Global warming will make it's 3 day September appearance in the high country starting tomorrow
BigSal
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Posted 5:30 pm, 09/23/2024
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Now do the previous days.
That boy sure is riding that struggle bus all the way to the end.
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Springy’s Specter
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Posted 5:26 pm, 09/23/2024
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the potential hurricane in the gulf now got the climate change activists all worked up
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DB Cooper
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Posted 5:12 pm, 09/23/2024
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Well the global warming heat wave for Sept ends tomorrow in Ashe. Only five days out of 30 will the daily high temp reach historical average levels.
Poor smurf... is there a doctor in the house?
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surfer
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Posted 6:59 pm, 09/21/2024
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DB's GOT EV's UP HIS A§§ SO BAD HE CAN'T THINK STRAIGHT.....LOL
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Conrad’s Ghost
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Posted 6:45 pm, 09/21/2024
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I wonder why DB isn't bumping the thread where he admits to not knowing the weather?
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DB Cooper
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Posted 9:45 am, 09/20/2024
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Meteorologist Debunks Claim Antarctica Is 'Burning' Up From A Heat Wave - This headline was omitted from my previous post for unknown reasons, possibly leftist goblins.
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Conrad’s Ghost
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Posted 4:50 pm, 09/19/2024
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DB is extra-strength stupid. How could you be so out of the loop you don't know what happened at the coast this week?
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surfer
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Posted 4:47 pm, 09/19/2024
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The Carolinas braced for a storm that forecasters warned could bring heavy rain - as much as 6 to 8 inches in some spots. But one narrow band got a "firehose" that dumped as much as 20 inches in a so-called 1,000-year flood that shocked many with its intensity. The storm that left homes flooded, cars submerged and schools closed Tuesday in parts of North Carolina wasn't really a surprise to scientists who have long said that such rainfalls are one marker of climate change. "Data shows one of the strongest relationships between climate change and precipitation is that as the atmosphere warms, the capacity to hold water increases. Therefore we see more intense rainfall in a shorter period of time," said Andrew Kruczkiewicz, senior researcher at the Columbia Climate School at Columbia University. Monday's deluge centered on Carolina Beach south of Wilmington, where more than 18 inches (46 centimeters) of rain fell in 12 hours and almost 21 overall. That much rain qualifies as a 1,000-year flood expected only once in that length of time, meteorologists at the National Weather Service office in Wilmington said.
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Conrad’s Ghost
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Posted 4:26 pm, 09/19/2024
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Jesus. You haven't seen the coast, have you?
This thread is not doing well. DB doesn't know about the storm that hit the coast. I'm a little embarrassed for him.
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DB Cooper
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Posted 4:22 pm, 09/19/2024
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But hurricane season is a bust!
Kaaa BOOOOM! (You so easy!)
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Conrad’s Ghost
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Posted 4:19 pm, 09/19/2024
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Meanwhile, the coast was hit with a once in a 1,000 years rain event...again.
DB's timing is always terrible.
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DB Cooper
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Posted 4:12 pm, 09/19/2024
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Gosh, I hope I didn't set off more global warming with that 'Kaaa BOOOOM'!
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surfer
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Posted 4:00 pm, 09/19/2024
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I PITY THIS DUMB ****.....SO SAD
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DB Cooper
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Posted 3:50 pm, 09/19/2024
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Scroll down to the graph which shows Sept 20, 21, and 22 to be the only three days to exceed the normal average daily high temperature this entire month.
Poor smurf... is there a doctor in the house?
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