Category Archives: weather

Watch the Snails – by Jay Carpenter – (reposted with his permission)

Watch the Snails

By Jay Carpenter   – Fall 2009

 

The Thing

My all-time favorite science fiction movie is, “The Thing (From Outer Space)”, circa 1952.  I am NOT referring to the John Carpenter remake.  The original film still scares me today and I have seen it probably 50 times.  In the end, the creature from outer space is ultimately defeated.  However, all of the crewmembers of the polar ice station who killed the alien are wondering what will happen next.  Will there be more creatures?  I am thinking that an alien who possesses technology for space travel must certainly have GPS tracking on his way to our planet!

 

The closing line of the movie is delivered by Scotty, a newspaper reporter.  He relays to other reporters listening over a shortwave radio the story of their encounter with the terrible and mean alien being.  At the end he says, “Watch the skies, everywhere! Keep looking. Keep watching the skies!”

 

Shortly after this movie came out, there was a rash of UFOs sited all over the world.

 

The Drought Continues

About ten years ago, we were in a similar drought situation as we find ourselves today.  There was blistering heat, absolutely no rain and no forecast for rain.  My cousin Will Ed, who lives in Spicewood and studies Texas climate history says, “We are in a continuing long term drought, interrupted by occasional flooding.”  I think Will Ed is right.

 

Anyway, in the time of the last hard drought of the late 1990s, a TV news reporter gal was doing a story about the heat wave and the failure of local farmers’ crops.  She visited a small farm east of Austin and interviewed a farmer.  She asked the type of questions that try to milk out a “woe is me” response.  Although this farmer’s crops were certainly burnt beyond recognition, he was not dismayed.  In fact, he was smiling as he forecasted a large rain event in the near future, which would be good for the upcoming winter garden and provide sub moisture for next year’s crop.

 

When asked how he knew that rain was coming when every expert weather forecaster was preaching Armageddon, he replied slowly, “Whal . . . ya see them thar snails crawlin’ up the sides of ma barn?  (The camera zooms in to a close up of a dozen slugs crawling straight up the barn’s wood wall). That’s a shore sign that rain is comin’, and comin’ big!”

 

The news reporter, in a post wrap editorial, ridiculed the farmer’s home-spun weather forecasting technique.  She said that this type of lore is primitive and superstitious.  With perfect hair and a gleam in her eye, she made the farmer appear foolish and ignorant of the scientific method.  Her personal comments, dripping with sarcasm, were more lengthy than the actual report about the drought.

 

The next week it rained for eight days straight and we received over 10 inches of the blessed wet stuff.

 

I never did see the news reporter do a follow up on the farmer’s prediction. In fact, I have not seen that news lady at all, since that time.

 

This morning I saw two snails crawling up the side of my house.  I also saw a red sky at dawn while walking Molly, our miniature albino coyote (recently captured from the Chihuahuan Desert of the Big Bend).  “Red sky in morning, sailor take warning.”  Then I went inside and viewed a TV news report about a tropical storm in the Caribbean headed this way, perhaps developing into a hurricane.  OMG, I thought.  Could our present drought (the worst that Will Ed has ever seen in our area) be coming to an end?

 

It will most likely be “occasional flooding”, but I will take anything at this point.

 

Watch the snails . . . everywhere.  Keep looking.  KEEP WATCHING THE SNAILS!

Crazy TX weather

Yesterday, May 1st, we had a cold front moving through Austin. Saturday and Sunday moring’s temperatures were in the 90ties (33C), when all of a sudden the temperature dropped to 18C within an hour. You would expect violent thunderstorms going along with such a drastic change, especially in light of the destruction in the Mississippi area (from tornados) this year. But not even a rain shower out of this system – just gusty winds, that was it. So this morning it was all fleece and heater in the car when driving to work, not the usual muggy weather for A/C and T-Shirt. It was 47F (9C)! Texas weather never seizes to impress me.

What I like about Austin

Do you want to know what I really like about Austin? It’s the weather in winter. Today I had lunch sitting outside with temperatures around 70F/(~21C). After two days of rain and fairly cold weather (40ies/~5C), we’re back to blue skies, calm winds and warm temperatures. With the low standing sun, the bright light is just amazing. January and February have been my favorite months over the last couple of years. Many times it stayed dry for multiple weeks during this time. Of course in summer the lakes are great and soaring can be just awesome in July/August, but temperetures are much less enjoyable (40C). Many people seem to agree, judging by the inflow of people from colder states from the north, or more expensive regions at either coast. Austin’s economy is still humming along nicely, although at a somewhat slower pace than 2007 and I’m not claiming we’re shielded from the national and global financial crisis. It’s just more managable down here…

Austin did it again!

High sixties during day time (23C) and freezing tempertures at night (-1C). After a cloudy and windy day with warm temperatures around lunch time, it cooled down rapidly to start freezing after midnight in Austin on Sun. This is the second time around this year that this phenomenon has occured. For the non-local reader: the steep tempereture drops are caused by a cold, dry, continental air-mass coming from Canada, pushing south. When it has enough momentum, it’ll push all the moist warm air from the Gulf of Mexico southward and replace it from ground to midlevels. This push south is usually accompanied by some rain showers that can produce snow. When the Gulf moisture finally makes it way back north the warm air glides on top of the cold air, producing fog, and drizzle and sometimes freezing rain – phenomenons associated with warm fronts. After a day or two the airmass will have penetrated the lower levels and the much warmer temperatures are back.

This year is special in that the cold temperatures have started almost two months early. We also had a particularly dry summer with well below average rains. In fact we have water usage restrictions in place to preserve this resource during the drought.