Gardening and Observing Life in SW Washington |
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| Posted by: BriarCraft, 00:04 GMT le 27 août 2012 | +2 |


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Live. Love. Harm no one. Help when you can. Be happy.
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Tropical Blogs
Tropical Weather Stickers®
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ToledoTel
Toledo, WA
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| Elevation: | 302 ft |
| Température: | 52.5 ° F |
| Point de rosée: | 48.4 ° F |
| Humidité: | 86% |
| Vent: | 5.0 mph from the SSO |
| Rafale de vent: | 9.0 mph |
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Updated: 11:15 PDT le 24 mai 2013
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Ylee: Somehow, I just had you figured for being a responsible, caring dad with more than two wits to rub together. You just proved me right.
Shore: Happy? Yes. Romantic? Not so much. DH did ask if I wanted to go out to dinner. Discussion ensued. Turned out neither of us had the ambition to get cleaned up, change clothes, drive 15 miles to eat some steak that we could just as well have here in our grubby jeans. So, I made a salad, baked some spuds, and DH fired up the grill. Sometimes, simpler is just better in so many ways.
WTS: Thanks for the How-To. I think I see a fun winter project, just in time to catch some fall clearance sales for the pieces and parts. Hmmmm. Anybody who loves backyard birds and bird baths ought to go over to WTS's place and check out his bird bath collage in #14.
Sandi: Maybe I've been living under a rock, but I've never heard of the pinwheel/whirligig/windmill solution for moles before. As I discovered from the link in your comment, Northern Tool even has an industrial strength "mole chaser". The whirligig solution would sure be a lot easier than digging holes and setting traps.
... Fire Weather Watch in effect from Wednesday evening through Thursday evening for low relative humidity values combined with local east winds and a high Haines over the west slopes of the Cascades... eastern Olympics and portions of the interior lowlands...
I've also never seen the term "high Haines" before, so I looked it up and here's what I found:
In a 1988 paper, Mr. Donald Haines of the USDA Forest Service’s North Central Research Station proposed what he called the “Lower Atmosphere Stability Index.” Renamed the Haines Index in his honor since then, it has a value of 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 and is a simple measure of how strongly atmospheric conditions near the earth’s surface might contribute to an existing fire becoming a dangerous, erratic fire with a strong, well defined updraft. It reflects atmospheric stability and dryness for a layer of the atmosphere roughly 1 to 5 km above the surface.
Since this is a weather site, I figured it might be worthwhile to share my learning with WU.
Never heard of the Haines index, either! Interesting!
Seems a bit odd for western Wa to have fire weather warning. Evergreen State, Emerald City, all that. I know the eastern side can get hot and dusty. Hope nothing dramatic happens!
Ylee: I love your new nighttime avatar! Of course, you knew I would. And yeah, I like win-win-win solutions best.
WTS: Yes, fire weather watches are not that common here. It takes an east wind and a long dry spell, which is not uncommon in western Washington (we had 0.04" of rain on July 27 and 0.13" on Sept. 10 with nothing in between). That's all we call it here is "east wind", but the same set of conditions is called "Santa Ana wind" in southern Cal, and I know you know what that means. The good news is this one won't last long. We started with blue skies this morning, but by evening, the skies were smoky gray-brown from eastern Washington fires as the upper level winds shifted. I see the Watch has been upgraded to a Warning, but as long as some idiot doesn't make a tool spark or toss a burning butt in the wrong place, we'll do just fine.
Hope you are having a good Thursday.
We had rain overnight, which was needed, unbelievably after the summer we have had.
The Indian summer of the last two weeks dried things up really quickly.
I read your area is under fire warning. I hope you get rain soon to that area.
In deed, 'no butts, no tool sparks', and here it's also 'no back country cook fires' when the wind is howling! Although the folks passing through the back country hills heading north don't usually understand.
Smokey skies = not good.
Think the windmills or whirlygigs would keep the rabbits and squirrels out of the bird seed? :)
Sandi: Ah, you have "Indian Summer" too? Here, too. The afternoon highs are warmish, but evenings cool off quickly and have gotten as low as 34F, enough to kill my cucumber plant. We could use some rain here. It's been dry for a really long time, after such a miserable start to the summer.
WTS: Happily, surface winds didn't materialize here. For a day, the sky was so thick with high elevation smoke, there was hardly a shadow cast by the sun. It looked cloudy, except the "clouds" were the wrong color. As to squirrels, the cats are a pretty good deterrent. I have one cat who manages to catch a rabbit now and then, but they breed like, well, rabbits, so I don't think there is a solution to that problem.
GGrrl: Trailer park or not, some people love yard art. There's a woman down the road who has deer to keep her gnomes company. I wish she'd do pinwheels and flamingos instead of deer. Frankly, we have too many real deer munching on stuff for me to think they're cute. Hmmm. Pinwheels, gnomes, and toadstools might make a fun combination for my yard.
10:30 and 99 degrees and counting!
Our area is not outdoor cat friendly, too many coyotes..
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Just about time for a new blog, if only I can come up with a topic. In the mean time, since the week is pretty much lost, I might as well head for Longview and see if I can find some clothes loose enough for Tai Chi and nice enough for me to not mind being seen in public. I don't want much, do I?
We have coyotes, too, but we are far enough away from the woods to not give them much cover if they ever decided to come near the house. One cat never leaves the yard, the other cat is "countrywise" enough not to put herself in jeopardy.
Good luck on the shopping! :)
Poppy: I know you do!
I'm impressed that you are going to take Tai Chi! Bet you'll love it and it will really help with balancing your strength, side to side. When's it start?
Thanks for the Haines Index info - it's that time of year again.
Thought you might enjoy this short video taken by a seagull :)
SP: So your experiment was a success of sorts. Rubbery texture for garlic wouldn't make a noticeable difference to pesto, or soups and stews either. And my shopping excursion paid off.
Fun video. Truly a bird's eye view.
I did find some suitable geezer exercise pants: straight leg, stretchy, somewhat loose, no racing stripes. One pair in navy, one in charcoal gray. Not what I would pick to wear to town, but neither will I be embarrassed to pop into the grocery store while wearing them. First class is Sept. 24.
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