• Welcome to https://albinowners.net, the new home of Albin Owners Group!
• You will need to log in here, and you may want to bookmark this site. If you don't remember your password, use the I forgot my password link to reset it.
• All content has been transferred from our previous site. Digests will be enabled soon.
Contact Us if you have any questions or notice a problem. If you're not receiving our email, include a phone number where we can text you.

Global Warming reversed

Not model or forum specific.

Moderators: DougSea, RobS

Post Reply
jetter
Gold Member
Gold Member
Posts: 88
Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2012 9:33 pm
Home Port: Skerryvore , Ontario
Location: Creemore, Ontario

Global Warming reversed

Post by jetter »

OK. First photo is Feb 22th. Ruddy Duck under its blanket. No snow. Sun shinning. Photo 2 is April 18th. Winter blanket off. 8" of snow. Ice in harbour. Overcast........10 days to splash. Hard to get excited.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post. To view images, please register for a free account.
Russell
DesertAlbin736
Gold Member
Gold Member
Posts: 2729
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA

Re: Global Warming reversed

Post by DesertAlbin736 »

Yet down here in the Arizona desert we had not one night of frost or below freezing temps all winter. Everything in the Phoenix area is bone dry, only 8 days with any amount of rain recorded year to date. Last time rain fell in any measurable amount was March 24th. Year to date recorded rainfall amount is now at 1.13 inches (2.87 cm), off 0.96 inches from seasonal year to date averages. We have already seen our first 100 degree F day (37.8 C) as of April 10th. We are at or near the end of our winter rainy (relatively speaking) season, so if no more rain comes before mid May it won't happen until the mid summer "monsoon" season arrives, and maybe not even then the way this drought is going. It goes without saying that Phoenix rarely if ever sees snow, but even the higher elevations of northern Arizona, which can and do get snow and cold winters, this year has been exceptionally dry for them too. Our normal annual average rainfall in Phoenix is 8 inches (20.3 cm), average number of rainy days per year = 36, that is less than one in ten. And "rainy day" is a relative term. When rain does occur it rarely lasts all day & usually less than an hour & is very scattered & spotty.
La Dolce Vita
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
jetter
Gold Member
Gold Member
Posts: 88
Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2012 9:33 pm
Home Port: Skerryvore , Ontario
Location: Creemore, Ontario

Re: Global Warming reversed

Post by jetter »

I have spent many enjoyable holidays in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley. Currently I'm booking April 2019. My wife and I love hiking the desert.AI visit to AZ has always made the months without Ruddy Duck in the water seem shorter.
Russell
User avatar
Tree
Gold Member
Gold Member
Posts: 1587
Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2013 12:28 pm
Home Port: Portsmouth, UK
Location: Bordon, UK
Contact:

Re: Global Warming reversed

Post by Tree »

Quite the opposite here today. It was the hottest April day for 70 years. Average temp for this time of year may be 16-18°c. Today topped out at 29°c!
Fisher Price 2
Hull Number AUL28489L900
Yanmar 6LP-STE
Built in Portsmouth RI, USA - Berthed in Portsmouth Hampshire, United Kingdom.
DesertAlbin736
Gold Member
Gold Member
Posts: 2729
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA

Re: Global Warming reversed

Post by DesertAlbin736 »

Quite the opposite here today. It was the hottest April day for 70 years. Average temp for this time of year may be 16-18°c. Today topped out at 29°c!
Yes, climate change is real. Sometimes it's counter intuitive, colder "polar vortex" winters in some places due to disrupted weather patterns & ocean currents. I've lived in Arizona for the past 40 years, and it definitely gets hotter earlier in the spring these days & stays hot until later in the fall than it used to. Some of that might be the "heat island" effect of urban sprawl, but this drought we're in now is exceptional. I can recall summer monsoon thunderstorms & downpours in the early 1980s where streets in Phoenix would flood curb to curb and dust storms where you couldn't see houses across the street. I was up at Lake Powell in July 1983 the last time the lake was brim full (I was at a "boogie" skydiving over the lake just like the scene in "Point Break" with Patrick Swayze & Keanu Reeves except we landed on the shore & not in the water, but that's another story from another chapter in my life). Now Powell's level is down by 83 feet, or 53% full. Lake Mead is just as bad or worse, down to 40% capacity, and affected states in the region are fighting over the water supply. Arizona's Central Arizona Project (aka CAP) canal system uses Lake Pleasant, our home boating lake, as a buffer storage reservoir which gets pumped up full each winter with water drawn from Lake Havasu via the canal, which in turn comes down from Powell & Mead. If this drought continues much longer it could limit Arizona's allocation of Colorado River water which in turn could affect boating on our lake. We're still a long way from the kind of shortages seen in places like Cape Town, South Africa or the drought restrictions California had the last couple years.
La Dolce Vita
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
Post Reply

Return to “General Discussion”