We're done those were the last minuse temperatures will see in our lifetime.
All types of winter tires no longer needed at sea level winter parkas and long Johnny's and all winter clothing discontinued.
We're done those were the last minuse temperatures will see in our lifetime.
It's a nice humid warm day too. It feels like a mid June!VanCitySouth wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:38 pm If it's this warm we might as well make a run at the monthly record. Only 1.3C more to go!
It was hard to sleep after nightshift Neetzy.wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:45 pm It's a nice humid warm day too. It feels like a mid June!
Might as well!!VanCitySouth wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:38 pm If it's this warm we might as well make a run at the monthly record. Only 1.3C more to go!
wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:45 pm It's a nice humid warm day too. It feels like a mid June!
That's very disturbing Hounderpounder l enjoy seeing snow capped mountains in the winter just to see snow. Now that's becoming a thing of the past now where do l go to see snow.Hound wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:35 pm Looking at all the local mountains today with the clouds gone is pretty depressing. They look like mid summer in terms of visible snow from down in the metro area. You would never know it was winter let alone Jan. Very grim. And the grim news is popping up in the news: https://www.merrittherald.com/low-snow- ... g-merritt/
You didn't get your 1980 repeat though...wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:45 pm It's a nice humid warm day too. It feels like a mid June!
17.3°C in West Vancouver, monthly record (since 1993 only).Rubus_Leucodermis wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 6:16 pm Now up to 17ËšC in Bellingham due to downsloping from SE winds.
So jealous.
Can only imagine what this will mean if we have another hot and dry summer.....Catnip wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:06 pm "“We’re off the charts in many ways,†said Brandes, who leads the University of Victoria’s POLIS Water Sustainability Project and advises the B.C. government on water issues. After an abnormally warm and dry early winter (the local denouement to the hottest year in global history) B.C. had just released its “Snow survey and water supply bulletin,†which showed the province entering 2024 with barely half its usual snowpack. That’s a provincial average; in many places the situation was far worse, with 15 snow stations recording all-time lows as of January 1, most of them in the interior.
Despite fall rains and a wet second half of January bringing some relief to the coast, the bulletin made clear that B.C.’s drought is now pushing into winter. Much of the province just experienced a brown Christmas; aquifers that would normally be recharging remain depleted across the province; major rivers, including the Columbia, the Peace and the Fraser are flowing at historic lows. “We’re in trouble in January,†Brandes exclaimed. It’s a disastrous portent for what summer could bring to a province that depends on snowmelt for everything from agriculture to electricity and drinking water, not to mention fighting wildfire."