A Real Blue Meanie
We watched the weather forecast. A great, amorphous, blue bulge of severe stuff- a real blue meanie- was burgeoning up from the South West. It swelled as far as Brummagem- where it was met by winds from Scandanavia- a hail of chunky, little arrows- which bounced against it and started pushing it back . Phew! We northerners will be spared the worst. Nevertheless it snowed again last night.
They say this is the harshest winter for 18 years.
And the planet is warming up?
They say this is the harshest winter for 18 years.
And the planet is warming up?

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Well, yes. It's the harshest winter for 18 years, which means we've had nearly 20 years of warm winters. If you go back to the 60s, winters were much colder and we could guarantee snow every winter. (At least as far as I recall.) Besides, it's certainly warming up in Australia. If only we had some kind of heat exchange system between the northern and southern hemispheres!
Global warming is actually terribly complicated, but one effect is that climate becomes more extreme. The type of storm that used to strike once every 50 years will now appear once every 7-10 years. There's just more energy in the weather system, and as it's a chaotic system that doesn't follow simple rules, everything is going to get harder to predict.
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I'm a bit of a sceptic about global warming- mainly because I'm a contrarian. If everyone is lining up to tell me that such and such a thing is true I start wanting to look for the flaws in their argument.
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Whether that's due to the activity of human beings or whether it's just due to us still warming up after the last ice age is a separate and much more complicated question.
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When i was a child, we had snow up to the roof of our chicken house. the last several years, we've only had puling 4 or 5 inch snowfalls.
The ocean currents get screwed up, and hten all the weather goes bonkers as well.
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It does seem as if global weather is becoming more extreme.
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I'm glad the Blue Meanie missed you this time around.
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There's plenty up here in the hills, five miles away.
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But I suppose I might be on my own for the entire meeting if nobody else makes it!
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I rather think it's trying to rain up here.
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However, in the 1990's I remember summers that were unseasonably cool so many days that I had to bring a wool blazer with me wherever I went. My daughter who was living in San Francisco at the time told me that I was having San Francisco summers (mild and wet).
I dont know about global warming, but I do know about climate change, just from my own observations.
This year seems more like the weather of the 1940's and later on, the 1970's -- hot summer,with a cold ice-and- snowy winter.
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And I will trade any amount of today's 24 degrees (the average for February is 12, btw) for snow or rain. Will give excellent exchange rate!
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We are ALL trying to rush the spring...
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We were at a Pagan camp about fifteen years back- and the rain was bucketing down- and Ailz started up a Native American sun chant- everyone joined in- and it worked. The rain cleared and the sun came out.