The DAMNABLE Rain

starcrafttom":328fi0t0 said:
Maybe I am the only one but I moved here for the weather. After spending months on end looking at the same blue cloudless boring sky everyday and sweating in the 100plus temps all day, I had enough and left. I love that it rains a little all year. I love that two days of 80 degrees is referred to as a heat wave. I love the change of the seasons with out having to shovel snow more then one day a year. I love that the water never takes on a solid form. and i really love how the sunny days are so clear and the light so warm because it rained the day before.

Sacramento -3 months of solid rain, 4 month of boring heat and cloudless skies, and 5 month of cold and a never ending fog or haze.


Seattle- ask me in the morning because it's always different and wonderful.

yeah I choose to live here.

Well written sentiment Tom. I grew up in Sacramento from 1-9 years old, all of my extended family lives in Central and Northern California but unlike you, I love the sun and the fact that we're lucky to get two months of sun in the summer up here in God's country drives me crazy!! :x

If only we could get summers like we had last year, sunshine beginning mid-May lasting all the way through until nearly October with an average of 75 degrees. Now that's perfect Seattle weather afaic. The 90+ degree weather last July was a bit unbearable but I tried not to complain since it just doesn't happen that often.

As I get older, I realize I need more sunshine :hot in my life. I'm not one of these Northwesterners who say, "it may rain a lot but oh, it makes everything so nice and fresh and the trees so green." Arrgghh!!!!

However, I wouldn't want 100 degree sun or high humidity either. Weather in San Diego sounds pretty good to me, foggy in the morning, the sunshine burning it off in the afternoon to 75 degrees during the day with lots of sunshine. Now that I could do.
 
I spotted this written on a outhouse wall in Canada many years ago-not sure if John Ruskin actually wrote it.

"Sunshine is delicious.
Rain is refreshing.
Snow is exhilarating.
Wind braces up.
There is no such thing as bad weather; only different kinds of good weather."
 
I'm reading this and chuckling as we listen to a downpour on the roof of a covered marina at Priest Lake Idaho. We were at the Indian Creek dock when the thunderstorm moved in with 2' rollers accompanying it. We set a speed record I think for untying and hightailing it to Blue Diamond Marina. Much better! 30 amp power, showers, covered slip, all for $25!

This trip to Lake Coeur d'Alene, Lake Pend Oreille and Priest Lake has been a weather disaster. Thunder storms occured on all 3 lakes, heavy rain and lightning, like tonight. So, after two days here, one of them gorgeous, we're packing it up in the AM and heading for Sunny ? Sequim.

The Talapia and Napa Valley Zinfandel made up for some of the discomfort however!
 
Well looks like the weather will improve this weekend. In the mean time, this afternoon was: thunder, lightning, hail, HEAVY showers even huge anvil clouds like those seen in the midwest...

Saturday can't come quick enough for me. Sundya MAY even be in the high 70's. :shock:
 
Roger - Perhaps Ruskin wrote those lines. He was certainly was one England's most prolific writers. But I don't believe he ever experienced anything like a Montana blizzard with below zero temperatures, snow, and wind. Anyway, I look at rain like Robbi, particularly the rain that falls without wind.

The rain in Yellowstone seemed to come in waves of different intensity these past few days, but straight down. Edna doesn't like to boat in cold weather, so I stayed by myself, she in White Sulphur Springs 185 miles away watching the different birds come to our feeders.

The temperatures hovered around 40F throughout the day. But the small ceramic heater kept the cabin cozy - shore power is wonderful. The Far West II was by itself on B dock so various kinds of ducks went swimming by doing their thing as I read from several different books. One, called "Death in Yellowstone." is a chronology of human deaths caused in every sort of manner since the park was created.

Perhaps this is a somewhat macabre topic for many people, but the chapter dealing with death by drownings caught my attention, and I discovered, among other things, that Yellowstone Lake numerically leads in the number who have died in park waters.

By my count, many of those deaths were due to hypothermia, since the bodies were found floating in the water in their jackets, suggesting that drownings itself was only part of the cause of death. According to the book at least 30 bodies were never recovered from the lake, similar to Lake Superior which "never gives up its dead."

Yesterday, while still on the lake, I went out to the arms for a look see, and measuring the surface temperatures found it close to 32F, Only in a specialized survival suit could anyone last more than 15 minutes or more under those conditions.

Back at the dock and getting ready to head back to White Sulphur, I thought of the steady rain which had been the norm since last Sunday.
It was in fact pleasant to sit there reading listening to the rain hit the roof.

Bridge Bay Marina puts one within several miles of the Lake Hotel. A quick drive to the hotel gives anyone access to the large sitting room with soft chairs surrounding a grand piano. An accomplished player was playing from 6-10 P.M. that evening. No cover charge. Just come in and plunk down and act like a hotel guest. Soon a waiter comes with a drink order.

After a while it is back to the boat and some of nature's finest music, rain.
I especially enjoy listening as the rain falls, warm and secure. Sleep comes easy for me during those times. John
 
localboy":2y46zb8f said:
Imagine how I feel. :roll: There was a report on the news this week on how this is even gonna affect certain produce prices come summer. Strawberries, lettuce, cabbage...seems the ground is too wet to plant and farmers in the Skagit Valley are concerned about their income this yr. The report showed a farmer in his field; wearing waders and sunk in mud up past his knees. He said no way he could get his equipment/tractor etc into that field. ENOUGH ALREADY! I get it. It rains here. :thdown Jeez.....

I happen to be one of those farmers they are talking about. we had a bad,wet spring like this in 1990 but didn't last as long. I was out in several of my fields today with a wing ditcher putting some ditches in to drain the water off the fields
 
Roger - As the old cliche goes, one man's meat is another man's poison.The ranchers and farmers around here are cheering on the rain, which as you noted is threatening your livelihood. Sorry to hear that.

Unfortunately, Montana depends upon many pacific storm fronts to provide moisture. Around here 15 inches is a wet year. A wet spell hit Montana in the fall a few years ago, immediately followed by sub-zero weather. The sugar beet growers couldn't get the beets out and they rotted in the field.

Hope things turn better for you. John
 
Here in the Yakima Valley, we're high desert and supposed to get around 7" of rain a year. I've never seen anything like this year. I'm not a farmer, but our customers are all in agriculture, so I worry about the weather almost like a farmer.

After a certain maturity level, the cherries absorb too much moisture and split. The early cherry crop has been ruined and if it doesn't stop raining soon the later areas will have the same issue. The crop is down from 25 million boxes last year to an estimate of 13-14 million boxes this year and shrinking. Other crops are being affected too, but the immediate concern here is the loss of the cherry crop.

Governor Gregoire just asked for a disaster declaration for farmers in the state. I don't know what constitutes a disaster, but it will be an economic blow for some of the smaller farmers.
Lyle
 
I just made it to Decatur an hour and a half ago. It's gorgeous up here. Sunny, 74, no wind. Great views of the Olympics and Lopez Sound from the kitchen. Hopefully it will last...
 
Hey, you guys send a couple of inches of that rain this way please. And some of the cooler temps. Gonna be 100 here today! :cry

I've got grass to cut and other stuff to do outside but not today!! :thup

Charlie
 
Flip side - we can still count the days without rain here on one hand (although today is looking dang good), have not strung enough dry days together for the ground to dry out at all. Back yard has not been mowed at all, is about 4' tall. Front yard gets mowed but Patty gets the dang John Deere stuck up to its hubs every time, it is getting VERY tiresome...

Captains Cat":kd67t1hj said:
Hey, you guys send a couple of inches of that rain this way please. And some of the cooler temps. Gonna be 100 here today! :cry

I've got grass to cut and other stuff to do outside but not today!! :thup

Charlie
 
Well Pat, my advice to you is to turn off the mower, and take a little ride up to Snoqualmie Point Park. Step back, lower your blood pressure and enjoy one of the grandest vistas around. Spend 20 or so minutes sitting on that bench. For a guy who gets frustrated dealing with the lug nuts of this world, just relax, and take justifiable satisfaction and pride in the fact that you were instrumental
in the development of this beautiful and wonderful public space.
 
Pat Anderson":nwjnxzwd said:
Flip side - we can still count the days without rain here on one hand (although today is looking dang good), have not strung enough dry days together for the ground to dry out at all. Back yard has not been mowed at all, is about 4' tall. Front yard gets mowed but Patty gets the dang John Deere stuck up to its hubs every time, it is getting VERY tiresome...

Captains Cat":nwjnxzwd said:
Hey, you guys send a couple of inches of that rain this way please. And some of the cooler temps. Gonna be 100 here today! :cry

I've got grass to cut and other stuff to do outside but not today!! :thup

Charlie

It was like that in late fall/winter here Pat! Darned sump pump ran every 4-6 minutes. Fortunately our grass doesn't grow during that time. We also had record (for us) snowfall. This spring has been pretty good, enough rain for the farmers, but not too much. The last month has been hot and dry. Wish Sally would drive my Kubota! She's intimidated by the backhoe though...

Chalrie
 
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