News of the Warm

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
75 mph wind gusts right here yesterday.

My neighbor to the west has a giant cottonwood in his backyard and every time it blows really hard or we have an icing event I get really nervous that fucking thing is gonna drop a limb through my house. And of course my bedroom is right in the way, too.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
75 mph wind gusts right here yesterday.

My neighbor to the west has a giant cottonwood in his backyard and every time it blows really hard or we have an icing event I get really nervous that fucking thing is gonna drop a limb through my house. And of course my bedroom is right in the way, too.
There is a huge oak outside my bedroom. I've slept on the couch a few nights when there was really high winds. But Micheal leaned it over about 15 degrees away from the house. Now I'm not so worried.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
There is a huge oak outside my bedroom. I've slept on the couch a few nights when there was really high winds. But Micheal leaned it over about 15 degrees away from the house. Now I'm not so worried.
I'm not holding my breath for hurricanes in Colorado lol

But the odd tornado...
 

thumper60

Well-Known Member
There is a huge oak outside my bedroom. I've slept on the couch a few nights when there was really high winds. But Micheal leaned it over about 15 degrees away from the house. Now I'm not so worried.
Try living under 150 ft white pines never ending clean up I dont sleep well with winds over 30. 50 again here today no snow yet but its about to change. Most yrs i can be ice fishing small ponds by dec 1 no ice anywhere so far this yr.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
I heard about this new report this morning on NPR. (in a google search I had to scroll past all the paid posts telling me emissions were getting lower before I found it) It seems a lot of what were called leaks are really just gas vented when they do work on the lines.

 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
I heard about this new report this morning on NPR. (in a google search I had to scroll past all the paid posts telling me emissions were getting lower before I found it) It seems a lot of what were called leaks are really just gas vented when they do work on the lines.

There are methane leaks everywhere they're drilling and fracking in the West. Colorado's answer to the problem is to delay buying monitoring requirement and then say we don't have a problem.

Another big source of climate affecting emissions are burning coal mines. Yes, there are hundreds of them, all over the country, all of them spewing CO2 and worse; in fact, one that's suspected of starting the Marshall Fire near Boulder Colorado has been burning for over 100 years!
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Sea level rise.

If you have beachfront property in the Gulf or up the east coast,I suggest selling.

I predict property in Colorado will continue to rise in value, due to people with wet feet buying someplace where they never have to look at an ocean again.

Me, I'm thinking about buying a boat; rising tides, right?!
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
If you have beachfront property in the Gulf or up the east coast,I suggest selling.

I predict property in Colorado will continue to rise in value, due to people with wet feet buying someplace where they never have to look at an ocean again.

Me, I'm thinking about buying a boat; rising tides, right?!
I wouldn't worry unless you have some real long legged genes. My lowest land is 65 feet above sea level down at the creek. Even at a foot every hundred years. . . . . .
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't worry unless you have some real long legged genes. My lowest land is 65 feet above sea level down at the creek. Even at a foot every hundred years. . . . . .
That's not beachfront property, though.

You do realize you live at higher altitude than fully half of America's population, right?
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
That's not beachfront property, though.

You do realize you live at higher altitude than fully half of America's population, right?
Sandhill. Here at the house I'm close to 100 feet. Seven miles into town, and it's 120 feet. But as I can attest from the time I rode a bike to school, there are a couple three big hills between here and there.
 
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