of summer, if you take a break for the other nine months, the next summer you have to learn things from the start all over again,” she says.

Originally a rock-climbing instructor, she first tried the sport last year. “I caught the wave and started falling, imagining the moment I would go underwater thinking ‘Oh my God, here comes hell’,” she says of her first experience.

During winter, the water measures around 2C (35F) with an average air temperature of -15C, but both Tanachoyva and Morozov agree that the greatest obstacle in winter is not the cold but the lack of facilities.

When snow buries the road to the beach it can only be reached with a snowmobile, and a small beach-hut provides scant protection from the elements. “It’s pure torture to put on a diving suit in the cold,” Tanachyova said.

Untapped potential

Sergei Rasshivayev, a professional surfer and head of the Russian Surfing Federation, also believes that winter surfing is the most interesting direction the sport has taken.

“It’s a great way of challenging yourself, of experiencing completely different emotions. Surfing among palm trees is not intriguing anyone these days – surfing against a background of volcanoes and glaciers is,” he explains.
 
After a very cold weather last 2 weeks in Macedonia, when lowest temperature went down to - 20 C, today and in the next few day very hot weather for this part of the year. Its up to 10-15 C. Again very dramatic temperature change.
 
We drop to 5º (35-41ºF) in Mexico City, we are not use to this freezing temperatrure, so everyone is talking about it, is expected snow and/or sleet in higher places of the country due to a polar wind of the 34 cold front.

.
 
OK so the fluctuating temperature continued, and then i think Tues/Wednesday we got the tail end of Storm Jonas which brought winds ~ 10 mph, rain, and certain areas which have had little chance to 'dry out' have suffered, a bridge finally gave way in one area, it had already taken a hit from the other storms which started around December.

The wind chill has taken temperatures to around 3-5C much lower than the ambient temperature 8-13C, and after the tail end of Jonas, we have another storm due to hit today/this weekend: Gertrude.

600x300-name-our-storms-names-5625eb76c219e.jpg


As you can see we're on the letter G so according the Met office, we've had 6 'proper' storms which have been named so far, Gertrudes being the 7th.

The main problem from this storm appears to be high winds, high tides and chances of flooding in northern areas of the UK, particularly those areas which already suffered; Cumbria and the surrounding areas, and Scotland.


Severe Weather Europe added 3 new photos.
1 hr · https://www.facebook.com/severeweatherEU/posts/1766750700214690
12654707_1766750666881360_1096576757698953536_n.png

Severe windstorm over UK & Ireland tomorrow! Storm to hurricane force winds over N Scotland and Faroe Islands tomorrow, gutsing to 150 km/h or more. Strong winds gusting to 80-100km/h+ over much of the British Isles and Ireland tomorrow under the influence of deep cyclone ‪#‎Gertrude‬.

Maps: Meteociel.fr
 
Interesting - considering these area's recently experienced flooding from Storm Jonas?

Tremors, Shaking Reported In Multiple South Jersey Counties
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2016/01/28/police-getting-numerous-calls-regarding-tremors-shaking-in-atlantic-county/

January 28, 2016 - HAMILTON Twp, NJ (CBS) – Residents reported feeling tremors and shaking in Atlantic, Cape May, Ocean and Camden Counties in New Jersey Thursday afternoon.

However, authorities say the USGS is reporting no earthquakes nearby.

Frank Salamone writes on Facebook, “Since 130 had about 6 occurrences feeling them all the way on the 45th floor of the trump Taj towers.”

“All the way through Ocean County….5 or 6 rounds of rattling and shaking,” comments Amy Bellis.

Heard 9 booms with rumbling coming from S.E. Working on beach in #AvalonNJ.

The National Weather Service tweeted they have confirmation of a sonic boom, not an earthquake in South Jersey.



In pictures: Snowfall in central Vietnam for the first time
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/vietnam-in-photos/150560/in-pictures--snowfall-in-central-vietnam-for-the-first-time.html

VietNamNet Bridge - Frost and snow have appeared across northern mountainous provinces in recent days due to a record cold spell over the last 40 years.

It is reported that up to 40 places were covered with snow on Sunday and Monday (January 24-25). In many places, this was the first time snowfall appearing in history.

On Sunday, January 24, snow fell on many mountainous villages of Thanh Hoa and Nghe An provinces in central Vietnam for the first time.

In Thanh Hoa province, the temperature in the plain and Thanh Hoa city was 6 degrees Celsius and zero degrees Celsius in the mountainous area. Frost and snow appeared in some villages as Cao Son in Lung Cao commune, Ba Thuoc district, Sai Khao in Muong Ly commune and Nhi Son commune in Muong Lat district.

In Cao Son village, frost appeared on the night of January 23 and snow began falling at noon of January 24. Locals said the last snowfall was many decades ago.

A local official said many families in Cao Son had to take their children to the commune center to avoid the cold.

In Yen Khuong commune of Lang Chanh mountainous district, snow also appeared on January 24.

Snow fell in Muong Long and Na Ngoi, near the Vietnam-Laos border, on Sunday. Temperatures dropped to -1.5 to -2 degrees Celsius.

The same day, frost appeared in some districts like Tuong Duong and Que Phong as temperatures dropped to below 0 degrees Celsius.

The deputy director of the National Hydrometeorology Center – Mr. Le Thanh Hai - said that it was very rare that the temperature in Vinh City of Nghe An Province dropped to 7 degrees Celsius on January 24. It was the first time in history that snow fell in some districts of Nghe An.



Image: Cattle killed and crops damaged by cold weather in northern Vietnam
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/society/150547/image--cattle-killed-and-crops-damaged-by-cold-weather-in-northern-vietnam.html

The record cold spell that brought unprecedented snow to parts of Viet Nam has been a hit with tourists, but made life miserable for poor households.

The cold snap has reportedly killed hundreds of cattle – the most valuable asset to many Vietnamese farmers – in the northern mountainous provinces of Lao Cai, Hoa Binh and Cao Bang.

A series of photos posted on Facebook taken by tourists highlighted the freezing weather with snow covering all the roads and houses. Temperatures in Sa Pa plunged to -5 degrees Celsius on Saturday night, the lowest in years.

Ha Thi Than, head of the Agriculture Division of Hoa Binh's Van Ho District, told Phap luat TPHCM (HCM City Law) that 17 cattle had succumbed to the cold since the whole district was blanketed in snow starting from Saturday night. Long Luong was the hardest hit commune with temperatures plummeting to -2 degrees Celsius.

At least 100ha of rubber plants, tea and plum trees were badly damaged together with another 200ha of vegetables, Than said.

Unofficial reports said more than 500 cattle had died in the three provinces of Yen Bai, Quang Ninh and Lao Cai alone, and the record cold spell is expected to continue.

According to the Quang Ninh departments of animal health, agriculture and rural development, a total of 431 buffaloes, cows, oxen and goats in the province, mostly let to wander in Binh Lieu District, had died by yesterday noon.


Border gate jammed

About 500 trucks carrying Vietnamese agricultural produce remain stranded at the Tan Thanh Border Gate in Lang Son Province – a conventional trade gateway between Viet Nam and China.

Lang Son Customs said that 400 trucks, mostly carried watermelons, dragon fruit and longans were parked in the waiting area for clearance, while another 100 had queued up along National Highway 1A. Snow storms in China were one of the main reasons for the clearance delay, according to Tan Thanh Border Gate Customs. The limited parking area for trucks on the Chinese side was also making the situation worse.

The number of trucks making through clearance fell over the last three days – coinciding with the cold spell that hit across Asia, including China and Viet Nam, said the Lang Son Customs Authority.



After overnight freeze, ice impacts Baltimore commute
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/weather/weather-blog/bs-md-morning-ice-20160127-story.html

Baltimore motorists will encounter slick roads after an overnight refreeze.

Accidents were reported on Interstate 95 South and Interstate 895 early Thursday.

The weekend's record snowfall melted Tuesday on Baltimore streets as temperatures touched 52 degrees under bright sun. Wednesday night marked the first time in about 48 hours that the mercury dipped below freezing.

"There's going to be some slippery spots," said Brian LaSorsa, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. "It will probably be more susceptible [to freezing] on secondary roads. ... There's probably more snow and more slush on those roads."



Digging out: More photos from this weekend's massive East Coast snow storm (Photo gallery)
http://www.yakimaherald.com/news/news_watch/digging-out-more-photos-from-this-weekend-s-massive-east/collection_71e4c3fc-c3b1-11e5-b8ca-db3f73f68fe4.html#26
 
Scientists Announce 'Doomsday Clock' Time Showing How Close We Are to the Apocalypse
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/doomsday-clock-time-adjusted-show-close-apocalypse/story?id=36524149

Tuesday Jan 26, 2016 - The minute hand of the "Doomsday Clock," which indicates how close the world's leading scientists think we are from destroying the planet, remains at "three minutes to midnight," scientists announced in Washington, D.C., today.

Midnight on the clock represents "doomsday." The closer the minute hand is to midnight, the higher the chance of a global cataclysm, according to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the group of scientists who set the "time" on the symbolic clock.

The clock's minute hand is assessed each year, and the clock's time "conveys how close we are to destroying our civilization with dangerous technologies of our own making," the Bulletin explained on its website.

Last year, scientists announced the clock moved from "five minutes to midnight" to "three minutes to midnight" due to climate change and "extraordinary and undeniable threats to the continued existence of humanity" by the modernization of nuclear weapon arsenals.

This year's time considered tensions between the United States and Russia and the recent North Korean nuclear test, the Bulletin said in a news release.

The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was founded in 1945 by University of Chicago scientists who helped develop the first atomic weapons. The scientists created the "Doomsday Clock" two years later in 1947.

The decision to move the clock's time is made by the bulletin's science and security board, which includes physicists and environmental scientists from around the world, in consultation with the bulletin's Board of Sponsors, which includes 16 Nobel laureates, according to the Bulletin.
 
Re: What's the weather where you are? (I love this question)

:cool: Coming at cha from the beautiful Arcata, California.
We had some light rain this morning, which is great! (The Redwoods love the rain, therefore, we love the rain)
And the rest of the days has been nothing less than glorious.
Blue skys, white clouds, a calm breeze.
Feels Like 55° Visibility 5mi Humidity 93% UV Index 0 (Low)
Today - Cloudy with occasional rain showers. High 57 °F (13.9 °C). Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%.
Tonight - Cloudy with periods of rain. Low 53 °F (11.7 °C). Winds SSE at 10 to 20 mph (16.1 to 32.2 kph). Chance of rain 100%. Rainfall around a half an inch.
according to:
https://weather.yahoo.com/united-states/california/humboldt-12587681;_ylt=A0SO8waUqqpWxAcAot5XNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEycm5kcTc2BGNvbG8DZ3ExBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDQjEzNTBfMQRzZWMDc2M-
 

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