You've got absolutely nothing over the tourist mecca sunshine capital of the pacific northwest....Come to seattle, they said.
It's nice and green here...
Well, in day 3 of nasty storms & pools of rain since then
I went to the beach yesterday here in NW Fl...got some bit of sunburn. The water was cold at first, but felt great after the first 5 mins. Beautiful day it was...Think I got sunburned @ Ft. Myers Beach. Drone pics were snapshots from videos today.View attachment 257562View attachment 257563
???Snowing like mad right now and going to freeze our butts off tonight!
92, windy...shot an 81, 28 putts.
Goal is to break par(done it once)and no more than 30 putts. So, yeah, for second time out this year not bad. Don't play courses longer than 6200 yards.about the same temps here with wind at 20 - 40 mph
is that a good score for you and putt count?
Moving fast! Atta boy Unca Taez!Now that we have a roof on the house, we have no more rain !!! Go figure !
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Are you in the same general weather pattern as Western Montana, on the Front Range of the Bitterroots?Now that we have a roof on the house, we have no more rain !!! Go figure !
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You'll hafta wait till next week —Now that we have a roof on the house, we have no more rain !!! Go figure !
Our weather went from down pour to hot & dry in two days. Normal rain fall for us is 60/70 inches/year.Are you in the same general weather pattern as Western Montana, on the Front Range of the Bitterroots?
I've been here eight years, and it STILL amazes me...how the area can go from a soggy spring, to a tinderbox of dried ground cover...in two weeks.
I know the science. Intense sunlight, the kind you find at 3600 feet. The thin air warms up fast; and because of, whatever the term is that refers to warmer air holding more moisture...the air becomes dry rapidly.
The wind blows steadily, off the peaks. We can go from 80-percent relative humidity to 25-percent, in about four hours.
Still, it's unnerving to me...a Lake Erie Midwesterner with webs on his toes. We were ALWAYS humid. On a quiet night, you could hear your Chevrolet rust. Out here...we have a fifth season, Fire Season - and it's taken for granted, but like Hurricane Season, it can sometimes be disruptive - or lethal.
So now, three weeks late, we get into the Summer Dry-Out. Fires coming in, oh, I expect, three weeks. Less time if someone pays Antifa to set a few - and we've had "vandals" set some, here, close to town, the last two years.
I looked up Coos Bay (I'd never heard of it!!) and boy howdy, you are in the sticks. Are you east or west of Route 5? I zoomed in with the map, and it;s so woolly up there, you've got lizards learning to fly. BTW: There is a $10,000 fine for shooting Bigfoot. <-- Actual Oregon Law -- at least where Scooter lives.Our weather went from down pour to hot & dry in two days. Normal rain fall for us is 60/70 inches/year.
We get our weather from the coast.
We watch the clouds come in like a fog front.
We are about 80 miles, as the crow flies, from Coos Bay.