Month: April 2017

Up to 16 inches of snow for parts of Wyoming and Nebraska

Up to 16 inches of snow for parts of Wyoming and Nebraska

via Ice Age Now
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WINTER storm warning

URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Cheyenne WY … Apr 27 2017

A Potent Spring Storm will Bring Widespread Moderate to Heavy
Snow to Portions of Southeast Wyoming and the Northern Nebraska Panhandle This Afternoon through Friday Evening…

Sierra Madre Range-Snowy Range-Including the cities of Centennial and Albany

…WINTER STORM WARNING EFFECT UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRIDAY NIGHT…

* TIMING…Moderate snow will continue this afternoon, with a
decrease in intensity early this evening. Moderate to heavy snow
will return by midnight tonight and continue periodically through
Friday evening.

* TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS…8 to 16 inches.

* WINDS/VISIBILITY…West winds 20 to 25 mph with gusts to 35 mph this afternoon. Winds diminish tonight and become north 10 to 20 mph Friday. Visibilities one half mile or less at times in snow and blowing snow.

* IMPACTS…Travel will be extremely hazardous due to snow covered
roads and low visibilities. Those planning outdoor recreation in
the Snowy and Sierra Madre mountains should be prepared for heavy snow and low visibilities.

http://ift.tt/1SPGwGG

Thanks to Kenneth Lund for this link


The post Up to 16 inches of snow for parts of Wyoming and Nebraska appeared first on Ice Age Now.

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April 27, 2017 at 04:55PM

Hard freeze in France – Some vineyards totally destroyed

Hard freeze in France – Some vineyards totally destroyed

via Ice Age Now
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“In winemakers’ memory … no one ever experienced such a severe freeze.” More freezes in the forecast.

________________________________
27 Apr 2017 – Hard freezes in some of France’s famous wine-making regions, including Champagne, Bordeaux and Burgundy, have caused extensive damage.

Temperatures plunged in all three regions last week, sometimes to below -7C (19°F).

In the Bugey region near Lyon, winemakers said the damage was extensive, with some vineyards totally destroyed.

“Frost destroyed everything – shoots are dead,” Julien Hubail, expert at the Bugey wine union, said. “In winemakers’ memory it had never happened, no one had ever experienced such a severe freeze.”

In Champagne the frost impact is worse than last year’s, and last year was down more than 20% from the year before that.

On average in Champagne, 20 to 25% of vine shoots had been destroyed by Tuesday against 14% destruction last year, said a spokesman for the Champagne Committee (CIVC) industry group. And that estimate did not include potential damage from frosts over the past two nights.

In the Bordeaux region, farm unions estimated that several thousand hectares of vineyards had experienced damage between 50 and 100%.

“Today we are likely seeing the most important freeze since 1991. said Patrick Vasseur, vice chairman of the local branch of France’s largest farm union FNSEA.

The entire Cognac vineyard has also been severely impacted.

Growers have been using candles, heaters, even helicopters in attempts save their crops. With additional freezes in the forecast, they fear the damage could increase even more.

http://ift.tt/2qkSwcF

Thanks to Glen Cuthbert for this link


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April 27, 2017 at 04:55PM

Climate will Make it both Easier and More Difficult to Exercise

Climate will Make it both Easier and More Difficult to Exercise

via Watts Up With That?
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Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Will Global Warming make it easier or more difficult to exercise? The answer apparently depends on how you squint at the latest study.

How climate change could affect the way we exercise

Sarah Berry APRIL 26 2017

The extreme changes of weather recently – from a seemingly endless heatwave to seemingly endless rain – affect more than the environment; they also affect the way we move.

For months it has often felt too hot or too wet to exercise. Long walks and runs have been replaced by cabin fever, indoor yoga classes and finally trying out some of the new livestream fitness classes you can do from your lounge (some Australian ones worth checking out include Varlah, Voome, Yogaholics and The Robards Method).

But, generally, for many of us during times of extreme weather conditions, we simply become more sedentary, exchanging the walk to work with the car or swapping the bicycle for the bus. Whether it’s lethargy from heat or an instinct to bunker down from the wet, we sit more and do less.

If we do that for too long, there is an impact on our health.

Read more: http://ift.tt/2qcQ5JD

Sounds bad, right? Maybe not;

Study Finds A Rare, ‘Small Silver Lining’ Of Climate Change: More Exercise

Jeremy Rellosa April 25, 2017

This is obvious: If it’s 10 degrees below zero outside, chances are you won’t see many runners on the street. But on a 70-degree spring day, you’ll spot more.

Given this link between weather and exercise, how will climate change affect it? That’s what one researcher at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government wanted to understand.

A study published Monday in the journal Nature offers an answer: Overall, we’re likely to see higher rates of physical activity as our country gets warmer.

“That could correspond to increases in benefits that we receive from being more physically active,” said lead author Nick Obradovich, a postdoctoral fellow at the Kennedy School. “This is one of the very rare studies that has shown some small possible benefits associated with warming for the United States.”

Read more: http://ift.tt/2oCsS6A

The abstract of the study which caused this confusion;

Climate change may alter human physical activity patterns

Nick Obradovich & James H. Fowler

Abstract

Regular physical activity supports healthy human functioning. Might climate change—by modifying the environmental determinants of human physical activity—alter exercise rates in the future? Here we conduct an empirical investigation of the relationship between meteorological conditions, physical activity and future climate change. Using data on reported participation in recreational physical activity from over 1.9 million US survey respondents between 2002 and 2012, coupled with daily meteorological data, we show that both cold and acutely hot temperatures, as well as precipitation days, reduce physical activity. We combine our historical estimates with output from 21 climate models and project the possible physical activity effects of future climatic changes by 2050 and 2099. Our projection indicates that warming over the course of this century may increase net recreational physical activity in the United States. Activity may increase most during the winter in northern states and decline most during the summer in southern states.

Read more (paywalled): http://ift.tt/2oCpNmZ

Sydney might not suffer the extreme winter cold of northern states of the USA, but Sydney winters are not much fun – even 50F can be a turnoff for outdoor fun if it is rainy, dark and windy. But maybe I’m prejudiced – my preferred exercise temperature is a nice 90F day, splashing about in my tropical swimming pool.

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April 27, 2017 at 03:38PM

Today’s Top Pix

Today’s Top Pix

via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog
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A cold, wet day in Colorado

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April 27, 2017 at 02:21PM