Not exact matches
So even without much
snow on the ground we have more to do, higher costs and
less time to work
in winter months.
Whether it's the fact that
winter is lingering around far past it's welcome (it
snowed... again), the fact that I'm going to Puerto Rico
in less than a month -LRB-!!)
Crouch said that the mild
winter and lack of
snow in much of the eastern U.S. makes the flood outlook for 2012 far
less ominous than last year, when floods caused billions of dollars
in damage and accounted for two of 2011's billion - dollar disasters.
That means that, for example, places like Boston may see
less snowy
winters overall, punctuated
in some years by blizzards that drop a foot or two of
snow.
In urban areas during the winter when snow cover is less pervasive, temperatures are higher than rural areas in the daytime by an average of 2 °
In urban areas during the
winter when
snow cover is
less pervasive, temperatures are higher than rural areas
in the daytime by an average of 2 °
in the daytime by an average of 2 °F.
Lake Tahoe is
less than two hours away, making it super easy to head to the
snow in the
winter or to the lake
in summer.
Spring may actually show its signs here (
in the high country of Colorado) earlier than years before as we've had much
less snow this
winter season than any I've experienced
in the past.
Your
winter looks a lot
less harsh than ours here
in new york - especially today, as I sit here surrounded by a big
snow storm!!
In Nashville people can't drive in the rain much less when snow is «imminent»... I would love to live somewhere like NYC or Chicago, but just know that the cold winters would KILLLLLL m
In Nashville people can't drive
in the rain much less when snow is «imminent»... I would love to live somewhere like NYC or Chicago, but just know that the cold winters would KILLLLLL m
in the rain much
less when
snow is «imminent»... I would love to live somewhere like NYC or Chicago, but just know that the cold
winters would KILLLLLL me!
Unless you live where the roads are regularly covered
in snow and ice or the noted compromises are worth the over-the-top security during a wicked storm, I'd seriously consider a
less aggressive
winter tire.
Having moved from an area with plenty of
snow (western New York) to an area with
less (Boston), I still switch to dedicated
snows in the
winter.
For this reason, Detroit is looking to move its show, possibly to October, when people will be
less likely to experience blizzards, bitter cold, and the enfeebled municipal
snow removal fleet that together comprise what Detroit
in winter is all about.
Stuck driving through
snow once again as this Nuclear-esque
winter drags on with no end
in sight, the AWD - equipped TL inspires exceptional confidence thanks to its well - controlled chassis, excellent seating position and chunky steering wheel; perhaps the highest compliment I can pay it is to say the TL is a very fluid package, resulting
in spirited driving even
in less - than - ideal conditions.
Anyhow,
less seriously, if you are living
in Montreal,
winter is now
in, we have that beautiful
snow and I am still without a metro pass.
According to AccuWeather, a blizzard is a dangerous
winter storm that has large amounts of
snow, winds
in excess of 35 mph, and visibility
less than 1/4 mile.
Some artworks seem to be made specifically for selfies and the art market knows this (people stood
in line for hours
in the
winter snow to see themselves for
less than two minutes
in Kusama's «infinity rooms»).
In that case (along with greater precipitation, and the precipitation belt moving to higher latitudes), there could be more snow in the winter & greater melting in the summer (in higher latitudes), while I'd think the lower latitudes (with less precip) and the local mean temp being higher, would melt the glaciers faster, without adequate snowfall & low winter temps to slow this glacial decreas
In that case (along with greater precipitation, and the precipitation belt moving to higher latitudes), there could be more
snow in the winter & greater melting in the summer (in higher latitudes), while I'd think the lower latitudes (with less precip) and the local mean temp being higher, would melt the glaciers faster, without adequate snowfall & low winter temps to slow this glacial decreas
in the
winter & greater melting
in the summer (in higher latitudes), while I'd think the lower latitudes (with less precip) and the local mean temp being higher, would melt the glaciers faster, without adequate snowfall & low winter temps to slow this glacial decreas
in the summer (
in higher latitudes), while I'd think the lower latitudes (with less precip) and the local mean temp being higher, would melt the glaciers faster, without adequate snowfall & low winter temps to slow this glacial decreas
in higher latitudes), while I'd think the lower latitudes (with
less precip) and the local mean temp being higher, would melt the glaciers faster, without adequate snowfall & low
winter temps to slow this glacial decrease.
Will
less ice and
snow in the Arctic during
winter increase, decrease or be about the same radiation loss as years with thick multiyear ice?
(Maybe there's some hope for a super lake
snow effect (like
in Moscow
winter 2012/13) and the feedback gets a wee bit
less catastrophic.)
For the entire Northern Hemisphere, there is evidence of an increase
in both storm frequency and intensity during the cold season since 1950,1 with storm tracks having shifted slightly towards the poles.2, 3 Extremely heavy snowstorms increased
in number during the last century
in northern and eastern parts of the United States, but have been
less frequent since 2000.11,15 Total seasonal snowfall has generally decreased
in southern and some western areas, 16 increased
in the northern Great Plains and Great Lakes region, 16,17 and not changed
in other areas, such as the Sierra Nevada, although
snow is melting earlier
in the year and more precipitation is falling as rain versus
snow.18 Very snowy
winters have generally been decreasing
in frequency
in most regions over the last 10 to 20 years, although the Northeast has been seeing a normal number of such
winters.19 Heavier - than - normal snowfalls recently observed
in the Midwest and Northeast U.S.
in some years, with little
snow in other years, are consistent with indications of increased blocking (a large scale pressure pattern with little or no movement) of the wintertime circulation of the Northern Hemisphere.5 However, conclusions about trends
in blocking have been found to depend on the method of analysis, 6 so the assessment and attribution of trends
in blocking remains an active research area.
«The spring months have sometimes storms of wind and thunder even so early as March within these last years the Climate seems to be greatly changed the summer so backward with very little rain and even
snow in winter much
less than usual and the ground parched that all summer have entirely dried up...»
In particular, more
winter and spring flooding and drier summers are expected as well as
less winter snow (more rain) and earlier snowmelt.
The fact that they are both
in agreement, is also an indication that
less snow has fallen on the ice than last
winter, because this tends to make CryoSat deviate from PIOMAS.
Warmer
winters and
less snow cover
in recent years have contributed to increased deer populations62 that degrade forest understory vegetation.82
Remember,
in the not too distant past we've seen predictions from them about how global warming will soon be causing
less or no
snow,
winters will disappear and how Arctic and Antarctic ice will soon be disappearing, right?
A recent report from Climate Central shows that there will be an increase
in the continuing trend of more rain and
less snow during US
winters, which will impact the Pacific Northwest, California and other parts of the United States as well.
AGW causes cool summers, cold
winters, hot summers and warm
winters, droughts, rain, flood, sun burnt whales, more
snow,
less snow, more ice,
less ice, disruptions
in ocean currents, and much much more.
Usually more
winter snow in the Central Arctic has seemed to indicate
less September sea ice extent.
«Within our lifetime,
winters in Minnesota will become more like
winters in Chicago — warmer with
less snow and more precipitation coming as rain.»
The flaw
in the 3C ECS over land, webby, is that where it's happening it's a welcome change resulting
in longer growing seasons,
less snow to shovel, and
less heating fuel needed
in the
winter.
Scarcely any sleighing, muddy roads, some fog, only five days... below zero,... and a mean temperature ten degrees warmer than any
winter of which I have any record... The almost entire absence of
snow has been somewhat detrimental to business generally and has proved a serious drawback to logging... The
winter certainly has been a pleasant and comfortable one, making small demands on the fuel pile... While the mean temperature of the month was about the same as February of last year, it was
in some respects
less pleasant.
Every
winter,
less seasonal
snow and ice forms
in the Arctic — spanning Northern Canada, Russia, Alaska, and Greenland
in addition to the Arctic Ocean — meaning that the melting from the preceding summer is not replenished.
For what I know, the models predict more precipitations
in the
winter, but a
less extended period of
snow (a wetter but shorter
winter).
Most people have never been to the bottom of the Grand Canyon much
less in the
winter when it's
snowing.
March 8, 2018 — The second major
winter storm
in less than a week is bringing significant amounts of
snow and strong winds to the Northeastern United States.