ttystikk
Well-Known Member
Yes it is! Took it from the 90s to the 60s in minutes!I saw a hail storm out that way when I was visiting Sister. Crazy how fast the temp drops when the ice starts raining down.
Quite refreshing, lol
Yes it is! Took it from the 90s to the 60s in minutes!I saw a hail storm out that way when I was visiting Sister. Crazy how fast the temp drops when the ice starts raining down.
More energy for storms to work with on hot days, true.It always seems to hail on the hottest days. I hear it's something about the height of the water when it leaves the clouds. I guess they are high on hotter days.
I remember about the updrafts now that you remind me. A mind is a terrible thing to waste.More energy for storms to work with on hot days, true.
Hail happens with strong updrafts inside the storm, blowing the particles up higher to freeze and then repeating the process to enlarge the stones.
Those same strong storms can also make tornadoes, but storms need to be well organized for that to happen. Since most of our weather comes from the direction of the mountains, they can be violent but the mountains generally don't allow them to organize into tornadic cells until they've been out over the plains for awhile.
That would be why my county gets very few tornadoes, but the county directly to the east of here actually holds the world record for most tornadoes on the ground.
Yet another reason not to live in Greeley!
Waste some for me, bro-I remember about the updrafts now that you remind me. A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
The locals were more concerned with their lotto numbers.Waste some for me, bro-
When I lived in SoFla, I saw a waterspout on the way to work in Ft Lauderdale one morning. No one seemed concerned in the least about it.
It wouldn't be the water that would trash a sailing ship's rigging but the wind in the cyclone itself. Shredded sails, snapped ropes and broken masts and spars pretty much guaranteed and a good possibility of blowing the ship flat and taking on water or even sinking it.The locals were more concerned with their lotto numbers.
When I was writing, my research turned up lots of cutting edge info on how early 18th century sea captains dealt with them at sea. The most common defense was to fire your cannon into the waterspout. I would hate to see the rigging on a Brigantine after bumping into one. Water is heavy, so you could expect everything to be smashed.
yikes. I hate even thinking about triple digit heat.105 & chance of rain in the high desert of socal
Finally got 1/4" and the hoped for cool down.I've been missed by several thundershowers today, hoping this one coming now manages to drop some measurable rain and cool things down.