To drive back to Florida I think you need to take the us-26. There's cams if anyone knows how to get archived footage we should be able to get a timestamp on the van.
https://www.weatherbug.com/air-quality/champaign-il-61821
PM10 is usually vehicle exhaust. PM2.5 can also come from vehicle exhaust, but is more often industrial related. Neither is currently very high anywhere in Champaign or Urbana, but is very slightly elevated from the norm because today we're sitting in a bowl of a low pressure cell, it's hot, and it's very humid.
tl;dr it's normal and your phone is set to alert you at some weirdly sensitive level. If you don't have a compromised respiratory system, you should tone it down.
Weatherbug is showing Delta turn into a Cat 5 before it hits the Yucatan peninsula. Not seeing any mention of Cat 5 anywhere else. Is this an accurate source?
Webcams will give you some idea but unless someone’s been on that section recently, I’d give the folks at Cumberland Trail Connection a call. That shop is right on the trail by the Crabby Pig in Cumberland and they should be able to give you a good idea of the trail conditions before you make the drive.
for those who are curious...
Hard Rock Stadium was supposed to be hosting the Rolling Stones tonight, so we decided to have the spring game in Orlando. After the concert was cancelled, we decided to keep the game in Orlando. Even if we wanted to be in HRS today, the stadium isn't ready and i'm not sure it would have been ready even if there was never a concert scheduled. They just finished taking down the temporary seating from the Miami Open and this is what the playing surface looks like:
Je ne me souviens pas ou j'avais lu ca, un article de presse je crois.
https://www.weatherbug.com/air-quality/san-francisco-ca-94103
C'est le meme niveau qu'hier et avant-hier, comparable a ce que tu aurais a Beijing.
This was in my town, Clovis NM. By the time I realized what was going on outside and got my drone up in the air I missed a good portion of the show.
This was all I was able to capture before the wind got too much for my drone to handle. https://imgur.com/a/mz0WyyO
A apologize for everyone else in this sub being a moron. The wind is obviously cutting visibility down to a fraction of normal.
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-camera/?cam=LSVHC
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-camera/las-vegas-nv-89102
Not sure how I missed this post but...
The past few years I’ve done quite a bit of riding on the section you mention. If the trail is clear enough to ride in Ohiopyle, it’s usually good from Connellsville to Confluence.
Now for up the mountain toward Meyersdale and Big Savage, I usually check some web cams to see how deep the snow is. This one and these at PennDot usually give me a fair idea of how much snow is laying down.
This winter however, it’s been tough. But studded tires help.
https://www.experiencewestport.com/live-westport-webcam
Closest live streams I could find to Aberdeen, WA
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-camera/east-aberdeen-wa-98520
At the time of this message, it is overcast.
Hurricanes are more properly known as cyclones. Cyclones form around the world in many different locations. Your perception is likely due to your location in the world. You're not hearing about the cyclones that affect other regions because you're not in those locations, so it's not very relevant to your day to day life.
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https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Hurricanes,-Typhoons,-Cyclones-Where-In-The-World
FWIW, Weatherbug and Accuweather are now both showing nothing until a chance of storms at 11. Dare we hope?
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-forecast/10-day-weather/southern-md-facility-md-20705
Look at the ten day weather forecast for your area and your destination. If you will be traveling far then also look at weather in cities along the way.
Do you have cold weather camping experience? Do you have layers of warm clothes and warm boots?
There are numerous traffic cams in this area run by the state or local agencies, which we would assume would be monitored. These feeds are available on Weatherbug.
"Hurricane force winds occur an average of 110 days per year. Mount Washington holds the Northern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere records for directly measured surface wind speed — 231 mph, which was recorded on April 12, 1934."
https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Mount-Washington-Home-of-the-World%E2%80%99s-Worst-Weathe
Might not actually be the worst but it's definitely not good.
I read somewhere that storing glasses upside down is a legacy of the 1930’s dust bowl. The vast majority of Americans lived east of the Mississippi River back then and the dust reached the east coast at times.
Because your doctor wasn't specific, it's probably environmental allergies. You said you don't react to pollen, but it's literally tiny, invisible in the air all the time, from trees, grades, weeds, etc. I can sniff a flower with no problem, bit the pollen you do to see blowing off a tree is a problem.
This time of year, environmental allergens are terrible for me. Today, the counts for ragweed, chenopods, and grass pollens are high by me. I've been feeling it all week.
It's possible you're allergic to pollens. Check out https://www.weatherbug.com/life/pollen/ or a similar site. When your allergies act up, check it. You start to notice a pattern, like your react when tree pollen is high, etc.
Then, you can use that to know when to expect trouble (the seasons when your pollens are highest). During those times, you create a regimen of meds that work, like a pill (Claritin or Zyrtec, for instance) and/or a prescription nasal spray. If you have a set regimen, you avoid the worst of it instead of trying to take meds to fix it after it gets bad.
I did have allergy testing, which confirmed the pollens I react worst to and clarified that walnut tree, not tree pollen in general, is one of my issues.
For people with environmental allergies, dust can also be an issue. So if you react in a home in the winter, it doesn't rule out environmental allergies.
I like weatherbug.com . You can do a 10 day forecast or an hourly forecast.
As a side note, the amount of moisture that is released by corn farms surrounding Chicago results in higher humidity not just in the city but the entire midwest. Called "corn sweat"
https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Corn-Sweat-Contributing-To-Midwest-Mugginess
Current view of the 405: https://www.weatherbug.com/traffic-cam/?latlng=33.999398,-118.408723
Not quite as empty, but considering I am looking at it near 5pm PST and the traffic is FLOWING, that alone is amazing for LA
Watch this recent time lapse for Crawfordsville, IN. It's kind of creepy. Any others?
Edit: Here's one from Kokomo, IN where lights go out just before the fog starts.
And one from Indianapolis. It's like at 6:30 AM, a giant cloud comes down and swallows the city.
Yeah, shockingly, enhanced risk is a classification used by the SPC that has certain criteria to be able to be declared. It is recommended to take enhanced risks seriously. An enhanced risk is issued when certain risk categories, including threat for tornadoes, excess winds, etc, have a higher than base-line chance of occurring.
"When an Enhanced Risk area is issued, it should be taken very seriously. Its presence means that government forecasters are confident enough that widespread storms will develop, and that these storms are capable of causing significant damage or even causing fatalities. For anyone in an Enhanced Risk area, it would be wise to keep an eye on the sky during any activities, and be prepared to take shelter at a moment`s notice." source
If this virus outbreak has taught us anything, it's that you're not allowed to have opinions on everything. Just like the virus, the definition and seriousness of an enhanced risk isn't something to have an opinion on, it just is. The severity of an enhanced risk is not something up for debate, there's no opinion to be had, listen to the experts and go about your day. That's the end of the conversation around this topic.
No problem! Good luck finding a local webcam to use for your wallpaper :p I used WeatherBug to find a local webcam that was just a "jpg" that updates periodically. Works perfectly for a few different use cases (I use it for my phone background and on a spare monitor so that I can quickly glance over and see if it's good hiking weather).
I think I have visited that site before, it is a good resource. Living in Hurricane Alley (even the local NHL team is called the Hurricanes), we tend to get oversaturated with coverage from all of the local pundits expounding on the US models, the Euro models, etc, so it's nice to have an arsenal of resources to help cut through the hype & sensationalism. Ofc, when I want a real idea of what the weather is up to, I stick my head outside for some first-hand observation. ;) Here is what we're looking at right now:
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-camera/cary-nc-27511
https://www.wral.com/rdu_airport_camera/13775143/
If you’re interested in checking sickness activity, there are a few sickness maps available online.
WebMD cold and flu map (as reported by their symptom checker)
I'm going with "None". No one will die during "the raid" because almost no one will show and it will be a total bust. It's going to be 51 degrees in the desert around Rachel NV tonight and anyone still there in the morning will be just looking for a heat source, and food.
Go Bolts! Not only is Florida the state with the highest number of lightning strikes, but Tampa is the city with the highest number!
https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Top-30-Cities-in-the-U-S-with-the-Most-Lightning
Also, if you ever find yourself in Tampa, be sure to catch a Bolts game. They're loads of fun and those Tesla coils are worth it in itself!
Thanks for the answer... I'm not sure if I'd love to have your weather app to be so optimistic, or point you to any random weather website that tells you it's gonna rain for at least a week 😞
https://www.weatherbug.com/weather-forecast/10-day-weather/
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The puppy is still too small and needs to do its 3rd vaccination recall so I don't think it's a great idea to make her get soaking wet. It's okay if we just need to walk for potty needs, but she also needs to run, play, etc.
Air contracts and expands (through temperature change) and thereby creates movement.
You can see it very well at the shore when day becomes night:
>"The sea breeze is a thermally produced wind blowing during the day from the cool ocean onto the adjoining warm land."
This also happens in hilly regions or simply if one part of flat land is hotter than another so there's also wind in a hot sandy desert.
Check out this: https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Land-and-Sea-Breezes-What-Causes-Them
That site explains a lot, even "landlocked wind". Alternatively, wind also comes from my intestines.
They're calling it based on the NWS Winter Weather Advisory that says
> FRIDAY...
> * WHAT...Snow tapering off tonight with the threat of ice forming on roads as temperatures drop below freezing.
ummm... the Dolphins are adding tennis courts. Does that count?
This is the wurstgunnit soap we all love.
So young and optimistic. They used to call me a Stanley cause I'd tell management that they were fucking inbred levels of special.
Something important to watch: regional prevailing winds and air quality.
Northern California wildfires are currently burning on a historic scale. Current air quality in Napa is rated "moderate", and Napa isn't very far south of some areas rated "poor".
Air pollution can travel hundreds of miles before dissipating. Annually, South East Asian and Oceania nations are plagued by haze from peat fires, some burning 500 miles away. Big Basin is approximately 236 linear miles from Redding, so this is definitely possible.
Check out this air quality map (look at the red dot over Redding and other fires): r/https://www.weatherbug.com/maps/?center=39.1982053,-121.0473633,7&layerId=AirQuality
Furthermore, fire haze regularly blows through Santa Cruz county in the Summer. Most years the haze originates from the North. Although, we do get a few fires (e.g. the Loma Fire in 2016), they typically don't destroy our air quality.
Tips:
Stay indoors as much as possible during the day time. Go outside in the early morning or night.
Wear face masks.
Be especially cautious of elderly, infants/children, and those with respiratory issues.
Don't lose hope, the haze can disappear tomorrow given the right wind conditions.
UV index is something that gets reported live with the weather. Something to look towards when thinking about what percent reduction you are looking at.
https://www.weatherbug.com/news/Several-People-Injured-in-Western-Japan-Earthquake
>A magnitude 6.1 earthquake jolted the western Japan prefecture of Shimane early Monday injuring eight people, local authorities said, as buildings were damaged and water supply to more than 1,000 households was cut off.
>In Oda, one of the hardest-hit cities, 224 cases of building damage were confirmed while up to 190 people were evacuated in the aftermath of the 1:32 a.m. quake that registered upper 5 on the Japanese seismic intensity scale of 7.
>The quake occurred at a depth of 12 kilometers, hitting the Kinki, Chugoku and Shikoku regions in western Japan, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.
So, southwestern Japan. The translators at Kyodo follow Japanese naming conventions rather than actual geography.